Meri Kirihimete! Sport Northland closes on 20 December 2024 and re opens on 13 January 2025 - if you need to get in touch with us, please email info@sportnorth.co.nz and we will get back to you on our return.
Providing funding for projects and programmes in Te Tai Tokerau
Ka pū te ruha ka hao te rangatahi
Old approaches must make way for new
Tēnei au te hōkai nei o taku tapuwae
Ko te hōkai nuku ko te hōkai rangi
Ko te hōkai a tō tupuna a Tānenui-a-rangi
Ka pikitia ai ki te rangi tūhāhā ki te Tihi-o-Manono
Ka rokohina atu rā ko Te Matua-kore anake
Ka tīkina mai ngā kete o te wānanga
Ko te kete-tuauri
Ko te kete-tuatea
Ko te kete-aronui
Ka tiritiria ka poupoua
Ka puta mai iho ko te ira tangata
Ki te wheiao ki te ao mārama
Tihei-mauri ora!
This is the journey of sacred footsteps
Journeyed about the earth journeyed about the heavens
The journey of the ancestral god Tānenuiarangi
Who ascended into the heavens to Te Tihi-o-Manono
Where he found the parentless source
From there he retrieved the baskets of knowledge
Te kete-tuauri
Te kete-tuatea
Te kete-aronui
These were distributed and implanted about the earth
From which came human life
Growing from dim light to full light
There was life!
Te Whakapapa o Tū Manawa i a Sport Northland
The history of Tū Manawa at Sport Northland
Sport Northland is proud to be managing Tū Manawa on behalf of Sport NZ in our region. Tū Manawa builds on the previous funding support from the KiwiSport fund, which successfully ran across Aotearoa for over a decade. Tū Manawa is aiming to transform approaches to engaging tamariki and rangatahi in healthy and active lifestyles for life through tākaro/play, ngā mahi a te rēhia/active recreation and hākinakina/sport. Sport NZ released this fund with a particular focus on groups who are less active, including girls and young women, disabled people and those living in our priority communities. Therefore, we welcome applications that will provide quality experiences for these groups.
Sport Northland launched Tū Manawa in July 2020. Between July 2020 and June 2024, we have distributed $3.6m of funding to over 370 kaupapa across Te Tai Tokerau.
We are continually improving our funding process to ensure equitable distribution of funding across Northland. As part of this, we have developed a funding framework ‘Ngā Kete o Tū Manawa’ to support applicants to achieve greater impact for whānau and their communities.
Ngā Kete o Tū Manawa
The treasures we seek to obtain
Our funding framework was developed based on the story of Tāne ascending to Te Tihi-o-Manono to obtain the baskets of knowledge. This framework demonstrates our bi-cultural approach to achieve our vision of all Northlanders moving more for enhanced wellbeing.
Ngā Kete o Tū Manawa is a guide for whānau to support them with their application and outlines the key priorities that our decision making panel considers. A kaupapa does not need to achieve all outcomes that we are seeking (all three Kete), it’s there to guide you in the development of meaningful, sustainable and impactful kaupapa.
Ngā Taura o Ngā Kete
The binding that holds and protects our kete
Ngā Tikanga o Tū Manawa
The process
We welcome applications from the following organisation types (please note, funded entities must have legal status):
Education settings:
Where an organisation or group wishes to apply but has no legal status, we recommend you consider partnering with a legal entity.
This is an activation fund that is intended to help cover the costs that are directly associated with the delivery of your activity. These costs might also address any barriers that prevent participants accessing your activity.
They could include:
We are interested in receiving applications that take innovative approaches to engaging our priority groups in quality tākaro/play, ngā mahi a te rēhia/active recreation and hākinakina auraki/sport experiences that meet their needs.
You can apply for up to $30,000 annually.
Applications under $10,000 will be assessed by an internal Sport Northland panel and applications over $10,000 will be assessed by an external panel that will include community members and Sport Northland staff.
The following are not eligible to apply:
The fund does not cover:
We want to ensure Tū Manawa funding does not replace curriculum delivery, or inadvertently cause confusion about the roles and responsibilities of teachers/kaiako and external providers. For that reason, when planned activities involve external providers other than school personnel and occur during class time, there is an additional step in the application process.
This involves a discussion between the school/kura and the external provider about the planned activity. The In-school/kura setting form has been created to guide this discussion.
Please complete the form and upload it to your application when applying. The link to the form is below.
It is important to be clear on what all parties are trying to achieve, and consider how the project supports building relationships, making use of local and community resources and connections and ultimately ensuring better outcomes for students and their learning.
Please note that you do not need to complete this form for projects that occur within a school/kura setting that are either before or after school, during lunchtime and breaks, or for applications that only involve school personnel.
If you have any questions or have finished your project and are ready to submit your final report, please email us on funding@sportnorth.co.nz and the team will happily answer any questions or send you your online reporting form.
Te Haerenga o Ngā Kete o Tū Manawa
Based on the kōrero of the scholar Māori Marsden, it was said that Te Kete Tuatea (basket of light) is present knowledge, Te Kete Tuauri (basket of darkness) is all things unknown, and Te Kete Aronui (basket of pursuit) is the knowledge that humans currently seek. Our interpretation and application of the kōrero from Māori Marsden provides a broader scope of kaupapa to be funded. We don’t read the kete in isolation from one another, nor the straight translation of their meanings.
In the context of Tū Manawa:
Te Kete Tuatea o Te Tiriti o Waitangi is seen as the basket of light from Te Tiriti o Waitangi, where we look at what knowledge we currently know (inequities, systemic racism, intergenerational trauma etc), and focus on investing into kaupapa that demonstrate a focus on improved equity and wellbeing as Māori.
Te Kete Tuauri o Te Taiao is seen as the basket of things unknown in Te Taiao, where we focus on the connection, access and protection of Te Taiao.
Te Kete Aronui o Te Aronga Whanokē is seen as the basket of pursuit of knowledge that humans currently seek, where we focus on investing into innovation and human advancement
Nā Trina Henare (Ngāti Hine, Ngāpuhi) i whakaingoatia ngā kete o Tū Manawa - Te Kaiārahi He Oranga Poutama, Te Kāhui Rautaki Māori, Ihi Aotearoa | Sport NZ
Additional Funding Options
If you haven’t already, check out these additional ways to fund your kaupapa and the individuals that Tū Manawa is trying to target.
SPORT NORTHLAND
CDL Group Northland Sports House
97 Western Hills Drive, Kensington,
Whangārei 0112
info@sportnorth.co.nz
CDL Group Northland Sports House - 09 437 9600
McKay Stadium / Kensington Fitness - 09 437 4404