Teacher PLD

Support for distance learning

COVID-19 has had such an impact on the way we live and work and indeed the way we teach. This article is to help you easily find resources we’ve created. They are organised into sections that are designed to meet various needs.

For teachers, we’ve created:

For parents and caregivers, we’ve created:

Composite image of adults + children during COVID-19 lockdowns

A new normal – COVID-19

COVID-19 has shifted how we view the world. It has forced us to navigate new normals in all aspects of our lives including how we teach and learn.

Rights: The University of Waikato Te Whare Wānanga o Waikato

Learning at home – ideas and resource links

Science is about discovery, curiosity and observation. Each topic within the articles below includes wrap-around resources to help with background information for adults or caregivers.

Young blond girl experimenting with baking soda and lemon juice.

Play and experimentation

There is much to be learned through play and experimentation with baking soda and lemon juice – measurement, cause and effect, eye-hand coordination and new words for a start. Mixtures and potions like these are the early beginnings of learning about chemistry.

Rights: Private Collection

Grab and go resources

These are downloadable worksheet-based resources in Word, allowing you to edit them to suit your students or use them just as they are. They cover literacy, maths and science. Some are based on the Connected articles, which are available online through TKI, and some also have audio files with the stories.

The two below feature Dr Hoare, one of New Zealand’s leading entomologists, and could also be used alongside TV episodes:

The three below are stand-alone worksheets that do not require internet access. They do not use Connected articles as a starting point.

Viruses, COVID-19 and our immune system

Dentist wearing PPE during the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020.

PPE equipment

During the COVID-19 pandemic, the use of PPE equipment is vital in reducing the spread of the virus. This is a dentist using PPE before performing emergency dental work during lockdown in Alert Level 4.

Rights: V Bootham

Microscopic beasts and how to fight them – an online course created by Thorndon School's Deputy Principal, Matt Boucher – dip into lessons that grab your interest, or do them all!

Home Learning TV episodes and supporting material

Did your students watch Home Learning TV on TVNZ DUKE+1 (Freeview channel 18 or Sky channel 504) as part of your teaching and learning programme? The 2021 season featured programmes and lessons for ākonga aged 2–11 years. Currently the episodes from the 2020–21 seasons are not available on TVNZ OnDemand. If you have access to ETV (a large online video platform for educators in Aotearoa New Zealand), then these videos can be accessed under TV recordings/Home Learning TV.

Suzy Cato presents junior science. Shawn Cooper presents middle and senior science. Dr Michelle Dickinson presents Kitchen Science for younger learners and Senior Science: Breaking It Down.

The Hub team created the scripts for Shawn’s episodes and many of Suzy’s. The episodes feature Hub content and we’ve created collections to provide additional support for some of the topics.

Below are a list of Shawn’s episodes – most are aimed at middle primary – but check the lesson title.

NOTE these shows are currently no longer accessible – but do check at a later date in case they come back on.

  • Antarctica

  • Aporo and innovation

  • Biosecurity – an introduced pest

  • Biosecurity and our ngahere (forest)

  • Careers and stereotypes

  • Citizen science and moths

  • Climate change

  • Discovering and naming new species – see our collection of related resources here

  • Down the drain

  • Ferns

  • Fit for purpose (learn about the different needs and habitats of our pets and native species)

  • Flight – see our collection of related resources here

  • Heat and temperature

  • Kai and kūmara

  • Kaimoana

  • Moths and butterflies – see our collection of related resources here

  • Pet power – upper primary science

  • Pollination

  • Properties of materials

  • Pūoru – the science of music and sound

  • Renewable energy

  • Science and innovation

  • Sea science – see our collection of related resources here

  • Sleep sleuths

  • States of matter – upper primary science – see our collection of related resources here

  • Takahē

  • The takeaway table

  • Thinking scientifically

  • Tracking our native birds

  • Turning old into new

  • Volcanoes

Content curations

For further inspiration and ideas have a look at our Learning science from home Pinterest board.

Teaching remotely and learning from home? – we created the collections below – they are full of ideas to keep students actively engaged in STEM activities:

For more on using and creating collections, see this super helpful article.

Useful links

Otago Musuem's @HOME contains a wide range of resources to keep you and your whānau entertained at home, with many of the materials having an underlying educational component.

Visit the Learning from home government website for other activity ideas.

At the start of 2021 The Education Review Office | Te Tari Arotake Mātauranga (ERO) released a report , Learning in a Covid-19 World: The Impact of Covid-19 on Schools, it looked at:

  • how Covid-19 impacted students, teachers, and schools

  • how schools responded, and what they learned

  • the challenges that schools expected they might face in future changes of alert levels.

The Science Spark website has a range of guides and activities for children from ages 8 to 11.

Published: 24 April 2020