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Wednesday, 30 August 2017

Social Studies Term 3 Week 6

  1. Why was the Treaty needed?


To make things more “peaceful” between the British and the Pakeha and the Maori


  1. How many versions of the Treaty are there?
2 versions


  1. How many articles are there?


4 Articles


  1. What was the issue with it?


The wording was different.


  1. What word should have been used instead of sovereignty/governorship?


Mana


  1. What does Tino Rangatiratanga mean?


Absolute sovereignty


  1. What happened when a chief didn’t sign the Treaty?


They would go around to the common people and ask them to sign it


  1. What is pepper potting? What was its aim?


They separated the Maori families


9. What is the Native School Acts? What was its aim?


Punishing children when they spoke Maori

Waitangi Day


What happens on Waitangi Day?
People protest against it.

What protests have occurred?



Name: Charlotte Jane
Date of Departure:  April 17, 1848
Date of Arrival: 16 December 1850
Length of Journey: 2 years, 8 months, 1 day.
Number of Passengers: 790
Planned Destination: Lyttelton
Interesting Fact: It was the first ship to arrived out of the four

Name: Randolph
Date of Departure: 
Date of Arrival:
Length of Journey:
Number of Passengers:
Planned Destination:
Interesting Fact:

Name:
Date of Departure:
Date of Arrival:
Length of Journey:
Number of Passengers:
Planned Destination:
Interesting Fact:

Name:
Date of Departure:
Date of Arrival:
Length of Journey:
Number of Passengers:
Planned Destination:
Interesting Fact:

Wednesday, 23 August 2017

DTE Inside A Computer

In DTE, we took a look at what's inside a laptop. 
Here is an infographic I made last week:



Social Studies Term 3 Week 5



Person
Pulling Power
Land Owner
Land to buy and sell for profit
Missionary
Churchless People
Escaped Convict
Place to hide
Explorer
Unmapped Land
Mill Worker
Open Spaces
Trader
Timber and flax resources
Invalid
Fine Climate
Black Sheep of the Family
Place for banishment
Farm Labourer
Land for a farm
Whalers and Sealers
Miles of coastline
Merchant
Investment opportunities


Name
Yes/No
Reason for Decision
The Redford family
No
Too many children
Laura
No
She’s Single
John
No
He’s single
The Water family
No
Too many children
The Bryrd family
No
Not fit enough
Leed family
Yes
They fit the conditions
Henry
No
He’s single
The Paul family
No
Too many children

The Invitation of 1831

  • Who sent the invitation? It was sent from the Maori chiefs to Britain.
  • Why? 1. The chiefs have special Trade and missionary contacts with Britain 2. They want to be friends with Britain. 3. They want to be saved from threats. 4. The want to be safe from other tribes. 5. They want British people to stop being horrible people
  • Who is James Busby?  He is a British Resident they sent to NZ
  • Where was Busby's house? Where the treaty was signed
  • What was his job? 
  • Who was William Williams and what did his translations mean?William Williams is the translator between Maori and British and the translation tells the Maori that they hope to be undisturbed.
Image result for the first nz flag

  1. The flag was called The Flag of the Independent Tribes of New Zealand.                                                                                         
  2. It was raised with the British flag and given a 21 gun salute by the Alligator, the man of war in the harbor. This indicated to the chiefs that New Zealand was an independent country with an association or friendship with Britain.                                           
  3. The flag was recognized by King William IV of Britain. This indicated to the chiefs that Britain had recognized the tino rangatiratanga of the chiefs.                                                          
  4. It gave New Zealand-built ships a flag to fly which let their cargo go duty free into foreign ports. Busby arranged for New Zealand-built ships to be registered in the name of The Independent Tribes of New Zealand.                                            
  5. It was also flown on land, especially at the Bay of Islands.          
  6. After the signing of the Treaty of Waitangi, the Union Jack took its place. But the 1834 flag was still used. In 1840, for example, the European settlers in Wellington from the New Zealand Company refused to recognize authority in Auckland and flew the flag of The Independent Tribes of New Zealand.                    
  7. The flag was always important to the Maori. In 1902 there was a petition to Parliament asking that the flag given to the Maori chiefs of New Zealand by King William IV be kept as the standard of New Zealand.                                                             
  8. The flag got renewed.

