Fevahevahe'aki 'o e fanangā mo e fāgogō
A nine-year-old boy’s homework involves asking his family about any myths or legends they know. With his mum’s help, he contacts his grandparents in Sāmoa and Tonga and, via computer, they share traditional stories with him.
Tags
- AudienceKaiakoStudents
- Curriculum Level234
- Learning AreaLearning Languages
- Resource LanguageLea faka Tonga
- Resource typeText/Book
- SeriesFaufaua!
About this resource
Series: Learning languages - Faufaua!
Reading year level: Year 7–10
Category: Fiction
Fevahevahe'aki 'o e fanangā mo e fāgogō
Words by Emeli Sione
Illistrations by Darcy Solia
Order copies
More from this series
Fakalukuluku
In this non-fiction book, ‘Elenga Mailangi explains the Niuafo‘ou way of fishing, called “fakalukuluku”. She says that “the problem with this kind of fishing is sharks … According to a legend, a very large shark, called Sekitoa, protects the local people from shark attack.” So when the local people ...
1 of 15Fakataha Faka‘osita‘u
It’s New Year’s Eve, and Vili is at Taniela’s family gathering. He really wants to meet Taniela’s cousin ‘Aisea, who is a great skateboarder, but where is ‘Aisea? Vili asks everyone as he searches for his hero.
2 of 15Ko Hoku Fāmilí
Ten-year-old Meleane Lupe loses her family when a tsunami strikes Niuatoputapu. Her uncle and his Samoan wife in New Zealand adopt her, and Meleane moves to Māngere.
3 of 15Ko e Fono'
Nena is going to the fono at the school hall, and ‘Alipete decides to join her.
4 of 15Ko e Ta‘u Taha ‘o Tomi‘
Liki promises to dance at his nephew’s first birthday party, but it’s a big event, and Liki gets nervous. Everyone will be watching. Can he dance well enough?
5 of 15Ko e Kahoa Fai‘aho
A young girl visiting relatives in Lapaha, Tonga, helps make heilala garlands for her cousin’s twenty-first birthday.
6 of 15Ngaahi me‘a Mālie he Fononga ‘a e ‘Ātisi tā Kōmiki
In this graphic novel-style autobiography students learn the childhood and career of Māngere-born comic book artist Michel Mulipola.
7 of 15Ko e hā ‘a e Hikingaua?
Sokopeti invites her French friend Madeleine to join her family for their Tongan gathering on Sunday, and Madeleine learns how to prepare Tongan food.
8 of 15Ko e Tāpuaki‘i ‘o e Me‘atokoní
An eight-year-old girl in a bilingual class at her school helps her mum learn a grace to say at a work function.
9 of 15Tau Koka‘anga Faka-Nu‘u Sila
A young girl living in New Zealand describes going with her family to school on a Saturday morning to join members of her community in making a ngatu cloth as a gift for the school’s fiftieth anniversary.
10 of 15Fakakaukau ke ke hoko ko ha tokotaha saienisi
In this non-fiction book, students meet two New Zealand scientists - research scientist Professor Palatasa Havea, and plant pathologist Amy Maslen-Miller.
11 of 15Ko e Ki‘i Fakapulipuli ‘a ‘Eku Kuí
After Grandma passes away, Grandpa moves from Auckland to Christchurch to live with his son and his family. One day, when Grandpa takes his grandson fishing, he shares a secret – “When we used to go fishing, your grandma was the one who usually caught most of the fish!”
12 of 15Ko e Sipitifaea mei Tongá
The artist and writer Mathew Tanielu Hunkin is fascinated by the history of World War Two in the Pacific. One day, he noticed an image of a spitfire (fighter plane) on a ngatu. Intrigued, he flew to Tonga to find out more. The Museum of New Zealand Te Papa Tongarewa, the Air Force Museum of New Zeal...
13 of 15Ko e Māketi he Tokonakī
In this play, two eight-year-olds are helping their parents run stalls at a Saturday market. It turns out that quite a lot of mathematics is involved.
14 of 15Faufaua! An introduction to Tongan
Resources for teachers to plan their lea faka-Tonga language programmes.
15 of 15