Age Group: 8-year-olds
Duration: 45–60 minutes
Learning Objectives
- Learn three steps to understand and grow their “inner garden”: Observe, Analyze, Action.
- Practice mindfulness and kindness (manaakitanga) to nurture positive thoughts and actions.
- Connect self-growth to Māori values like whanaungatanga (relationships) and kaitiakitanga (care for the environment).
Materials
- “Garden of Self” Poster with sections: Seeds (Observe), Weeds (Analyze), Flowers (Action).
- Emotion Cards (happy, sad, angry, calm) with Māori symbols (heart = aroha, koru = growth).
- Breathing Feathers (real or craft feathers for mindfulness).
- Craft Supplies: Paper, colored pencils, stickers, and pounamu (greenstone) shapes.
- Storybook: Tama the Tūī Learns to Grow (custom story about a bird nurturing its garden).
Lesson Structure
1. Storytime: Tama the Tūī’s Garden (10 mins)
- Story: Tama the Tūī notices weeds (sadness) in his garden. With help from Koro the Kererū, he learns to:
- Observe (spot weeds),
- Analyze (choose flowers instead),
- Take Action (water the flowers with kindness).
- Ask: “What ‘weeds’ or ‘flowers’ do YOU have in your mind?”
2. Activity 1: Observe Like a Detective (10 mins)
- Mindfulness Exercise:
- Hand out “breathing feathers.” “Close your eyes, breathe in (ha) and out (oho). Notice how you feel—happy, calm, or wobbly?”
- Emotion Cards: Kids pick a card matching their feeling and place it on the “Garden of Self” poster (Seeds section).
3. Activity 2: Analyze with Aroha (15 mins)
- Sorting Game:
- Weeds vs. Flowers: Use emotion cards to sort “helpful” (flowers) and “unhelpful” (weeds) feelings.
- Example: “Angry” = weed (repulsive), “Calm” = flower (attractive).
- Māori Connection: Discuss how manaakitanga (kindness) helps weeds become flowers.
- Weeds vs. Flowers: Use emotion cards to sort “helpful” (flowers) and “unhelpful” (weeds) feelings.
- Sticky Notes: Kids write/draw one “weed” they want to change and stick it on the poster (Weeds section).
4. Activity 3: Action Heroes (15 mins)
- Role-Play:
- Scenarios: “Your friend takes your toy. Do you shout (weed) or share (flower)?”
- Use a pounamu (greenstone) as a “kindness token” to pass when kids suggest solutions.
- Craft: Make a “Flower of Action” with petals labeled: Share, Breathe, Ask for Help. Add to the poster (Flowers section).
5. Conclusion: Karakia for Growth (5 mins)
- Recap: “We observed our garden, pulled weeds, and planted flowers! Now our minds can bloom.”
- Karakia: “Kia tipu te pai i roto i a tātou” (May goodness grow within us).
- Take-Home: A paper pounamu with steps: Observe, Analyze, Action.
Curriculum Links
- Health & PE: Mental well-being, self-management.
- Social Sciences: Roles in communities.
- Te Ao Māori: Aroha, manaakitanga, and connection to nature.
Assessment
- Participation in sorting/role-play.
- Thoughtfulness in craft and discussion.
🌟 Why It Works:
- Uses NZ birds and symbols for cultural relevance.
- Turns abstract concepts into tactile, play-based learning.
- Encourages teamwork through the garden metaphor.
Optional Extension: Plant real seeds in a class garden to symbolize growth! 🌿