Friday 28th
We are learning to identify the authors purpose, audience and the point-of-view portrayed by of the text.
This week we have been reading more texts from Mrs Broadwith Google site on this topic, learning about European's arrival in New Zealand. Two of our texts are non-fiction and provide information on how Captain Cook voyaged around New Zealand, charting the coastline and making contact with Māori. The other is about the same event, but tells us more about the important work Tupaia - Captain Cook's navigator played in the discovery, particularly recording events through pictures and being the translator with Māori on their arrival.
We also read two fictional narratives. One was called 'Te Taki" and was told from the point of view of a Māori boy seeing Europeans for the first time (and preparing to challenge them), and the second a complementary account of a Scottish boy called John McLay who travelled on the ship Mooltan in 1862 from Scotland to Otago. We found it interesting to think about how different people may have experienced these events.
We have started creating our own timelines and narrating our own stories of our ancestors journeys to New Zealand. Some people like to use paper. Some people prefer to go digital and use google slides. These are examples of Summer's and James's paper timeline, and Paora's digital timeline.
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