Te Ao Māori
Environment and Sustainability
History and Power
Government and Citizenship
Culture and Identity
100

This term refers to the spiritual essence or life force of all things.

What is mauri?

100

The term for a community of interacting organisms and their environment.

What is ecosystem?

100

A system where profit and private ownership are key.

What is capitalism?

100

The system that makes laws and decisions for a country.

What is government?

100

Treasured possessions, not always physical.

What is taonga?

200

This concept is about guardianship, especially of the environment.

What is kaitiakitanga?

200

A movement that promotes protection of the natural world.

What is environmentalism?

200

The historical process where one country takes control over another.

What is colonisation?

200

Taking part in voting or community decisions is this.

What is participation?

200

Deeply held ideas about what’s important in life.

What are beliefs?

300

This represents genealogical connections to people and the land.

What is whakapapa?

300

Traditional knowledge passed down about the natural world.

What is indigenous knowledge?

300

Māori word for self-determination or sovereignty.

What is tino rangatiratanga?

300

These are entitlements like education, speech, or protection.

What are rights?

300

The connections between people in a whānau, hapū or community.

What is whanaungatanga?

400

This principle is about customs, values, and correct practices.

What is tikanga?

400

An example of a Māori practice that supports environmental sustainability.

What is kaitiakitanga?

400

Colonisation often resulted in the loss of these sacred things.

What are taonga?

400

These are duties such as obeying the law or paying taxes.

What are responsibilities?

400

This Māori worldview sees land, people, and spirit as connected.

What is Te Ao Māori?

500

This concept explains why Māori consider land and water sacred and part of identity.

What is whakapapa or mauri? (accept both with explanation)

500

Explain how Indigenous knowledge might offer different solutions to climate change than Western science.

Open-ended: Must mention long-term relationship with land, spiritual values, holistic view, etc.

500

Explain how colonisation disrupted mana and tino rangatiratanga for Māori.

Must show understanding of loss of authority, cultural suppression, etc.

500

Describe how governments can both support and limit Indigenous rights.

Accept examples like Treaty partnerships, laws around land, voting, or protest.

500

How do mana, tikanga, and whakapapa work together to shape Māori identity?

Must explain interconnection of dignity, correct practice, ancestry.

M
e
n
u