Systems Thinking — Whakaaro Pūnaha

A Year 8 Social Studies unit on how parts, people, and decisions connect

← Back to Y8 Systems Unit

Lesson 1.2: Systems Are Everywhere

Learning to See the World Through a Systems Lens

Students learn to identify systems in their everyday lives, from natural ecosystems to social structures, understanding that a system is a set of connected parts forming a complex whole.

Whakatūwhera - Cultural Opening

In Te Ao Māori, nothing exists in isolation. The forest, the rivers, the community—they are all interconnected systems. The principle of whanaungatanga teaches us that our relationships with people and with the environment are what give us strength. Today, we will learn to see these connections everywhere, to recognise the hidden patterns and relationships that make up our world. This is the heart of systems thinking.

Ngā Whāinga Ako - Learning Intentions

Students Will Learn

  • To define a **system** (parts, purpose, connections).
  • To identify systems in the **natural world**.
  • To identify systems in the **social world**.

Students Will Demonstrate

  • By finding examples of systems in the classroom.
  • By drawing and labeling a system they are part of.
  • By explaining how one part of a system can affect the whole.

Ngā Mahi - Lesson Activities (75 minutes)

1. What is a System? (15 mins)

Teacher-led discussion: Introduce the three key parts of any system:

  • Parts: The individual components or elements.
  • Connections: The relationships between the parts.
  • Purpose: What the system does or achieves.

Example: A Bicycle. Parts (wheels, frame, pedals), Connections (chain connects pedals to wheel), Purpose (transportation).

Activity: "Systems Spotting Game." In 1 minute, how many systems can students spot in the classroom? (e.g., the lighting system, the desk system, the human body system).

2. Draw Your System (30 mins)

Creative Task: Students choose one system they are a part of and draw it. They must label the parts, the connections, and the overall purpose.

System Ideas:

  • My family system
  • My sports team system
  • The school bus system
  • A video game system (e.g., Fortnite)
  • A local park ecosystem

Differentiation:

  • Support: Provide a template with boxes for "Parts," "Connections," and "Purpose." Download Template
  • Extension: Ask students to add a "What if?" scenario to their drawing (e.g., "What if one part was removed?").

3. Gallery Walk & Sharing (20 mins)

Students place their drawings around the room. In small groups, they do a "gallery walk" to see each other's work. Each student shares their drawing with their small group, explaining the parts, connections, and purpose.

Aromatawai - Assessment & Next Steps

Formative Assessment

  • Can students define "system" in their own words?
  • Do their drawings correctly identify parts, connections, and purpose?
  • Can they explain how a change in one part affects the whole system?

Homework & Extension

  • Find a news story about a system that is broken (e.g., a healthcare system, a transportation system).
  • Explain a system to a family member.

Whakaaro - Reflection

Seeing the world as a series of systems is like gaining a superpower. Instead of seeing separate, unrelated things, you start to see the hidden connections and patterns all around you. This is the first step to understanding how our world works, and how we can work to change it for the better.

🌿 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

Science in the NZ Curriculum

Official NZ science curriculum with Nature of Science, Living World, Physical World strands

Years: 1-10 60% 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 30% Match Official NZ Resource

🤖 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.