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NZC - Health and Physical Education Phase 4 (Years 9–10)

This page provides the draft progress outcome and teaching sequence for Phase 4 (Years 9-10) of the Health and Physical Education Learning Area. This is now available for wider feedback and familiarisation. The current Health and Physical Education curriculum remains in effect until 1 January 2027.

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About this resource

This page provides the draft Phase 4 (Years 9-10) Health and Physical Education Learning Area. This is now available for wider feedback and familiarisation.  The current Health and Physical Education curriculum remains in effect until 1 January 2027 and can be found here The New Zealand Curriculum - Health and Physical Education.

Health Education

Knowledge

The facts, concepts, principles, and theories to teach.

Practices

The skills, strategies, and applications to teach.

During Year 9

During Year 10

During Year 9

During Year 10

Bodies | Minds

Adolescent change

  • Understanding the changes of early adolescence can support personal growth and connection. Resilience often develops through navigating the awkward, uncertain, and sometimes isolating parts of growing up.
  • Respectful communication is important during times of change, and connection often grows through moments of misunderstanding, emotional tension, and learning how to repair and rebuild trust when things do not go perfectly.

Nutrition 

  • Healthy eating can be influenced by individual differences in access, cultural norms, body image, and emotional wellbeing. 

Self-care

  • Reframing, setting boundaries, and building supportive relationships can strengthen emotional wellbeing, and learning to use these tools takes time.
  • Adolescents face many transitions, like changes in appearance, relationships, and responsibilities, and adapting to these changes involves self-awareness and resilience. 

Alcohol and other drugs

  • Even when students know how to say no or seek help, making safe choices around substances can still be difficult.

Adolescent change

  • Adolescents may know what to expect during puberty, but they can still feel unsure about how to talk about changes that feel personal, awkward, or different from others.
  • Period poverty (the limited access to suitable menstrual products) and stigma surrounding menstruation can negatively affect participation, wellbeing, and dignity, particularly in educational and social settings.
  • Adolescents may know where to go for support, but stigma, fear of judgment, or not feeling understood can make it hard to reach out or use these strategies.

Nutrition 

  • Knowing what’s healthy does not always lead to healthy choices — other factors like stress, social norms, or limited access to nutritious food can influence what people eat.

Self-care

  • Self-care practices vary across developmental stages and cultural contexts, influencing how people manage stress, maintain health, and access support.
  • Resilience development involves neurobiological, psychological, and social processes that interact with environmental stressors and protective factors.

Alcohol and other drugs

  • Substance use affects brain development, decision-making, and long-term wellbeing, and can become addictive, especially during adolescence when the brain is still maturing.
  • Addiction is a progressive condition where repeated substance use changes how the brain functions, making it harder to stop even when it causes harm.
  • Substance use is influenced by global factors, such as availability, social norms, marketing, and equity, and can lead to health, legal, and social consequences that vary across communities and countries. 
  • Developing strategies for managing emotional discomfort and uncertainty during times of personal change, including practising respectful communication, repairing trust after misunderstandings, and building resilience through reflection and connection
  • Developing strategies for navigating personal and social transitions, including seeking support, reflecting on experiences, and building resilience through trial and error
  • Developing self-awareness, emotional regulation, and health knowledge by investigating how physical states like fatigue, hunger, and illness affect adolescents’ thinking, feelings, and behaviour 
  • Recognising signs of pressure and developing techniques to regulate emotions and seek support from trusted people or services when facing challenges
  • Recognising and reflecting on the physical, emotional, and social changes experienced by practising self-awareness, help-seeking, and strategies for managing uncertainty and change
  • Analysing how peer pressure, social expectations, and fear of standing out can make protective behaviours around substance use feel risky or isolating
  • Investigating the social, cultural, and global influences on substance use by analysing media portrayals
  • Developing harm reduction and protective decision-making strategies such as practising refusal skills, identifying support networks, and assessing community services to promote wellbeing and informed choices
  • Practising resilience and self-awareness by identifying and applying personal strategies to manage change and challenges
  • Exploring how self-care practices vary across developmental stages and cultural contexts and developing strategies for managing stress, maintaining health, and accessing support in diverse settings
  • Analysing how stress, social norms, and access to food influence nutrition choices and practising strategies for making informed and realistic decisions in everyday contexts
  • Developing problem-solving and goal-setting strategies to manage complex life changes
  • Analysing how substance use affects brain development, decision-making, and long-term health
  • Investigating how global factors, such as marketing, inequality, and access, influence patterns of substance use and exploring strategies to support informed health-enhancing decisions

