This is your mahi for weeks 9 and 10 please work hard and try to complete it all.
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This is your mahi for weeks six and seven. Please work hard and try to complete it all.
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Please complete your mahi this week - next week there will be a new slideshow.
Can you please email Whaea Kylie and let her know if you are finished the slideshow? Also email with your assessment when you want it checked or some feedback.
Learning: To read, write, speak and listen in te reo Māori by building on the foundations we already have.
Use it or lose it e te whānau!
Log in to drops a daily game for learning te reo.
Check your learning folder, complete your worksheets and hand in to Whaea. You will have one or two books in your folder. Please read these and write any new words in your pukapuka reo Māori. Watch this video to help you with reading your pukapuka.
Make sure you keep learning the kupu (words) for fruit and vegetables. Play this game: Fruit n veg game
Watch the videos and do the online work on this link.
Manu mahi link to assessment
You have some worksheets in the year nine or year ten folder to complete. These are based on learning numbers and sentences in te reo Māori. Please complete the worksheet. Then get the marking book from Whaea.
In the same folder is a book for you to read. You can work with a friend. Look up the words that you do not yet know and write them in your book. after you have read the book, see if you can understand what it was about. Write a short summary.
Talk about the new words and sentences that were in the book with your friends. You will share these thoughts with the rest of your group and Whaea Kylie.
Make sure you keep learning the kupu (words) for fruit and vegetables.
You need to watch the video below and learn the new sentence. Follow the instructions next to and below the video.
Learning about tēnei, follow the instructions below.
Manu mahi link to assessment
Watch this video - practice asking each other what your favourite fruit is.
Learn this question:
He aha te huarākau tino pai ki a koe? He ārani.
Write the question and a different answer, five times in your book. Practise asking and answering with your friends. Scroll down for the fruits and veggie words.
Watch this short video and take notes
Year 9
Keep practising your pepeha. Check in with Whaea Kylie.
Ahau, koe ia is out learning this week. You need to make a copy of the slideshow below. Save it in your NHK folder. add your name to the title and work your way through it.
You also need to try to learn the kupu Māori for fruit and vegetables (see below).
Year 10
Pronouns: rātou, mātou, tātou and koutou. This week you will be focusing on learning these and using these. These are a lot of resources for you to look at and work through on the last few slides of the slideshow.
You also need to learn the kupu Māori for fruit and vegetables (see below).
Ngā hua whenua (vegetables) and ngā hua rākau (fruit) - please learn as many of these as you can.
Keep learning the fruit and veggies below. Whaea has a game of bingo for you to play. Practise your learning on this page
Take a walk around the marakai (garden) that is outside the whare. What do you see in the garden? Do you know the kupu Māori for what you see?
Click on this link and make a copy, this will help you have access to macrons. you need to try hard to use macrons correctly. Watch this video.
Adding to your pepeha... It is time to make your pepeha even better!
What information do you want to say in your introduction?
What do you already know and what do you need to find out from home?
Add a whakataukī to begin with and add extra to your ending.
Find a picture online of your Maunga and your marae, sketch these or some patterns to represent these along with your awa and waka in your pukapuka.
YEAR 9:There are some print outs on the table for you to use to begin with - fill in the blank parts and work out what else you would like to say. Whaea Kylie can help you and so can matua Joe and some of our senior students.
Once you have worked out the new information you want to add, write out your pepeha in full at the front of your new pukapuka Māori.