Your Fonofale wall display
Introduce the Fonofale health model to your tamariki with this HUGE collaborative mosaic wall display!
Introduce the Fonofale health model to your tamariki with this HUGE collaborative mosaic wall display!
Lean into your strengths with a team work activity.
Celebrating our identity, whānau and where we come from.
Many schools, kura and classrooms have special manu and rākau they associate with. We've created these to add to your classroom and learn from.
DoC recordings of native birdsong all prepped for mindfulness, imaginative writing, tummy breathing time - you choose.
From our friends at the Department of Conservation. While lots of our tamariki love being outside, sometimes having something to hunt for can add a layer of excitement and increase the exercise!
A relaxing colouring activity to promote relaxation and calm.
Sparklers has been working with the Department of Conservation and SKIP to create fun outside adventures in te Reo Māori and English - bubble friendly, super easy and stress-busting!
A creative writing activity for celebrating the senses.
Traditional Māori breathing and mindfulness sequences.
This activity takes inspiration from the ordinary, yet extraordinary things in our natural world, as a mindfulness technique.
A practical mindfulness activity using our senses.
From our friends at the Department of Conservation - this is a really simple mindfulness activity, only needing a quiet space to look and listen.
A calming, mindfulness activity that boosts body awareness
From our friends at the Department of Conservation, this activity combines physical activity, mindfulness and being outside. All of best wellbeing bits that tamariki love!
Welcome some fresh air and some sky magic by making a manu tukutku!
Tuputupu is a fun, activity-based workbook created as part of Te Wiki o te Reo Māori which uses te Reo and Whare Tapa Whā as a foundation for tamariki to understand and care for their hauora.
From our friends at the Department of Conservation - we love that this idea is so accessible to everyone while in home-learning, and the combination of reading (learning) and being outdoors will help tamariki feel great!
An activity that’s fun and engaging for all students and has a unique Pacific focus – first create your fale (house), then create your classroom’s village!
Kōrero with a loved-one and create a poster about them.
Sometimes we fall into habits, and sometimes we have to spend some time creating them. Here's how...
Sharing kai is a big part of Matariki. Here tamariki create a placemat to use for shared kai during Matariki with whānau.
Give tamariki the opportunity to make a moemoeā (wish) upon the Matariki whetū Hiwa-i-te-rangi, but also learn about how to make a good moemoeā (wish) come true!
An activity for thinking about and adjusting our energy levels.
Helping tamariki discover how music affects their mood.
Bring Whare Tapa Whā to life with these super easy print-outs - makes either a mean wall display, or gift for whānau to carry on this important mahi.
Teaching tamariki the neuroscience behind worrying helps them make sense of the way it feels, so they can better work through it.
An interactive game that explores all the things we have in common, rather than focusing on our differences.
A game for identifying, naming and sharing emotions.
A group exercise for showing and guessing different emotions.
An energising game that’s all about working as a team.
A tool that supports tamariki to feel settled and calm.
A quick game that promotes cooperation, patience and trust.
A breathing ‘experiment’ that extends tummy breathing.
A crafty activity that will give tamariki a calming keepsake.
Teaching mindful breathing for focus and calm.
A fun, energising, memory-based game
A calming game that paves the way for tummy breathing.
A fun literacy (and emotional literacy) activity that can last the whole week!
Helping tamariki understand and manage their worries.
Two games that helps students discover their inner pause button.
Our favourite ideas for teaching and encouraging gratitude.
Expressing gratitude and giving back through special surprises.
A classic that helps tamariki find similarities and have fun through movement
A calming activity that boosts students’ awareness of the world around them.
Extending the connection between music and emotions.
Celebrating our strengths and being unique.
Fostering a growth mindset and celebrating akoranga (learning).
Use the Whare Tapa Whā hauora model to check in with your collective tamariki wellbeing.
A week of sensory fun and exploration.
This activity encourages tamariki to think about their wellbeing, all the ways they can boost it and some of the great stuff they're already doing.
Sensory kete promote self-regulation and calm.
A fun way to foster kindness, gratitude and the joy of giving.
Our favourite ideas for boosting kindness at school and beyond.
Absorbing, simple activities that help students relax and find flow.
A traditional, fun and energetic challenge for tamariki.
These energising warm-ups encourage team work and communication.
Create an interactive classroom rollercoaster, and support tamariki to develop their emotional literacy and regulation
An energising game to incorporate and extend te reo Māori
A video-making activity for senior tamariki to learn about managing big emotions, and teach others to too.
Making memory posters to encourage connections to tamariki whānau and whakapapa with this simple interviewing activity.
A fun activity to help tamariki overcome inhibitions and get to know each other better
A familiar and fun game that tamariki LOVE!
We’ve created this activity to encourage tamariki to think about Pink Shirt Day beyond the colour pink.
Previously called Got Your Back, this activity helps Year 7 and 8 tamariki reflect on the people who are there for them, and the different roles they can play.
A simple and imaginative trust game (without too much risk!), this activity helps tamariki work together
Create a shaker (maybe out of paūa) whose sound will lead you to your friends. This is a great 'taking notice' game.
This activity helps tamariki learn to manage emotions using a playground slide as a visualisation tool.
An acting exercise that helps tamariki learn to manage tricky situations and big emotions.
An opportunity for tamariki to acknowledge and explore their amazing whenua (land) and heritage.
A partner activity promoting teamwork and a bit of active problem solving.
This activity uses colours to help tamariki name emotions. Being able to recognise and name emotions is the biggest step towards successfully regulating them.
Demonstrating how our actions impact others.
This fun game will get your greetings in te reo down pat!
With Te Ara Pū you can keep learning te reo sounds to help make kōrero easy.
A fun way to help activate Te Whare Tapa Whā at this tricky time of the school year.
A great aiga (family) connecting and learning activity highlighting the importance of our names.
Introduce Te Whare Tapa Whā to your tamariki with this HUGE collaborative mosaic wall display!
Help tamariki find the ways that best suit them to support their hauora and wellbeing.
When we're tired and tamariki are tired, tiny, quiet activities give us the time we all need to 'refresh'. Here's some go-to's from our weekly e-newsletter.
A book review worksheet for exploring books with positive diversity, emotion or wellbeing- based themes.
He ngohe hei whakaaro, hei āta whakariterite hoki i ngā taumata ngao.
He ngohe pai tēnei ki te whakatau te mauri, ā, he mea māmā hoki te tākaro
Te whakaako ki te whakangā kia aro ai, kia whakatau ai.
He ngohe whakangā nō te ao Māori.
Te Whare Tapa Whā provides an excellent way for tamariki to kōrero and understand school values and the positive difference they make.
A quiz to help senior students find their strengths and make a set of strengths cards.
Practice listening, asking questions, having conversations and building empathy.
A funny game for helping tamariki understand and feel good about their strengths
Activities to help senior students start using and developing their strengths.
This is a handy printable guide you might send home with tamariki for whānau in the lead up to Pink Shirt Day and to support kindness and friendship.
When it's a first day back after a break, this activity provides and opportunity to kōrero about this and express how they're doing.
A chance to recreate Pacific stories and beliefs using any performance art you choose.
This fantastic story for tamariki in years 5-8, explores independence, how we see ourselves and finding the courage to "ask for help with the hard bits".
A resiliency-based set of activities based on reading, or listening to the book Rising Tide (He Tai Pari) – in English and/or te reo Māori.
We all know books have super powers. Here’s an activity that will use them to help tamariki develop emotional literacy, tune in to how others are feeling and know how to react to different emotions.