Relationships

Self and others

  • Communities are made up of people from diverse cultural, religious, and ethnic backgrounds and understanding and respecting these differences helps build inclusive and supportive relationships.
  • Cultural, religious, and social groups and organisations contribute to the wellbeing of communities through heritage, values, and collective action. These groups sometimes experience discrimination.
  • Global inequality affects access to basic needs like clean water, nutritious food, and healthcare, which can impact physical and emotional wellbeing across different communities.
  • Empathy, emotional awareness, and respectful communication are important for building positive relationships. Applying them in real-life situations can be challenging, especially when emotions are high or perspectives clash.
  • In real-life social situations, emotions can be overwhelming. Using strategies like reframing or self-talk can help build confidence over time.
  • Intervening and taking action in bullying situations is often challenging. Fear of becoming a target, uncertainty about what is ‘safe’, or not wanting to stand out can make doing the right thing feel risky and confusing.
  • Modelling inclusive behaviour can support positive group dynamics. Sometimes it challenges group norms, creates discomfort, or requires courage to stand up for others. 
  • Self-perception and body image continue to evolve during adolescence and are shaped by personal values, cultural influences, and social environments, including online spaces.

Consent

  • Coercive situations often begin subtly and may not feel harmful at first, so recognising them can be difficult.
  • Assertive communication uses clear language and confident cues. Applying it in real life can be emotionally and socially complex.
  • Consent is shaped by power, trust, and emotional safety, and recognising these influences enables strategies such as eye contact, posture, and tone that help to assert personal boundaries.
  • An imbalance of power may affect someone’s ability to give or withhold consent freely and safely.
  • Respecting consent involves recognising power dynamics and social pressures in relationships, and ensuring that decisions are mutual, clearly communicated, and made without coercion.

Staying safe online

  • Body image is shaped by internal factors like self-talk and external factors like media and culture. Recognising these influences can support mental wellbeing by fostering a more positive self-image.
  • Harmful online behaviours like cyberbullying often emerge not just from individual choices, but from group dynamics and unspoken social norms that reward conformity. 
  • Influencers and targeted advertising can shape beliefs and behaviours by using personal data to promote products or ideas that may not be accurate.

Stereotypes

  • Stereotypes reduce complex identities to fixed traits, like gender, culture, or ability, shaping how people are judged and treated. This simplification can reinforce bias and affect fairness in everyday interactions.

Self and others

  • Effective navigating of complex social situations is influenced by emotional regulation, cultural norms, and the ability to interpret non-verbal cues.
  • Inclusive practices challenge dominant social narratives and foster environments where diverse identities are acknowledged and valued.
  • Exclusion based on identity disrupts access to social, emotional, and physical wellbeing. Understanding how identity-based exclusion operates in everyday contexts helps communities take informed, collective action to promote inclusion and safety. 
  • Challenging discrimination based on appearance or beliefs is important, but it does not always lead to immediate inclusion — sometimes it means facing resistance, discomfort, or social pushback.
  • Group norms that go unchallenged (e.g. agreeing with the loudest voice or excluding people who are different) can lead to exclusion and harmful behaviours.

Consent

  • Relational power, emotional vulnerability, and access to information all shape consent and can influence a person’s ability to make autonomous decisions.
  • Consent is a relational process influenced by intersecting factors such as authority, peer norms, and emotional dependency.

