Collecting kōwhai seeds from outside the classroom and then growing them inside breaks down the perception that learning only happens in the classroom. This activity will provide students with opportunities to learn about the process of seed germination.
In this activity, students plant kōwhai seeds. After researching what kowhai seeds may need to grow, they make decisions about the conditions that will be the best for their seeds. This sets the scene for a scientific investigation that becomes student driven as they predict and observe growth from their seeds. Allowing tamariki to make choices about how and where they plant their seeds increases student agency, learning and engagement.
During this lesson, I found it quite hard not to interfere too heavily with the decisions students were making while planting their seeds. Some students left their seeds on the top of the soil, some appeared to drown them, some added sand from the sandpit and some seemed to bury them at the bottom of their container. However, over the duration of the lesson as they went back and read the instructions again or watched other students, most seeds were planted in a way that meant germination was at least a potential! The pride they had in their container having made the decisions themselves was well worth it.
We did this activity one week before the end of term and students took their containers/seeds home. When they returned after the break, one student had diligently watered and cared for her seedling and we were able to have a class discussion about why this student’s kōwhai germinated and others didn’t.
Chloe Stantiall, Silverdale Normal School
In this activity, students learn about the planting conditions required to successfully grow kōwhai seeds and then plant their seeds.
By the end of this activity, students should be able to:
- use resources to research the conditions needed to grow kōwhai seeds
- identify and take the steps required to plant kōwhai seeds
- justify the decisions they make about how to plant seeds.
Download the Word file (see link below).
Student inquiry
This activity works as a stand-alone lesson or as part of a wider teaching/inquiry sequence about mātauranga Māori of kōwhai. Additional activities include:
- Collecting kōwhai seeds | Kohikohia ngā kākano kōwhai
- Observing kōwhai | Āta titiro kōwhai
- Sharing scientific understanding through poetry
- Creating kōwhai infographics
You can hear Chloe talking about these resources in our recorded webinar Exploring mātauranga in the classroom.
Nature of science
When students research the conditions required for seed germination and take the steps to plant the seeds, they are working with the ‘Investigating in science’ strand of the Nature of Science.
Related content
Learn more about seeds with the following resources:
- Ngā kākano ❘ Seeds
- Te haenga me te ruinga o te kākano ❘ Pollination and seed dispersal
- Seed dispersal
Related activities
Extend student learning with these seed-related activities:
- Looking at seeds and fruits – cross-curricular worksheet for NZC levels 2–3
- Student-led investigations about seeds
- Matching seeds and fruits
Useful links
Use the following resources to learn how to prepare kōwhai seeds for planting:
- Grow and care for kōwhai – Department of Conservation
- Germinating kōwhai seeds – Foundation for Arable Research
- Growing kōwhai part 1 – Red Earth Native Plants (YouTube video)
- Growing kōwhai part 2 – Red Earth Native Plants (YouTube video)
Consider using the Figure it Out resource The Greenhouse Effect to look at the relationships between the rates of growth rates of different plants.
Acknowledgement
This article was written by Chloe Stantiall as part of the Teaching and Learning Research Initiative project Envisioning student possible selves in science: Addressing ‘plant blindness’ through place-based education. The project explores students’ sense of place and science-related possible selves through local curriculum units that focus on plants. Chloe was assisted by researchers Maurice M. W. Cheng and Bronwen Cowie from The University of Waikato.