Te Kete Ipurangi Navigation:

Te Kete Ipurangi
Communities
Schools

Te Kete Ipurangi user options:


Literacy Online. Every child literate - a shared responsibility.

Instructional Series

Welcome to the English medium literacy instructional series teaching and learning resources for years 1 to 8.

Example resources
Tip: enter the exact title of the resource you are seeking, or use one or two keywords.
  • 2
  • 4
  • English
  • Social Sciences
  • false
  • Fiction
  • Stories
/content/search?SearchText=Baskets of fire&SubTreeArray[]=22578&CurriculumLevel=all&ReadingYearLevel=all&LearningArea=all&Type=all

Search results

2 items - Showing 1 - 2

  • Baskets on fire.

    Baskets of Fire

    Two students holding plastic.

    by Whiti Hereaka

    “Baskets of Fire” is a pakiwaitara – a traditional Māori story that explains natural phenomena or why something is the way it is. This pakiwaitara tells how the Ngāti Tūwharetoa explorer Ngātoro-i-rangi discovers Mount Tongariro and wants to claim it for his people.

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Learning area: English, Social Sciences

    Curriculum level: 2

    Reading year level: 4

    Category: Fiction

    Related titles: Listed in TSM

    Topics: atua, explorers, fire, gods, Hawaiki, Lake Taupō, legends, magical powers, Māori, mountains, Ngāuruhoe, Ngātoro-i-rangi, Rūaumoko, Te Arawa, Te Hoata, Te Pupū, tikanga Māori, Tongariro, traditional stories, volcanic activity, volcanoes

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

  • Two students holding plastic.

    School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    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 A Waste of Space    
    Baskets of Fire
    Poems Plastic Planet    
    Articles Tafoe O!
    The Plastic-free Challenge  

    Series: School Journal

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

    Look inside this issue

    Two people driving a spaceship.

    A Waste of Space

    Two students holding plastic.

    by Simon Cooke

    illustrated by Dede Putra

    ""Warning!” said the ship’s computer. “Impact in –” Bang! Something slammed into the ship. Mia and Tane were thrown across the flight deck."

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Learning area: English

    Curriculum level: 2

    Reading year level: 4

    Category: Fiction

    Topics: environment, gravity, humour, pollution, rubbish, science fiction, space, sustainability

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

    Baskets on fire.

    Baskets of Fire

    Two students holding plastic.

    by Whiti Hereaka

    “Baskets of Fire” is a pakiwaitara – a traditional Māori story that explains natural phenomena or why something is the way it is. This pakiwaitara tells how the Ngāti Tūwharetoa explorer Ngātoro-i-rangi discovers Mount Tongariro and wants to claim it for his people.

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Learning area: English, Social Sciences

    Curriculum level: 2

    Reading year level: 4

    Category: Fiction

    Related titles: Listed in TSM

    Topics: atua, explorers, fire, gods, Hawaiki, Lake Taupō, legends, magical powers, Māori, mountains, Ngāuruhoe, Ngātoro-i-rangi, Rūaumoko, Te Arawa, Te Hoata, Te Pupū, tikanga Māori, Tongariro, traditional stories, volcanic activity, volcanoes

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

    Plastic items.

    Plastic Planet

    Two students holding plastic.

    by James Brown

    illustrated by Fraser Williamson

    "Plastic raincoats, plastic rain. Plastic in our hearts and brains. Long after we’ve come and gone, our plastic footprints will live on."

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Learning area: English

    Curriculum level: 2

    Reading year level: 4

    Category: Fiction

    Topics: citizenship, environment, humour, plastic, poetry, pollution, recycling, rhyme, rhythm, rubbish, sustainability, verse

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

    Students and teacher performing tafoe.

    Tafoe O!

    Two students holding plastic.

    by Hio Kelemete

    Every Sunday, a group of Tokelau adults and children meet in Wellington to pass on cultural knowledge. Recently, artist and master carver Paulino Tuwhala guided the group through the task of carving foe (paddles), which they used to perform a tafoe (dance).

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 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: action songs, aganuku, belonging, carving, church, community, culture, dance, design, faith, fakatuatua, foe, generations, identity, kaulotu, learning, lotokaiga, lyrics, Pacific, paddles, performing, practice, song, tafoe, teaching, Tokelau, toki, traditions

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text

    Bird sitting on a beach with plastic.

    The Plastic-free Challenge

    Two students holding plastic.

    by Deanna Ferguson

    When the Room 5 students at Motueka South School saw a video about the Great Pacific Garbage Patch, they were inspired to take action. There’s a lot of media attention on how plastic is polluting the oceans, and it sometimes seems as if the problem is too big to tackle. These students show that it’s possible to make small changes that lead to big results.

    Series: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Learning area: English, Mathematics and Statistics, Science

    Curriculum level: 2

    Reading year level: 4

    Category: Non-fiction

    Related titles: Listed in TSM

    Topics: Boyan Slat, challenge, citizenship, cooperation, environment, Great Pacific Garbage Patch, inspiration, Motueka South School, Ocean Cleanup, Pacific Ocean, planning, plastic, pollution, recycling, rubbish, sea creatures, social action, sustainability

    In: School Journal Level 2 November 2018

    Publication date: November 2018

    Order this text