WP_Water Challenge_Module Icons_400 x 400px_WP_Water Challenge_Module Icons_Protect_400 x 400px

Module 1: Protect

Ko te wai te ora ngā mea katoaWater is the life giver of all things.

Nau mai haere mai, welcome to the Water Challenge.

Get ready to unpack your kit, meet your Wonder Project Ambassador, and discover the world of wai (water).

Before you get started, make sure you’ve done your pre challenge survey.


The world of wai

From nourishing our whenua (land) and hapori (communities) to helping us clean, eat and travel, wai is the essence of all life. We need to ensure future generations can all benefit from clean, healthy wai. So, how do we achieve this? Say kia ora to STEM superstar Lupesina to find out.

Welcome to the Water Challenge thumbnail

Let’s dive in!

Using STEM skills and mātauranga Māori (Māori knowledge), it’s time for you to engineer a splash-tastic solution to our challenge pātai (question):

I wonder how water reaches us?

Meet your support crew

It’s up to all of us to protect the mauri of wai. Your Wonder Project Ambassador and kaiako (teacher) are here to help you through each module of the Water Challenge.

Say kia ora to your ambassador and whakarongo (listen) to their incredible STEM story.

Unpack your water kit

The Wonder Project has hooked you up with a water kit to get you started on your journey.

You’ll also need to collect a few more things to help along the way:

  • Clear, recycled 1.5/2L bottles
  • Natural debris (grass, small pieces of bark, leaves, small pebbles, etc)
  • Containers that hold at least 500ml of wai

Smile for the camera

At the end of the Water Challenge, your school will have the chance to make and share a short video or poster of your challenge experience to be in to win a prize!

Make sure you’re documenting your Water Challenge journey with heaps of videos and photos and start thinking about the story you want to tell. Check out Activity 6.2 if you want to get ahead.


STEM design process

To find a solution to the challenge pātai, you’re going to follow the STEM design process. It’s a series of simple steps that STEM superstars use to solve problems and make ideas work.

WP_Water Challenge_Engineering Design Process Flow Chart_765 x 500px

Poster: STEM design process

Print and display this poster on the STEM design process – six steps STEM superstars use to solve a problem.

STEM design process
WP_Water Challenge_STEM Design Process Poster_Thumbnail_250 x 350px

Ask

STEM superstars start their projects by asking lots of pātai. This helps them understand the problem they’re trying to solve.

Activity 1.1: Ask

Get into challenge rōpū (teams) and think about what you’d like to achieve by the end of your Water Challenge journey.

Ask
WP_Water Challenge_Activity 1.1_Ask_Thumbnail_250 x 350px

The mauri of wai

Ko au te wai, ko te wai ko authe water is me, and I am the water

In te ao Māori (the Māori world), wai is a precious taonga (treasure) with its own mauri, or life force. It flows through our lands and bodies, nourishing ecosystems, sustaining life, and connecting us all.

Wai is not simply a resource to be used, but something to care for and respect. When the mauri of wai is protected, the whenua and its inhabitants thrive.

Kaitiakitanga | guardianship

Humans are connected to the natural environment. So, we have a responsibility to look after wai by practising kaitiakitanga (guardianship), to ensure it stays healthy – now and into the future.

Why do you think it’s important to practise kaitiakitanga for wai?


The Mauri Compass

A great way to figure out whether wai is healthy is the Mauri Compass. But what is it?

The Mauri Compass is a tool developed by tangata whenua to assess the mauri (life force) of wai. It looks at factors relating to:

WP_Water Challenge_Mauri compass_765 x 400px

Natural sources of wai

STEM superstars use tools like the Mauri Compass to assess whether natural sources of wai are healthy enough for things like drinking, cleaning and collecting kai.

Can you name some natural sources of wai? How could our senses give us signs and clues about the mauri of these wai sources?

Activity 1.2: The Mauri Compass

Using the Mauri Compass, assess the mauri of natural sources of wai.

The Mauri Compass
WP_Water Challenge_Activity 1.2_The Mauri Compass_Thumbnail_250 x 350px

Wai sources in your neighbourhood

If you have time, why not investigate natural wai sources in your hapori?

Head to Google Earth using the link below and enter your region into the search bar. Then, find a natural wai source and give it a score using the Mauri Compass!


Braided river

Ka pai e hoa mā! After all that incredible mahi, harness your auahatanga (creativity) and build a work of art to represent your learning so far.

Activity 1.3: Braided river

Create a class artwork linking tāngata, whenua, and wai together as a braided river.

Braided river
WP_Water Challenge_Activity 1.3_Braided river_Thumbnail_250 x 350px

Reminder!

Start collecting 1.5/2L bottles to collect wai.

Tools down!

Mīharo. Today you:

  • Met your ambassador
  • Unpacked your water kit
  • Discovered the STEM design process
  • Discussed the mauri of wai
  • Learned about the Mauri Compass
  • Discovered natural water sources in your hapori