Mihi Maker
This website allows you to code your own mini-game, using basic collision detection algorithms, and learn how to introduce yourself in te reo Māori.
This website allows you to code your own mini-game, using basic collision detection algorithms, and learn how to introduce yourself in te reo Māori.
In this resource, Clementine Fraser - a teacher at Avondale College - provides advice on making Te Tiriti o Waitangi come alive in learning programmes.
He Reo Tupu, He Reo Ora is a multimedia resource for teaching and learning te reo Māori for years 1-6.
Te Aho Arataki Marau mō te Ako i Te Reo Māori – the Curriculum Guidelines for Teaching and Learning Te Reo Māori – assists all English-medium schools in Aotearoa-New Zealand to design a curriculum which includes te reo Māori.
The world has ended. You must now escape post-apocalyptic America. Make your way to the only uncontaminated Island in the world, Katuku. Build your own tribe and escape the crumbling city. Design Māori weapons, armoury and your own tribal Tattoo. Survive the turbulent ocean, the attack of other tribes, battle sea monsters and watch from above as swarms of angry Weta bombard your waka. Game to survive. Do literacy along the way and win bonus rewards! Enjoy extra time out gaming zones, build online Indigenous collaborations with other learners, and create your own Toa Pukenga - Online Traders store.
Te Reo Ūkaipō has been developed by parents, for parents through the support of 'Mā te Reo'. Te Reo Ūkaipō aims to help parents – with tamariki between the ages of 0 and 6 years – support the Māori language development of their kids.
This series of online modules complements the four textbooks of the Te Whanake series for learning te reo Māori.
Powered by Google technology and knowledge from the Te Aka Māori Dictionary, Kupu provides a new way to experience the language. It’s really easy to use – just take a photo of an everyday object (or upload your own) and see it translated in real time. You can save the translated image, share it or have another go.
Kōrerorero, meaning conversations, is an interactive learning tool developed (by AUT) to teach te reo Māori through listening, repetition and learning vocabulary and phrases that can be easily introduced into real life situations. Current lessons/vocabulary include: In the morning, flatmates, on the phone, a pub lunch, in the office, at the supermarket, heading home, and preparing dinner.