Wednesday, 16 August 2017

Social Studies Week 4 Term 3

Abel Tasman

  • In 1642
  • To explore the unknown areas
  •  They fought the Maori
  • Dead soldiers
Captain Cook
  • In 1769
  • To explore the rest of NZ
  • He managed to trade food and goods, and explored the rest of NZ
  • Fresh food
Frenchman Jean-Francois de Surville
  • Either in 1769, 1773-4 or 1776
  • To find some treasure
  • The Frenchman sailed past Captain Cook, drew a map of Doubtless Bay and went back
  • Ill Soldiers
Marion du Fresne
  • In 1772
  • To explore more of NZ
  • He unwittingly broke the tapu law and got fifteen of his men killed and eaten.
  • Nothing

Captain Cook: The voyage

  • Captain Cook and his crew went to New Zealand to explore it
  • A 12 year old boy named Nicholas found the land of NZ and as a reward, Captain Cook named it Young Nick's head.
  • The Maori's, naturally, didn't trust the Europeans and would either run away or attack them.
  • However after a while, the Maori turned out to be really friendly.
  • They traded with Maori and got some food out of it
  • They then left to Australia but nearly got shipwrecked
  • Captain Cook came back to England after 3 years
  • He went back to NZ between 1773-74.
  • He visited NZ one last time in 1776 before getting killed in Hawaii.
Wakefield
Ideas
  1. Immigration must be carefully planned
  2. The immigrants must sit up small farms like those in England. This will make it easy to provide each farming village with things like schools and churches.
  3. Land must be bought from the Maoris and then sold at a higher price to wealthy English people.
  4.  The profits from the sale of loud will pay for the fares of carefully chosen labourers.
  5. The price of land must be high enough so that the labourers will not be able to afford to buy it for some years. They will have to work to save money. This will mean plenty of labour for the farmers.
Poster


























Wednesday, 9 August 2017

Social Studies Term 3 Week 3

1. Emigrate is exiting an area to go somewhere else
2. A push factor is a reason you want to leave that particular area
3. Not enough job opportunities
4. A title for each axis, a border.
5. Shawn has migrated to Christchurch 
6. 


Conditions in England.

  • The workers were living in cheaply built houses
  • If you retired from your job, you'll get kicked out of your house
  • Have to share accommodation
  • There was no garden or space for kids to play
  • There's no clean water and the toilets were empty
  • Diseases that spread really quickly  
  • Kids didn't go to school and were underfed
  • There were lots of children working

Push Factors in England.

  • Only the rich got much education
  • Most people are either in the lower class or middle class
  • Children are being employed at jobs like chimney sweeping and pulling coal trucks underground.
  • The lower classes were landless
Government

Education

Society


Seel Paragraph

Statement
Explanation
Example
Link

What are the pull factors of New Zealand?

A pull factor is something that draws you to a place or a country. New Zealand is a place many people want to go to, and for good reasons. There's beautiful landscapes, decent jobs, good education and it's a safe place. New Zealand is a beautiful place where people like to go to due to it's positive reputation. 

Why do the British want to leave England?

A push factor is what makes you want to leave the place or the country. British didn't really like what England has became due to the Industrial Revolution and wanted to leave immediately. They lived in cheaply made house, children were working, diseases spread pretty quickly, worked long hours and dangerous jobs. England felt like torture for those workers which made them want to leave.

Wednesday, 2 August 2017

Social Studies Week 2 Term 3

Migration pattern

-I stayed in Christchurch for my entire life, excluding the holidays.


Te Rama live in Christchurch but have holidayed to other places in NZ.