Saturday, October 15, 2016

Auckland Diwali Festival

This week Indian communities in Auckland will celebrate Diwali.

The Auckland Diwali Festival takes its inspiration from Diwali or Deepavali (row of lamps), an important and ancient Indian festival celebrated throughout India and in Indian communities around the world. Indians will celebrate the week with family and friends, dressing in traditional clothing, exchanging Indian sweets or gifts, cooking and eating together and enjoying song and dance. 


Blue Guru Indian music and dance troupe

This week our Indian cultural team will create a few rangoli patterns to welcome guests near the entrance to our house, our school.The bright patterns encourage the goddess Lakshmi to enter, and bring positive energy to our environment. Please come and observe these students create their design outside the Technology Room this week (weather dependent). 

Day one of our 2016 rangoli

Mahi's rangoli design

The word 'rangoli' is derived from the words 'rang' and 'aavalli' which refers to a row of colours. The design usually follows a certain theme. The central design or motif is symbolic and represents natural elements like birds, snakes, fish, flowers, sun, moon or a flower. It usually has a geometric and symmetrical shape, which expresses the infiniteness of time. A rangoli is often bordered by a lotus design, to represent the goddess Lakshmi. The lotus symbolises the beginning of life. 

Mrs Pinto drawing a design for day two 
Mrs Pinto with Tanesha and Mahi

Helpers working on the rangoli

Brike & Zayan were hard at work using their hands
Mahi's second design being filled in on day two

Mrs Pinto's design with colour



Thursday, September 8, 2016

Ni Hao - Chinese Language Week 2016

Check out the gallery of photos showing a group of our Year 5 and Year 6 students working on their Chinese word posters to share with the school.Each of the students chose a word that had special significance. They wrote the word in Chinese characters along with some images to show the meaning. I was so impressed by their knowledge of this ancient and beautiful writing system.  I have a new appreciation on the challenge our students face in keeping a heritage or home language such as Chinese, as well as learning in another language - English. Congratulations and thank you for all for your efforts this week Erica, Rebecca, Jessica, Cindy, Bonnie, Mia, Jack, Lucas, Ivan, Jeff, Mark and Henry. Look out for the finished product in the library.








Click on the website below if you would like to learn more about the language.

NZ Chinese Language Week website

Sunday, July 24, 2016

Celebrate Dual Cultures in Term 3

Duality Maps Help You Explore Two Cultures

Celebrate being bilingual!    Be proud to have two worlds:


  • your first home language and the world of the second language
  • you will understand your extended family and its history
  • you will understand how language and culture are one
  • you will understand more about who you are
  • your family's language is a treasure or taonga
Post a comment on how you feel about speaking and learning other languages

Sunday, June 19, 2016

Art imitates life

Art reflects the cultures and histories of the people living in a community.


Take a look at the snapshot of ideas, experiences, memories, and dreams young artists around Sunnynook have created this term.

Self portrait, pencil, paint, Jess Cen R4


Multimedia emotions on a rollercoaster, April Pian R6

Pencil/pastel study of marine life in rock pool, Amy Cho R5


Stencil/spray paint of Tui, Aoi Miyata R2
Post a comment about your favourite artwork this term. What ideas were you expressing?


Visit the Auckland Art Gallery to see A Space to Dream: Recent Art from South America


Ernesto Neto
Just like drops in time, nothing (installation view) 2002


Saturday, May 28, 2016

Maori New Year begins with Matariki on 6th June

Matariki is a cluster of seven stars in the constellation of Taurus.
Because the star cluster can be seen all around the world from almost every single spot on Earth, and in different cultures it has lots of different names:

  • The Pleiades or The Seven Sisters in Greece
  • Subaru in Japan
  • The six wives of the six sages in Tamil
  • Seven chickens in Thailand
  • Matali'l in Samoa

Matariki has always been an important time in the Māori calendar. Calendars use the Moon to set the months and the Sun to mark the seasons. Early Maori used the lunar calendar - Maramataka - to guide them in fishing and growing crops.

Matariki means ‘eyes of the god’ or ‘little eyes’. Some say that when Ranginui, the sky father, and Papatūānuku, the earth mother, were separated by their children, the god of the winds, Tāwhirimātea, became angry, tearing out his eyes and hurling them into the heavens. Others say Matariki is the mother surrounded by her six daughters.

The Māori New Year signals a time for connecting with, and giving thanks to, the land, sea and sky. It’s also a time for the community to farewell people who have passed away and accept everything that has happened in the last year, and to look to the future and celebrate new beginnings.
Look at the night sky this month. See if you can identify the phases of the moon. On 6th June at 6:30am you may find Matariki in the dawn sky. Post a comment on what you see in the night sky.
Visit the observatory in Auckland to learn more about the stars.

Listen to He waiata Matariki our kapa haka group are learning this year.




Monday, April 25, 2016

Reflections on ANZAC Day 2016





This is the day New Zealanders pay tribute to the soldiers who died on 25 April 1915, eight months into the First World War, when the Allied soldiers landed on the shores of the Gallipoli peninsula in Turkey.


