Saturday, 25 March 2017

Wiki Tuawaru, Wahanga Tuatahi, 2017

Meinga, Meinga, kua tere haere ngā wiki inaianei.

The weeks are flying past as we farewell week 8!!

Another great learning week for our Tūī in room 23.

Tuhituhi

We've been learning how we can use a sentence structure by using the picture to help us guess what the sentence might say and by breaking it up and then put it back together. We learnt these were called "cut up stories".

We are getting more and more confident in communicating our ideas and our ability and confidence in communicating in te reo Māori is growing as well. Our picture detail is developing each day which helps when we explain what our picture is trying to say.

Pānui

Our pānui is moving slowly but steadily, keep practicing the arapū Māori each night because we can then use that knowledge to help sound out words during wā pānui.
We can use;

  • ngā pikitia (pictures)
  • ngā oro timatanga (the beginning sounds)
  • ngā pū (letters)
  • ngā kupu waiwai (high frequency words)
to help us while we are reading. 

We have also been learning beyond the words by;

  • thinking about how they characters feel
  • predicting what will happen next
  • identifying sentence structures and patterns
  • where capital letters are found and what a full stop tells us
Pāngarau

Counting to 100 is tough but we are getting better every day. We count forward easily but counting back is tricky. 

Kei te ako mātou i ngā tauira me te pānga. Patterns are everywhere and we have been learning to identify the pattern and continue the pattern.

 We used coloured strips of paper to create our own patterns.
Te mutunga mai o te pai tamariki mā.
The best part of our week was when Ms Nathan announced that Room 23 had the BEST attendance for week 7 out of ALL of the classes at Clendon Park School. 
Me mihi ka tiki ki a koutou katoa ngā tamariki me ngā whānau e kaha ana ki te tautoko i ā koutou tamariki kia tae mai ki te kura. Mā tō rātou taenga mai ki te kura ka taea e rātou te ako i ngā mahi katoa o te kura.

Nei rā ngā tamariki o te akomanga 23 e koakoa ana me te kapu taenga ki te kura.


Mauri ora e te whānau.


Tuesday, 14 March 2017

Wiki Tuawhitu, Wahanga Tuatahi

Kino kē ngā Tūī o te Akomanga 23!!

Our Tūī in Room 23 have had a wonderful start to our learning this week.
With the help of Matua Dudley and Whaea Carol we began our inquiry about Hangi.

We started off with a brainstorm about hangi, 

Kei te mōhio kē mātou? What do we already know?

Their responses were:

  • You put stuff in the ground.
  • Put the fire in the ground.
  • Put leave and wood.
  • Put vegetable in - carrots and corn
  • Rocks are in the fire.
  • Sausages, chicken
  • Have hangi at tangi and parties.
Our tamariki shared some awesome ideas about what they already knew about hangi. I then asked them what they would like to know about hangi and two pātai came about.

  1. Can you cook fish in the hangi?
  2. Can we cook a hangi in the oven?
After our brainstorming we watched a couple of video clips showing us how to make a ground hangi before we went into Te Korowai Aroha a Rahera to prepare our hangi for the oven.


We had to put our kai into our tray
Whaea Carol put the stuffing in before Whaea
Camille put the lids on each tray.
Matua Dudley put them all into the oven and we let them cook for just over an hour.
We went back into Te Whare Awhina and decided to look on youtube to see if you can cook fish in a hangi and we learnt that YES you can cook fish in a hangi!!

Me karakia i mua i te kai.
He reka te hangi ki a mātou katoa. 

Thumbs up for our yummy hangi in the oven.
We also learnt that we can cook a hangi in the oven not just in the ground.

Our Inquiry about Hangi was a GREAT success, no doubt this is the beginning of many more inquiries to come.

Mauri ora ki a koutou katoa e te whānau.

Saturday, 11 March 2017

Wahanga 1 Wiki Tuarima me te Tuaono

Mauri ora ki a koutou katoa e te whānau, 

In week 5 we had a big class shift in Te Whānau Āwhina which meant sadly we had to say goodbye to 10 of our whānau members who moved to another class, but we then welcomed 12 new whānau members into our Tūī whānau.

We have learnt a lot in the past 2 weeks about each other and learning our routines too.

We've been making Pāngarau fun by using cards to help us with our number identification. 



 Kei te āta whakaaro a Marley-Joy, ko tēwhea te kāri tika.
Marley- Joy is thinking carefully about which cards she wants.

Each card we turn we have to read the number our loud to the rōpū before picking our second card. If both kāri are the same then we get to keep the pair, if not we turn then over again and it's the next persons turn.



Jullian is keeping a close eye on which cards Trevarn picks while he waits patiently for his turn again.

He rawe tēnei rōpū te pānui tau!!







Me whakanuia ka tika i a Kerin, nāna te tiwhikete i whiwhi i te wiki tuaono. Pāia Kerin!!


I whiwhi a Kerin i tēnei tiwhikete mō tana kaha ki te pānui, mīharo rawa atu tāu mahi e tama.

We have been busy finishing our art work for the hall. If you have a spare moment please come into our office and ask if you can have a look at all the amazing art our students have created.

Here's a sneak peak at ours.
So bright and colourful. The tamariki used a cotton bud to showcase their dotting skills. I think they turned our amazing!!

Our TWA teina enjoy their waiata and haka time with Matua Richard during Kapa Haka. Here is a video of our tama showing all their ihi and wehi with their haka.
These are only a few of the many things we have been doing in Akomanga 23, te whānau Tūī.

Watch this space as we update our blog with more awesome mahi.

Mauri ora ki a koutou katoa.