Staying safe online

  • Digital media often promotes idealised images of identity and appearance which can lead to negative body image and distorted views of self.
  • Media and online platforms can subtly reinforce norms that distort self-perception. Developing the ability to critically decode these messages is key to resisting their influence and making more self-aligned choices.
  • Online safety is influenced by digital literacy, platform design, and social norms around privacy, consent, and peer accountability.
  • Cyber bullying can result in psychological trauma, reputational damage, and legal repercussions, with impacts shaped by the severity, visibility, and response from peers and institutions.
  • Pornography often presents distorted and unrealistic portrayals of sexual activity, consent, and relationships which can negatively influence attitudes, expectations, and behaviours and contribute to unsafe or disrespectful actions.

Stereotypes

  • Stereotyping reinforces both positive and negative group-based expectations and influences decision making. 
  • Examining how inequity and discrimination can exist in the local and global communities and practising the strategies for promoting fairness, inclusion, and collective wellbeing
  • Recognising intense emotions in social situations and applying regulation strategies, such as reappraisal or self-talk with support and reflection to build confidence over time
  • Challenging unrealistic appearance ideals, and using strategies like self-compassion, media literacy, and supportive peer connections
  • Reflecting on how role models and peer influences shape values and behaviours, and practising making intentional choices that align with personal identity and wellbeing, even when facing inner conflict or social pressure
  • Developing skills for taking action against discrimination and applying strategies for building inclusive environments, even when facing resistance or discomfort
  • Practising assertive communication using clear language and confident cues and exploring strategies for navigating emotional and social discomfort when personal boundaries conflict with group norms or power dynamics
  • Critically examining how media messages, influencers, advertising, online norms, and group dynamics shape self-perception and contribute to harmful behaviours like cyberbullying and developing strategies for making self-aligned choice and promoting safer, more inclusive digital interactions
  • Examining how stereotypes reduce complex identities to fixed traits and developing strategies for recognising bias and promoting fairness in everyday interactions
  • Recognising when people are excluded or treated unfairly based on identity and exploring strategies for promoting inclusion and safety, such as speaking up, supporting others, and participating in collective actions that foster belonging
  • Examining unspoken group norms and exploring inclusive strategies such as questioning assumptions, amplifying diverse voices, and fostering respectful disagreement
  • Analysing how authority, peer norms, and emotional dependency influence the consent process and practising communication strategies that support mutual understanding and respect
  • Recognising subtle signs of coercion and practising assertive communication strategies and self-awareness to set and maintain personal boundaries in emotionally and socially complex situations
  • Evaluating how competence in using digital technologies, platform design, and social norms impact online safety and applying protective strategies for managing privacy, consent, and peer interactions
  • Analysing how online platforms influence relationships, self-image, and personal development and developing strategies to navigate these influences safely
  • Demonstrating strategies for maintaining digital wellbeing, including managing screen time, emotional responses, and online relationships
  • Examining how positive stereotypes reinforce group-based expectations and limit individual agency, and applying strategies to challenge assumptions and promote diverse representations 
  • Examining how stereotypes affect decision making in social situations

Sex education

  • In New Zealand, the legal age of consent for sexual activity is 16. Sexual activity with someone under this age is unlawful. Consent cannot be given if a person is significantly impaired by alcohol or drugs and is invalid if a person is unable to give informed, voluntary agreement.
  • Cultural, religious, and family values and beliefs shape attitudes about consent, sexual behaviour, and rights and responsibilities in relationships.
  • Every individual has the right to bodily autonomy and to make informed, respectful decisions about sexual activity, sexual health, and relationships, based on personal values and beliefs.
  • Hormonal changes influence mood, personal development, and sexual feelings, and recognising these influences helps people manage them respectfully and safely.
  • Sexual development includes forming values, understanding consent, and knowing how to access confidential advice and support for sexual health when needed.
  • Understanding the role of consent, communication, and emotional readiness supports healthy and positive sexual relationships.
  • People experience sexual desire (a longing for sexual expression or a feeling of sexual attraction) in many ways. Thinking about sex is normal.
  • In New Zealand, the legal age of consent for sexual activity is 16. Sexual activity with someone under this age is unlawful. Consent cannot be given if a person is significantly impaired by alcohol or drugs and is invalid if a person is unable to give informed, voluntary agreement.
  • Various forms of contraception (including abstinence, barrier methods, and hormonal options) can prevent unplanned pregnancies. Barrier methods can also reduce the risk of sexually transmissible infections (STIs).
  • STIs can be transmitted through sexual contact and can affect multiple body systems. Access to confidential sexual health services (including testing, treatment, and counselling) can help to maintain personal health and relationships.
  • Engagement in harmful sexual behaviours, including non-consensual distribution of intimate content and unsolicited sexual advances, can result in significant psychological, social, and legal consequences for all involved.
  • Sexual activity between consenting adults should be safe, respectful, and mutually enjoyable. 
  • What feels sexually pleasurable varies by person.  Sexual activity is enjoyable when people know what feels good to them and to their partner.
  • The way the body responds to sexual stimulation involves various physiological processes e.g. heart rate increases, blood flow to the genital area.
  • Analysing how cultural and social values and beliefs affect personal choices in relationships and decision-making
  • Recognising how hormonal changes and sexual development influence emotions, values, and behaviour
  • Identifying ways to manage changes respectfully, including understanding consent and knowing where to access support
  • Developing strategies for managing unsafe or non-consensual situations, including removing oneself, assisting others, and seeking additional support when needed
  • Critically assessing how media representations of sexual activity, safer sex practices, consent, and relationships affect beliefs and behaviours