It is a day to honour all people who have paid the ultimate sacrifice of their life, and service men and women work around the world to keep people safe from war and disaster. 

See NZ Herald photos and videos of ANZAC Day 2016


ANZAC Day has not only become a public holiday, but a day to be with family and friends in this peaceful country. We are a nation that celebrates cultural diversity, and the freedom to choose how we live.

The Last Post Reveille sounding from a trumpet always brings many emotions to the surface

  • How did you spend ANZAC Day this year?
  • What does Aotearoa, New Zealand mean to you?
  • What do you value about living in this country?


The poppy flower is a symbol of remembrance on Anzac Day. It was the first flower to grow in the battle fields where men had fought and died in Flanders, Belgium, Europe.

Flowers are very powerful symbols. 

In Japan, Sakura, the cherry blossom represents the fragile beauty of life.

In South Africa the Protea, is a symbol of courage and transformation.

In Samoa, the Frangipani means everlasting life.



Saturday, April 2, 2016

Museum Week Worldwide



What are museums?

museum is a place that cares for collections of artifacts, objects of artistic, cultural, historical, or scientific importance. These collections are there for us to see and learn about our own people and other cultures.

Did you know it is worldwide Museum Week?
 Explore Museum Week on Twitter

Twitter#MuseumWeek

March 28 - April 3, 2016


                                  What's On at Auckland Museum

These are some cultural artifacts in my house. They are a snapshot of my cultural background and personal interests. Think about what would be some artifacts in your home that show your culture. Post a photograph or comment.
Basket made by my cousin Cora Baillie using recycled material scraps
Favourite books I inherited from my mother

Aztec necklace from my husband's family who come from Argentina
Painting by my artist friend Frances Hansen on the need to protect the environment






















Saturday, March 19, 2016

Race Relations Day March


This year's Race Relations Day theme is "Welcoming Diversity".
New Zealand is one of the most ethnically diverse nations on earth. It is also one of the most peaceful. The change in our society has happened very fast, in less than a generation. Our newest Kiwis come here, as we all did once, as migrants or refugees.
Our biggest challenge is how we choose to live our lives and what kind of country we let New Zealand become. This Race Relations Day the Human Rights Commission is asking all Kiwis to welcome and get to know the people in your community. What you do makes all the difference.
Human Rights Commission

Today we came together as a whole school in a heart formation. We were hoping to capture an image of how culturally diverse we are at Sunnynook Primary School.


Photograph by Audrey Cadness
Click here for more photographs of our 'heart' for Relations Day
2015 Relations Day

Things To Do In Class

Create a class poster as a visual representation of its diversity. Take a piece of paper and partner up with someone. Draw your partner. Montage all the class drawings together. Take a photograph to share on the blog.
Imagine you are writing a profile to introduce yourself on your class Wiki, join Facebook or a social network site.
Write your profile using only three words to describe who you are. Try not to just think of physical descriptions or personality but also words relating to other factors such as your beliefs, the different communities you belong to and these origins. Share them on the blog.

Tuesday, March 1, 2016

Tervetuloa (Welcome) to the Klen family from Finland


Welcome to Urho, Into and Taimi Klen who have flown all the way from Finland and will be at Sunnynook this term.

The distance they travelled from Finland to New Zealand is 16,893km

The off-centred blue cross is based on the Scandinavian Cross, a cross widely used on Scandinavian country flags. The blue color is symbolic of blue skies, and the thousands of lakes in Finland. The white represents the winter snows.
Click here for some useful Finnish phrases to say to Taimi, Into or Urho

Monday, February 22, 2016

The Lantern Festival


This weekend brought together all the people living in Auckland to celebrate the Chinese New Year.Did you go? Post a comment about your experience.

The Auckland War Memorial Museum lit up at night for the 2016 Lantern Festival





A fantastic blend of cultures with this Maori warrior Chinese lantern


Rows of colourful lanterns decorated the tree branches at The Domain


Friday, January 22, 2016

Welcome back to school!

Welcome back to a new year at Sunnynook Primary School. I hope you have all had a great break this summer. Here's a snapshot from my holiday camping in the Bay of Islands. Post a comment on the blog to say what you did.

Camping at Elliot Bay, Bay of Islands December 2015

This month our Chinese students will celebrate the Chinese New Year, the Year of the Monkey. Below are the dates and venue so that you can join in the celebrations with your family and friends.  (新年快樂)



The Chinese Lantern Festival will be at the Auckland Domain for the first time this year. Below are a few of the entertainment acts advertised for the event: 

Second Hand Rose (Chinese: 二手玫瑰; pinyin: èrshǒu méiguī) rock band

Shanghai Puppet Theatre

Guangdong Traditional Music Philharmonic

Guanzhou Acrobatic Arts Theatre.



Auckland War Memorial Museum lights up to welcome in the Chinese Lunar New Year 20 February to 21 February 2016