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Friday 29 December 2017

Summer learning journey Day 5 Week 1 Completed

Day 5: The Dawn of a New Era…
From the 1840s onwards, many European settlers came to live in New Zealand. It was a difficult period in New Zealand’s history. As the settlers began to outnumber the Māori, a great war erupted between the two groups as they fought for access to land to build homes and establish communities.


Activity 1: Translating Phrases
Unlike the Māori, many of the European settlers didn’t speak Te Reo Māori. Instead, they spoke English. As you can imagine, it was very difficult for the two groups to communicate because they did not have a dictionary or a translator. These days we are able to use the Internet to translate words and phrases from one language to another.

Use Google Translate to translate the following five phrases from English to Te Reo Māori or from Te Reo Māori to English. Post the translations on your blog. Be sure to include the phrase in both the English and Māori to earn full points.

Phrases:

  1. Maori: Nau mai ki Aotearoa. English: Welcome to New Zealand
  2. English: Opeti is my name Maori: Ko Opeti toku ingoa
  3. English: What is your name? Maori: He aha to ingoa?
  4. Maori: He pai taku ki te takaro i te whutupaoro. English: I like to play rugby
  5. English: Where do you come from? Maori: No hea koe?

Activity 2 | The Treaty of Waitangi

On 6 February 1840, a very special document was signed by the Māori chiefs and the British settlers in New Zealand. It was called the Treaty of Waitangi (Te Tiriti o Waitangi) and it outlined how the two groups would live together and work together in New Zealand. It was the first document of its kind to be signed in the entire world. The Treaty was signed in a place called Waitangi in northern New Zealand.



Follow this Waitangi village link to read about the village of Waitangi.

On your blog, tell us three fun things that you can do as a visitor in Waitangi. Which one would you like to do the most?
Visiting Waitangi | Things to do

Taiamai Tours
-What I liked about this amazing tour is that you can ride on a waka while exploring and looking around.

Waitagi treaty grounds
- What I liked about this is that you could see olden day stuff that were the biggest war canoe.
Waitangi Hangi & Concert
- What I liked about this is the hangi and the Maori food that is so yum.

Taiamai Tours
This is what I would wanna do the most in Waitangi is Taiamai Tours because you get to go in a Waka and look and the whole of Waitangi.
Bonus Activity | #EarnTheFern
After the Treaty of Waitangi was signed, New Zealand became a British colony. Many other countries in the world are also British colonies including Canada, South Africa, Australia, India and Malaysia. As a group they were, and still are, called the ‘Commonwealth’ countries. Years ago, a man named Melville Marks Robinson was asked to organize a sporting competition for people living in the Commonwealth countries. It is called the Commonwealth Games. The first ever event took place in Hamilton, Canada in 1930.

Athletes from New Zealand have competed in the Commonwealth Games for years. In the most recent Commonwealth Games event in Glasgow, Scotland New Zealand athletes won a total of 45 medals. The next Commonwealth Games will be held in 2018 in the Gold Coast, Australia. Hundreds of athletes are competing for the chance to represent NZ at the games (to 'Earn the Fern').


One of New Zealand’s gold-medal-winning Commonwealth athletes was a man named Bill Kini. Bill won a gold medal at the 1966 Commonwealth Games for being the best heavyweight boxer. He was a man of many talents! He played rugby in Ōtāhuhu in the 1960s and later moved to Whangarei.

Imagine that you could interview Bill. What would you ask him about his time at the 1966 Commonwealth Games. What would you want to know? I’d like to know how he had time to train for two sports at once.


On your blog, write four questions that you would ask Bill Kini.

Bill Kini / Four questions
How did yo feel when you were a boxer? Did you think you will be the strongest.

What was the best thing about being famous? Is it getting the money or getting all the fans.

What did you like about rugby?
getting to bump the guys off or scoring a try.

What did you like Boxing or Rugby?
which was your best sport.


1 comment:

  1. Kia Ora Opeti,

    My name is Jordan and I'm the Kootuitui (Papakura, South Auckland) cluster manager for the Summer Learning Journey 2017-2018 programme. Alongside Billy, I have the pleasure to be commenting on your blog!

    Well done for completing Day 5 of Week 1, and what a beautifully structured blog post.

    I'll start with Activity 1: Translating Phrases.
    Ka pai, e hoa for navigating Google Translate, and for translating phrases from Māori in to English. I think that Te Reo Māori is a really beautiful language. I'm currently learning it— there's certainly a lot to take in! I can speak a bit of Japanese, which is quite similar to Te Reo Māori with the way that the sentences are structured, and also the way in which the vowels are spoken.

    How about you, can you speak another language?

    Activity 2: The Treaty of Waitangi.
    Well done for providing us with three fun things that you can do as a visitor in Waitangi. Going on the Taiamai Tour would be something that I would choose as my favourite, too. Being able to travel in a proper waka and explore the area would be spectacular.
    I tried rowing a boat a few weeks ago actually, and I wasn't very good.
    How about you, can you row?

    Bonus Activity: #EarnTheFern.
    Thanks for providing us with questions that you would like to ask Bill Kini. I'm intrigued by your first question. I, too, wonder how he felt when he was a boxer, and if he thought that he was going to be the strongest. It would be a hard thing to discover, because being the strongest doesn't necessarily mean being the best boxer. Agility has a lot to do with it, too.
    Do you play any sports?

    Keep up the great work, Opeti!

    Cheers,

    Jordan


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