š± He WhakataukÄ«
"Ko ahau te taiao, ko te taiao ko ahau"
I am the environment, and the environment is me
This whakataukÄ« reminds us that in Te Ao MÄori (the MÄori worldview), humans and nature are not separate - they are interconnected. As you research Te Ao MÄori foundations, remember this deep connection that shapes how MÄori understand the world.
š About This Guided Inquiry Project
Instead of writing an essay from scratch, you'll be guided step-by-step through the research process. This helps you develop essential skills: asking good questions, finding reliable sources, analyzing evidence, and drawing conclusions.
You will:
- Develop your own research question about Te Ao MÄori
- Use multiple source types (academic, oral, visual)
- Apply critical thinking frameworks
- Synthesize findings into clear conclusions
- Present your research using multiple formats
Stage 1: Choose Your Research Focus
Select ONE essential question that interests you. These questions can't be answered with simple facts - they require deep investigation.
š Pathway A: Whakapapa & Interconnectedness
Essential Question:
"How does the concept of whakapapa shape MÄori understanding of relationships between people, places, and the natural world?"
Research Areas:
- Genealogical connections beyond family trees
- Whakapapa of landscapes and natural features
- How whakapapa influences decision-making
- Comparison with Western individualistic thinking
šļø Pathway B: Mauri & Life Force
Essential Question:
"Why is mauri (life force) central to MÄori environmental practices, and how does this challenge Western ideas about 'resources'?"
Research Areas:
- Mauri in rivers, forests, and landscapes
- How mauri guides kaitiakitanga practices
- Differences from Western 'natural resources' thinking
- Contemporary applications in environmental law
š£ļø Pathway C: Te Reo & Worldview
Essential Question:
"How does te reo MÄori reflect and preserve unique ways of understanding the world that can't be translated into English?"
Research Areas:
- Untranslatable concepts (aroha, whakatÅhea, etc.)
- How language shapes thinking
- Language revitalization and worldview preservation
- Examples from other Indigenous languages
āļø Pathway D: Utu & Restorative Justice
Essential Question:
"How does the MÄori concept of utu (balanced response) offer different approaches to justice than Western punishment systems?"
Research Areas:
- Utu as balance and reciprocity, not revenge
- Traditional conflict resolution practices
- Modern restorative justice applications
- Community healing vs individual punishment
š My Chosen Research Focus:
Stage 2: Develop Your Specific Research Question
Take your chosen pathway and make it more specific. A strong research question is:
ā Strong Research Questions:
- Focused on specific examples
- Can be answered with evidence
- Allow for multiple perspectives
- Connect to contemporary issues
ā Weak Research Questions:
- Too broad or vague
- Can be answered with a simple fact
- Based on stereotypes
- Only have one "right" answer
šÆ Question Development Examples:
Whakapapa Focus Example:
"How do NgÄti TÅ«wharetoa understand their whakapapa connection to Lake TaupÅ, and how does this influence their environmental protection strategies?"
Mauri Focus Example:
"How did recognition of Te Urewera's mauri in the 2014 Te Urewera Act change legal thinking about nature's rights in Aotearoa?"
š MY SPECIFIC RESEARCH QUESTION:
Stage 3: Identify Your Source Types
To understand Te Ao MÄori authentically, you need diverse source types. Check off each type as you find them:
š£ļø Oral Sources (MÄtauranga MÄori)
- Interviews with kaumÄtua or cultural experts
- Recorded whakataukÄ« or whakatÅhea explanations
- Iwi website oral histories
- Documentary interviews
š Academic Sources
- MÄori scholars' research (Linda Tuhiwai Smith, Mason Durie, etc.)
- Peer-reviewed journal articles
- University research papers
- Books by respected MÄori academics
šļø Contemporary Applications
- Recent Treaty settlement documents
- Environmental court cases
- Iwi management plans
- Government policy incorporating MÄori worldviews
š° Media & Current Events
- MÄori Television or Radio New Zealand interviews
- Recent news about environmental disputes
- Social media from MÄori activists/educators
- TED talks or YouTube videos by MÄori speakers
ā ļø Critical Source Evaluation:
Always prioritize sources BY MÄori people ABOUT MÄori topics. Be cautious of non-MÄori interpretations that might misrepresent concepts. Ask: "Who has the cultural authority to speak on this topic?"
Stage 4: Collect & Analyze Evidence
Use this framework to systematically analyze each source. Complete one table per source:
| š SOURCE ANALYSIS #1 | |
|---|---|
| Source Type: | |
| Author/Speaker: | |
| Cultural Authority: | |
| Key Evidence: | |
| Connection to My Question: | |
š” Analysis Questions to Consider:
- What specific examples does this source provide?
- How does this connect to contemporary issues?
- What perspective does this represent?
- How does this compare/contrast with other sources?
- What questions does this raise for further research?
Stage 5: Synthesize Your Findings
Now bring together what you've learned from multiple sources. This is where you develop your own insights:
š§© Pattern Recognition:
What patterns do you see across your sources?
What contradictions or tensions did you discover?
How do these findings challenge or confirm your initial assumptions?
šÆ Your Research Conclusion:
Based on your evidence, how would you answer your research question?
What are the broader implications of your findings?
What questions emerged that could guide future research?
Stage 6: Present Your Research
Choose how you'll share your findings. Pick the format that best suits your research and strengths:
š° Traditional Research Essay
1,500-2,000 words with introduction, body paragraphs presenting evidence, and conclusion. Include proper citations.
š„ Video Documentary
8-10 minute video combining narration, interviews (if possible), images, and evidence. Include source credits.
š¤ Podcast Episode
15-20 minute audio exploring your research, including "interviews" with historical figures or expert quotes.
š¼ļø Digital Exhibition
Interactive display (website, poster series, or presentation) combining visuals, text, and multimedia elements.
My chosen presentation format:
ā Assessment Rubric - Te Ao MÄori Research Skills
| Criteria | Developing | Achieved | Excelling |
|---|---|---|---|
| Research Question | Broad or unfocused question; limited connection to Te Ao MÄori | Clear, focused question directly related to Te Ao MÄori concepts | Sophisticated question showing deep understanding of MÄori worldview complexities |
| Source Selection | Limited source types; some non-MÄori perspectives only | Multiple source types including MÄori voices; culturally appropriate | Diverse, high-quality sources prioritizing MÄori expertise; critical evaluation of authority |
| Evidence Analysis | Basic summary of sources; limited connection between evidence | Clear analysis of evidence; identifies patterns and contradictions | Sophisticated synthesis; evaluates reliability and recognizes multiple perspectives |
| Cultural Understanding | Surface-level understanding; some misconceptions evident | Demonstrates genuine understanding of concepts; culturally respectful | Deep, nuanced understanding; makes meaningful connections to contemporary issues |
| Conclusion | Restates information without clear conclusion | Draws clear conclusions based on evidence; addresses research question | Insightful conclusions with broader implications; identifies areas for future research |
| Presentation | Basic organization; minimal creativity | Well-organized, engaging format; clear communication | Creative, polished presentation; effective use of chosen medium; culturally appropriate |