Unit 3: STEM Through Mātauranga Māori - Dual Knowledge Systems for Environmental Action

Integrating traditional Māori environmental knowledge with contemporary STEM approaches for innovative solutions

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Unit 3: STEM Through Mātauranga Māori

Dual Knowledge Systems for Environmental Action

This 8-10 week unit integrates traditional Māori environmental knowledge with contemporary STEM approaches. Students will learn how these two powerful knowledge systems can work together to create innovative solutions for the environmental challenges facing our communities and our planet.

Whakatūwhera - Unit Opening

In this unit, we explore how mātauranga Māori and Western science are not opposing forces, but complementary ways of understanding our natural world. Through the lens of kaitiakitanga, we become environmental guardians using both traditional wisdom and modern technology.

"Ko au te taiao, ko te taiao ko au" - I am the environment, the environment is me.

Weeks 1-2: Dual Knowledge Systems

"He waka eke noa" - A canoe which we are all in with no exception

Learning Focus

Students investigate the nature of knowledge itself, moving beyond the idea that science is the "only" way to understand the world. They explore how Mātauranga Māori (local, place-based, holistic) and Western Science (universal, siloed, analytical) can work together.

Key Concepts

  • Observation (Titiro): The foundation of all science.
  • Maramataka: The Māori lunar calendar as a predictive scientific tool.
  • Empiricism vs Holism: Comparing how different cultures gather data.

Core Activities

Weeks 3-4: Kaitiakitanga in Action

"Toitū te whenua, whatungarongaro te tangata" - The land remains when people have disappeared

Learning Focus

Applying the dual systems to the environment. Students learn to read the "tohu" (signs) of nature. Using bio-indicators (like the health of harakeke or presence of kawakawa looper moths) alongside chemical water testing.

Key Concepts

  • Bio-indicators: Plants/animals that signal ecosystem health.
  • Mauri: Understanding the "life force" of a river or forest physically and spiritually.
  • Rāhui: Conservation as a spiritual and practical restriction.

Core Activities

Weeks 5-6: Cultural Maths & Eco-Tech

From Pattern to Prototype

Mathematics in Design

Unlocking the geometry within kōwhaiwhai and tukutuku. Understanding that our ancestors were master mathematicians and engineers.

Eco-Innovation

Using biomimicry (adapting nature's designs) and mātauranga to solve modern problems (e.g., filtering water using traditional wetland designs).

Core Activities

Weeks 7-8: Community Science Project

"Nā tō rourou, nā taku rourou, ka ora ai te iwi" - With your basket and my basket, the people will thrive

Capstone Project: The Dual-Knowledge Report

Students select an environmental issue in their school or community (e.g., waste, water quality, biodiversity loss). They must produce a report/solution that includes:

  • Scientific Data: Measurements, graphs, objective analysis.
  • Cultural Context: Historical status of the land, whakataukÄ«, and potential for rāhui or restoration.
  • Action Plan: A proposed solution that respects both systems.

Lesson 5: Community Science guides the presentation of these findings.

šŸ“Ž Unit Resources

Downloadable handouts, worksheets, and materials for this unit.

🌿 Nga Rauemi Tauwehe - External Resources

High-quality resources from official New Zealand education sites to extend and enrich this learning content.

Science Learning Hub

Over 11,550 NZ science education resources for teachers, students and community

Years: 1-13 66% Match Official NZ Resource

Tāhūrangi - Te Reo Māori Education Hub

Official NZ government hub for te reo Māori resources, guidance, and teaching support

Years: 7-13 35% Match Official NZ Resource

šŸ¤– These resources were automatically curated by Te Kete Ako's AI system to complement this content. All external links lead to official New Zealand educational and government websites.