Physical Education

Knowledge

The facts, concepts, principles, and theories to teach.

Practices

The skills, strategies, and applications to teach.

During Year 9

During Year 10

During Year 9

During Year 10

Movement skills

(Invasion games)

Invasion games (e.g. hockey)

  • Accurate passing techniques require proper follow through and control and identifying strengths and areas for improvement helps refine skill execution.
  • A cool down is important for physiological recovery, including gradual heart rate reduction, oxygen delivery, and prevention of blood pooling.
  • Antagonistic muscle pairs (e.g. quadriceps and hamstrings) work together during stretching, with one muscle lengthening while the other shortens.
  • Lactic acid is produced during anaerobic activity, especially during high-intensity efforts.
  • Interval training improves speed endurance and is specific to sports like hockey.

Invasion games (e.g. hockey)

  • Advanced outfield skills (e.g. hit to cross/shoot), offensive and defensive tactics (e.g. short corner strategies), and set plays require specific terminology, technique, and body positioning.
  • Full rules, umpiring signals, and conventions are essential for fair play and officiating.
  • Training methods (e.g. HIIT, plyometrics) improve hockey-specific fitness components such as power, agility, and endurance, with attention to safety, intensity, and individual needs.
  • Overload and intensity in training can be measured using heart rate, bpm, and rate of perceived exertion, and are linked to physiological improvements.
  • Data collection (e.g. passes completed, shots on target) and analysis support self and team evaluation, goal setting, and coaching decisions.
  • Psychological preparation (e.g. mental rehearsal) and a full warm-up (pulse raiser, dynamic stretches, skill rehearsal) are important for performance and injury prevention.

Invasion games (e.g. hockey)

  • Using powerful passing techniques accurately, including push pass and slap pass
  • Using basic hand grips on the stick and performing partner passing drills that use top and bottom hand techniques
  • Catching across the body and passing with both hands
  • Dribbling using open stick and reverse stick techniques
  • Performing tackling techniques such as block and jab tackles and applying footwork, positioning, and reaction time in blocking drills
  • Executing long corners and crossing the ball effectively
  • Using the hit technique for power and accuracy
  • Applying defensive strategies such as marking, tracking, and jockeying
  • Applying game rules including feet, sideline ball, self-pass, shooting within the D and self-pass restarts
  • Creating and exploiting space by limiting the size of the field
  • Completing cool down activities including pulse reducing movements and static stretching
  • Completing pyramid interval training sessions to build speed endurance
  • Participating in agility-based circuit sessions, using equipment and drills such as agility ladders, Illinois runs with stick and ball, and T drill runs

Invasion games (e.g. hockey)

