🏛️ Values Architecture - Designing My Whare

Students translate identity and whenua insights into a tangible blueprint for their personal whare of wellbeing.

🏛️ Mastery Lesson 3: Building the Foundation - Personal Values Architecture

⏱️ Duration: 80 minutes
👥 Year 8
🎯 Taha Wairua • Taha Hinengaro
🆔 HauOra-p3-u1-l3

🎯 Lesson Overview

Students synthesise insights gathered in Lessons 1-2 to design the foundations of their personal whare. Using architectural metaphors, they map values, protective boundaries, and growth goals for each pou of Te Whare Tapa Whā.

🌿 Te Ao Māori Approach

Architectural design is grounded in whakapapa: every beam is anchored in story, ancestors, and whenua. Students honour this by naming each structural element in te reo Māori and linking it to a lived practice.

🎯 Learning Intentions & Success Criteria

Learning Intentions

  • Identify core values that uphold each wall of Te Whare Tapa Whā
  • Create a visual blueprint showing protective boundaries and growth pathways
  • Explain how values influence daily decisions and wellbeing
  • Use Te Reo vocabulary to label whare components accurately

Success Criteria

  • I can connect at least two personal values to each dimension of hauora
  • I can justify why each value is important to my whare
  • I can describe strategies that protect my foundations
  • I can share my blueprint respectfully with peers

🧱 Key Concepts

Tautara

Corner posts of the whare that symbolise unwavering values.

Pou Tokomanawa

Central post representing balance between dimensions.

Ārai

Protective boundaries—habits and routines that keep the whare strong.

Whakaaro Hōu

New mindsets or future-focused aspirations to add to the design.

📋 Lesson Activities

Activity 1: Value Excavation Interviews

⏱️ 15 min

Pairs interview each other using provided prompts (e.g., “When do you feel most proud?”, “Who in your whānau models strength?”). Students highlight keywords that keep surfacing—these become potential pou values.

  • Teacher circulates, offering additional kupu for students wanting Māori vocabulary.
  • Students record at least three value statements on sticky notes.

Activity 2: Blueprint Studio

⏱️ 35 min

Using the large-format template, students sketch their whare. Each wall is labelled with a value, a protective practice, and an everyday action.

  1. Students lightly draw outlines, then add kupu labels for each pou.
  2. They mark thresholds (doors/windows) with habits that invite support.
  3. Teacher mini-conference with learners needing scaffolds.

Activity 3: Tuakana-Teina Gallery Walk

⏱️ 20 min

Students display blueprints and receive feedback using “Tautoko / Pātai / Whakaaro Hou” sticky notes (Support / Question / New Idea). Focus on cultural respect and constructive language.

🧭 Assessment & Reflection

  • Exit card: “The strongest wall in my whare is… because…”
  • Teacher uses a quick rubric (1-4) on clarity of values and Te Reo usage.
  • Students log next steps in their hauora journal (provided template).