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School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Two children

PDFs of all the texts in this issue of the School Journal are available online as well as teacher support materials (TSM) and audio for the following:

    TSM Audio
Stories As Easy as One, Two, Three  
Articles A Hoe!  
Ngatu: Keeping the Tradition Alive
Painted Hoe

Series: School Journal

Publication date: June 2018

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Steve gibbs and his artwork.

A Hoe!

by Steve Gibbs

The first peaceful meetings between Māori and Europeans took place in 1769, when James Cook landed in the Tairāwhiti region. During those meetings, Māori traded a number of painted hoe (paddles) for cloth, seeds, potatoes, and other items. The paddles are decorated with the earliest examples of what we now call kōwhaiwhai. They ended up in museums around the world.

Series: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Learning area: English, The Arts, Social Sciences

Curriculum level: 2

Reading year level: 4

Category: Fiction

Related titles: Listed in TSM

Topics: “A Hoe!”, art, canoes, colonisation, design, drawing, Endeavour, exhibitions, first meetings, Gisborne, history, hoe, James Cook, kōwhaiwhai, Māori,New Zealand history, “No Ordinary Bird”, paddles, painting, Pawa, “Scent”, “Sixth Sense”, Sydney Parkinson, symbolism, Tairāwhiti Museum, taonga, Te Hā, “Te Hoe Nukuroa”, te kurī a Pawa, tradition, Tupaia, Tūranganui-a-Kiwa, waka, Whareongaonga

In: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Publication date: June 2018

Order this text

Person standing next to spaceship

As Easy as One, Two, Three

by Simon Cooke

illustrated by Dede Putra

After crash landing on an unfriendly planet, Tane and Mia must find an energy crystal to recharge their ship. Tane has found a crystal, but he’s stuck in security goo outside the Meruvian fortress. To rescue Tane, Mia must navigate her way through the most difficult defence maze in the universe! She has her guide-bot to help, but unfortunately, the guide-bot doesn’t have all the data necessary to find the quickest and safest route through the maze.

Series: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Learning area: English, Technology

Curriculum level: 2

Reading year level: 4

Category: Fiction

Related titles: Listed in TSM

Topics: algorithms, computers, courage, family, fantasy, future, humour, logic, maze, science fiction, siblings, space, working together

In: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Publication date: June 2018

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Teachers and students sitting around a table

Ngatu: Keeping the Tradition Alive

by Iona McNaughton

Megan and Lita are cousins who belong to the Tongan community in Wellington. This article describes how every week they come together with their mothers, grandmother, and other women and girls to learn about Tongan culture and how to make ngatu (tapa cloth). It explains the process of making ngatu and the significance of the cloth, and it demonstrates how such traditions are passed down through the generations.

Series: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Learning area: English, The Arts, Social Sciences, Technology

Curriculum level: 2

Reading year level: 4

Category: Non-fiction

Related titles: Listed in TSM

Topics: community, culture, design, family, feta‘aki, grandparents, identity, lea faka-Tonga, ngatu, parents, processes, tapa, Tonga, traditions

In: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Publication date: June 2018

Order this text

Waka

Painted Hoe

by Steve Gibbs

The first peaceful meetings between Māori and Europeans took place in 1769, when James Cook landed in the Tairāwhiti region. During those meetings, Māori traded a number of painted hoe (paddles) for cloth, seeds, potatoes, and other items. The paddles are decorated with the earliest examples of what we now call kōwhaiwhai. They ended up in museums around the world. “Painted Hoe” describes those early meetings.

Series: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Learning area: English, The Arts, Social Sciences

Curriculum level: 2

Reading year level: 4

Category: Non-fiction

Related titles: Listed in TSM

Topics: art, canoes, design, Endeavour, first meetings, Gisborne, history, hoe, James Cook, kōwhaiwhai, Māori, New Zealand history, paddles, taonga, Te Hā, Tupaia, Tūranganui-a- Kiwa, waka, Whareongaonga

In: School Journal Level 2 June 2018

Publication date: June 2018

Order this text

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