  • Using advanced outfield skills such as switching play, channelling, short corners, zoning vs man-to-man marking and applying them accurately in game situations
  • Applying advanced offensive and defensive tactics and set plays, using correct terminology and decision-making in game situations
  • Officiating games using full rules and hand signals and participating as umpire, coach, or player
  • Implementing and reflecting on training methods, monitoring intensity and applying overload principles for improvement
  • Collecting and interpreting quantitative data from gameplay to analyse strengths and limitations and inform team strategies
  • Preparing for participation with a complete warm-up and psychological techniques and adapting training and gameplay based on data and feedback
  • Adapting training and gameplay based on performance data and peer or coach feedback, identifying areas for improvement and applying targeted solutions

Movement skills

(Sport)

Physical activity/sport (select a sport not previously covered)

  • Sports and activities require clear and accurate application of rules, strategies, and tactics for both participation and officiating.
  • A complete warm-up includes a pulse raiser and both static and dynamic stretching and is important for physical and mental preparation.
  • Nutrition and psychological techniques support readiness and performance.
  • Physiological changes (e.g. heart rate, muscle use) depend on activity intensity and type, and can be analysed to identify strengths, limitations, and set goals.
  • Bones, muscles, and fitness components (e.g. cardiovascular and muscular endurance) are developed through participation and specific training.

Physical activity/sport (e.g. football, waka ama)

  • Advanced application of rules, strategies, and tactics is required for both participation and officiating, including adapting to changing game situations and making tactical decisions under pressure.
  • A comprehensive warm-up includes a pulse raiser, dynamic and static stretching, and activity-specific skill rehearsal, and should be adapted for different sports or activities.
  • Nutrition and advanced psychological techniques (e.g. visualisation, self-talk, goal setting) are used to optimise performance and recovery.
  • Physiological responses (e.g. heart rate, muscle fatigue, recovery time) can be monitored and analysed in real time (e.g. using heart rate monitors, RPE scales, or fitness apps) to inform training adjustments and performance improvement.
  • Anatomy and fitness components (e.g. cardiovascular endurance, muscular endurance, flexibility, power) can be targeted and developed through tailored training programmes, with muscles and bones working together to support movement, strength, and physical performance.
  • Regular participation in physical activity and sport supports holistic wellbeing, including physical, mental, and social health, and students can articulate these benefits with specific examples.

Physical activity/sport (select a sport not previously covered)

  • Applying rules, strategies, and tactics accurately as both participant and official in a chosen sport or activity
  • Completing a full warm-up with a pulse raiser and appropriate stretching
  • Using nutrition and psychological techniques to prepare for activity
  • Analysing and responding to physiological changes during activity, using data for self-assessment and goal setting
  • Developing fitness through specific training methods
  • Comparing and contrasting methods of starting and restarting play across different sports
  • Applying and refining movement patterns, poses, or skills relevant to the selected activity

Physical activity/sport (e.g. football, waka ama)

  • Applying and adapting rules, strategies, and tactics in complex, competitive situations, both as a participant and as an official, demonstrating leadership and fair play
  • Designing and leading a full warm-up for a chosen activity, explaining the purpose of each phase and adapting it for group needs
  • Planning and implementing nutrition and psychological preparation strategies before, during, and after activity to enhance performance and recovery
  • Monitoring and analysing physiological changes to inform self-assessment, goal setting, and training adjustments
  • Using and refining fitness components through progressive, sport-specific training methods, and reflecting on their impact on performance
  • Comparing, contrasting, and justifying methods of starting and restarting play across a range of sports, considering the impact on tactics and team strategy
  • Refining and evaluating movement patterns, skills, or poses relevant to the selected activity, using feedback and self-analysis to improve

Movement skills

(Net and wall and ki o rahi)

Personal exercise plan

  • Quantitative and qualitative data collection can support understanding of improvements and help measure the success of a training programme.
  • A personalised exercise programme (PEP) requires understanding the specific physical demands of the activity (e.g. cardiovascular endurance, muscular strength, core stability, recovery).
  • Heart rate and breathing rate changes during preparation, activity, and recovery and provide useful quantitative data, with specific strengths and limitations.
  • Qualitative data such as rate of perceived exertion (RPE), mood scales, and physiological sensations (e.g. tightness, pain, lethargy) offer insight into how the body responds to training.
  • Fitness tests (e.g. 60m sprint, vertical jump, Cooper run, sit and reach, Illinois test) require clear protocols and have strengths and limitations depending on the activity.
  • The principle of overload involves increasing frequency, intensity, or type of exercise to improve fitness (e.g. increasing exercise time, reducing rest, varying stations).
  • Trail running, cross country, and jumping require cardiovascular fitness, lower body strength, agility, and adaptability to terrain and elevation.

