Lesson 4.1: The Treaty of Waitangi & Co-Governance
The Foundation of Our Nation's Systems
Students explore Te Tiriti o Waitangi not as a relic of the past, but as a living `kawenata` (covenant) that establishes the relationship between Māori and the Crown and provides a blueprint for co-governance.
Whakatūwhera - Cultural Opening
Te Tiriti o Waitangi is more than a document; it is a `kawenata`, a sacred covenant. It was a promise of a relationship, a partnership between two peoples to share this land and build a future together. It was intended to create a system of co-governance. Today, we will explore that promise. We will look at what was agreed to, how that promise was broken, and how people today are working to honour it by building new systems based on partnership.
Ngā Whāinga Ako - Learning Intentions
Students Will Learn
- The key differences between the **Māori and English texts** of Te Tiriti.
- The meaning of the **Three P's**: Partnership, Participation, and Protection.
- What **co-governance** means in a modern context.
Students Will Demonstrate
- By explaining the difference between `kāwanatanga` and `sovereignty`.
- By applying the Three P's to a school-based scenario.
- By analyzing a real-world example of co-governance.
Ngā Mahi - Lesson Activities (75 minutes)
1. Two Texts, Two Meanings (25 mins)
Activity: Using the Treaty Texts Comparison handout, students work in pairs to compare the English and Māori versions of Article 1 and Article 2.
Key Question for Article 1:
Did Māori agree to give up "sovereignty" or just "kāwanatanga" (governorship)? What is the difference?
Key Question for Article 2:
What does "tino rangatiratanga" (absolute chieftainship) promise to Māori? How does this conflict with the English version?
2. The Three P's: A Framework for Partnership (20 mins)
Teacher-led Discussion: Introduce the "Three P's" as a way to understand our obligations under the Treaty today.
Partnership
Māori and the Crown must work together in good faith.
Participation
Māori must be fully involved in decisions that affect them.
Protection
The Crown must actively protect Māori language, culture, and resources.
Activity: How could we apply the Three P's to our school's decision-making?
3. Co-Governance in Action (30 mins)
Case Study: Introduce a modern example of co-governance, such as the Waikato River Authority, where the river is represented by both iwi and Crown appointees who must make decisions together.
Group Task: Students create a simple diagram showing how this co-governance model works. They must label how it demonstrates Partnership, Participation, and Protection.
Differentiation:
- Support: Provide a pre-made diagram of the authority, and students just have to label where the Three P's are happening.
- Extension: Research another example of co-governance in New Zealand.
Aromatawai - Assessment & Next Steps
Formative Assessment
- Can students articulate the key difference between the two Treaty texts?
- Can they apply the Three P's to a new scenario?
- Does their co-governance diagram show understanding of the concept?
Homework & Extension
- Ask a family member what they know about the Treaty.
- Find a news article about a modern Treaty issue.
Whakaaro - Reflection
The Treaty of Waitangi is not about blame; it is about a promise. It is a guide for how we can live together in Aotearoa in a way that is fair, just, and honours the rights of all people. Understanding the original promise of partnership is the first step to building a better and more equitable system of governance for the future, and co-governance is one of the ways we are trying to bring that promise to life.