Wednesday, February 12, 2020

Waiari and Te Ahi- Our new journey in 2020 in Te-Puna-Wairua

Ahi-

kia ora e te  whaanau, Ko Te Ahimairangi tooku ingoa. Today i am going to talk about my  new akomanga Te puna wairua.

 My favourite thing about this class is when we do maths called DMIC its cool because we work together with new class mates. At my old school, we had to work by ourselves, but here we get to work together. The next thing is when we finish the morning rehita, we go outside to play games with our teina, we call it whakawhanaungatanga. The other thing that I like about Te Puna Wairua is when we get together the year 4/5/6/7 and 8 and do kapahaka, kapahaka is when we sing and practice our cultural items for the regional comps.


Ka kite anō.


Monday, December 9, 2019

Friday, December 6, 2019

Thursday, November 28, 2019

Tukutuku panel

THE MEANING OF OUR TUKUTUKU
Before I tell you guys the story we named our tukutuku Te wehenga ā Papa-tū-ā-nuku raua ko Ranginui. While Papa-tu-ā-nuku and Ranginui were still together they were slowly falling apart from each other and when they were slowly falling apart they had a feeling that they would never see each other again. When Papa-tu-ā-nuku and Ranginui got separated the children were happy because they had at last freedom. When they were seperated there became a balance between darkness and light the atua had realised that they had made a terrible mistake by separating their parents. After the humans arrival everything started to get oddly strange and they called this climate change. Climate change is where the environment changes like water pollution, flooding and earthquakes. Bad chemicals going into our awa, deforestation, air pollution, sea levels rising, temperatures are rising, lower soil affecting our rainforest. Humans decided to throw rubbish around only thinking about themselves and not Papa-tua-nuku or Ranginui.  
 THE PERSON THAT INSPIRED US?
Heene kerekere was the person because
 She was asked to teach floor mats at 4 different marae in her rohe. We also liked her because She learnt how to weave in the early 1980s. 
WHAT COLOURS DID WE USE?
Green represents Papa-tū-ā-nuku
Black represents Ranginui and the separation
Red represents Tumatauenga
Yellow represents Rongomatāne

Blue represents Tangaroa and Tāwhirimatea.

Monday, November 4, 2019

Weekends