Personal exercise plan

  • Fitness tests have specific protocols and can reveal strengths and limitations relevant to chosen activities (e.g. football might use 60m sprint, Illinois test, Cooper run, wall sit).
  • Muscular endurance and other fitness components can be improved through structured circuit training (e.g. completing multiple rounds of bodyweight exercises like squats and push-ups with minimal rest between stations to build stamina and strength over time).
  • Progression, overload, and variety are key principles to reduce tedium and improve performance.
  • Baseline data includes both qualitative (e.g. self-assessment) and quantitative (e.g. fitness test results, resting heart rate) measures.
  • SMART (specific, measurable, achievable, relevant and time bound) targets help set clear achievable goals (e.g. a goal to improve cardiovascular fitness might be to run 1.5km in under 10 minutes three times a week for four weeks).
  • SPORT principles (specificity, progression, overload, reversibility, tedium) guide effective training.
  • Accurate and reliable data collection is essential for tracking progress.
  • Fitness tests can be adapted to make them more sport-specific (e.g. Illinois test with dribbling for football).
  • Aerobic capacity and biomechanical efficiency and psychological readiness in cross country running are improved through structured training methods, physiological adaptations, such as increased stroke volume, and mental strategies including goal setting, self-talk, and focus control.

Personal exercise plan

  • Monitoring heart rate and breathing rate before, during, and after exercise to collect quantitative data
  • Tracking RPE, mode, and physiological sensations before, during, and after exercise to collect qualitative data
  • Conducting fitness tests using correct protocols and interpreting results in relation to activity specific demands
  • Using the principle of overload through progressive circuit training
  • Creating a balanced training plan that includes aerobic conditioning, strength training, flexibility, and rest days tailored to goals and fitness level
  • Structuring a running programme that includes hill training, endurance runs, strength conditioning, and recovery strategies to improve trail running and tramping performance

Personal exercise plan

  • Completing fitness tests relevant to a chosen activity, following correct protocols
  • Participating in a teacher-led circuit training programme, applying progression, overload, and variety
  • Selecting and applying training methods that target muscular endurance and other fitness components
  • Collecting and interpreting baseline data to identify areas for improvement
  • Setting SMART goals based on baseline data
  • Undertaking training programmes using varied methods (e.g. circuit training, interval training, plyometrics)
  • Applying SPORT principles to adapt and refine training approaches
  • Accurately replicating training methods to work towards fitness goals
  • Conducting fitness testing and reflecting on progress
  • Adapting fitness tests to better suit the sport or activity being trained for
  • Implementing pacing, efficient movement techniques, and mental strategies, such as goal setting and focus control, to sustain performance throughout a cross-country course

Net and wall (e.g. badminton)

  • Training methods such as interval training, circuit training, HIIT, and plyometrics contribute to the development of cardiovascular and muscular endurance, with agility circuits enhancing movement efficiency.
  • Skill acquisition occurs across isolated drills, modified games, and full game contexts, each supporting progression in control, accuracy, and tactical decision-making.
  • Effective court coverage involves spatial strategies including recovery positioning, movement patterns to pressure opponents, and tactical play at the net and backcourt.
  • Advanced net and wall techniques include overhead clears, smashes, drop shots, and backhand low serves, each serving distinct tactical purposes within gameplay.
  • Strategic manipulation of space and shot placement is central to controlling rallies, creating scoring opportunities, and responding to opponent movement.

Kī o rahi

  • Kī o rahi involves fluid role transactions between Taniwha and Kioma, requiring strategic adaption based on game flow, scoring opportunities, and team coordination.
  • Pūrākau underpinning kī o rahi informs not only the game’s structure but also its values, encouraging deeper reflection on whakapapa, tikanga, and collective responsibility.
  • Agility, anticipation, and zone-specific movement patterns are essential for maintaining positional advantage and responding to dynamic play.
  • Ball control includes executing passes under pressure, using feints (pretending to pass or move in one direction, quickly changing or executing a different action) and selecting passing options that align with team strategy and zone objectives. 
  • Scoring requires tactical decision making, including when to target the tupu or pawero, and how to manipulate space and timing to maximise scoring potential.
  • Advanced gameplay involves coordinated defensive systems (e.g. zone marking, intercept setups) and offensive systems (e.g. overloads, switches) to dominate play.
  • Nuanced rule application such as contact interpretation, zone transitions, and scoring resets support confident officiating and peer leadership.

Net and wall (e.g. badminton)

  • Completing 10–15-minute training blocks using interval, circuit, HIIT, or plyometric methods to improve agility, cardiovascular endurance, and muscular strength
  • Using net and wall techniques in isolated drills, modified games, and full game scenarios, showing control, accuracy, and tactical awareness
  • Moving efficiently around the court by returning to the base position after each shot, creating space, and using footwork to pressure the opponent at the net and backcourt
  • Executing advanced net and wall shots with appropriate technique and tactical intent
  • Applying rules accurately while officiating singles and doubles games, including correct scoring, service rotation, and fault identification
  • Using shot placement and movement strategies to control rallies, force opponent movement, and create scoring opportunities during gameplay

Kī o rahi

  • Transitioning effectively between Taniwha and Kioma roles, adjusting movement and tactics based on game phase and team strategy
  • Respecting the cultural origins of kī o rahi by incorporating tikanga into gameplay, team interactions, and game preparation
  • Using agile footwork and spatial awareness to maintain positional advantage, evade defenders, and support zone transitions
  • Executing precise passes under pressure, using deception and timing to maintain possession and advance team strategy
  • Using movement, positioning, and timing to create scoring opportunities by accurately targeting the tupu or placing the ball in the pawero zone
  • Applying coordinated defensive and offensive systems, including marking strategies, intercept setups, and attacking combinations
  • Officiating games with confidence, applying rules accurately and supporting fair play through peer leadership and decision-making
  • Participating in a kī o rahi tournament by applying advanced gameplay skills, demonstrating teamwork and strategic decision-making, and upholding tikanga and fair play throughout competitive play

Outdoor Education

  • Outdoor activities can be personally meaningful, helping people to explore challenge and resilience.
  • Following low-impact travel principles, managing waste responsibly, staying on designated tracks, and avoiding disturbance to wildlife supports the long-term health and resilience of ecosystems and demonstrates tiakitanga (guardianship).
  • Planning and preparation are essential for safe and enjoyable outdoor experiences. They reduce risk, improve group coordination, and ensure participants are equipped to respond to environmental challenges (e.g. weather changes, terrain variability, emergency situations).
  • Risk documentation provides a structured format for monitoring and reviewing risks over time and includes key features, such as clearly identifying potential hazards, describing the likelihood and consequences of each risk and outlining strategies to mitigate them.
  • Outdoor education experiences can increase wellbeing and inspire environmental care and a love for adventure and learning.
  • Outdoor leadership requires the ability to guide individuals or groups with a focus on safety, responsibility, enjoyment, decision-making, and environmental awareness (e.g. coordinating an adventure-based learning activity, sharing a skill or ngā kōrero tuku iho, knowledge passed down over time).
  • Outdoor education experiences promote personal development, encourage environmental stewardship (tiakitanga), and strengthen connections within communities through shared experiences and collaborative learning.
  • Applying sustainable practices during outdoor activities and demonstrating tiakitanga (guardianship) through actions that protect and respect the natural environment
  • Effectively plan and prepare for outdoor experiences by assessing risks, coordinating group logistics, and adapting to environmental challenges to ensure safety and success
  • Leading others in outdoor settings by making informed decisions, managing group safety, and fostering responsibility
  • Engaging in outdoor education experiences that support personal growth, promote environmental stewardship (tiakitanga), and build meaningful connections within communities