Subject adaptation | Years 11–13 | Health and Physical Education | Field-Based STEM | Tony Jones
The Position First Protocol creates a before-and-after record of student thinking. In HPE at Years 11 to 13, where tasks often involve evaluating health claims, analysing performance data, or forming positions on hauora and wellbeing, the protocol makes the student's own reasoning the assessable starting point.
Task: analyse how one dimension of hauora affects a young person's participation in physical activity. Before any research begins, students write their position: which dimension they will focus on, why they believe it is significant, and what they are uncertain about. A student might write: "I think taha hinengaro is most important because I have noticed that how I feel mentally changes how hard I try. I am not sure whether this is different for people who play team sports compared to individual sports." That uncertainty becomes the driving question for the investigation. The Position Comparison at submission shows how the evidence shaped or challenged that starting uncertainty.
Task: evaluate the effectiveness of a health promotion approach for a specific population group. Students write their initial position before examining any programme data or research. The position names their claim about effectiveness, the reason behind it, and one assumption they are making. During investigation, students annotate their position statement with notes: "this confirmed my claim" or "this challenged my assumption about..." The annotations become the basis for the Position Comparison, which is completed before drafting begins. The comparison is a required submission component.
Task: evaluate how a biophysical principle applies to performance in a chosen physical activity. The position statement requires the student to name the principle, claim how it applies, and identify one aspect they have not yet been able to observe or measure in practice. The Position Comparison at submission addresses: what the evidence confirmed, what required revision, and which single source or observation most changed their understanding. For Level 3, the comparison is discussed briefly with the teacher before submission as a ten-minute conference. That conversation is the secure evidence point that the evaluative thinking belongs to the student.
Collect the position statement before the research phase opens. A statement written after investigation has begun is not a pre-task artefact. At Year 11, allow ten minutes for the position writing step at the start of the first lesson of the task. At Year 12 and 13, students may complete it as a brief pre-task exercise set the day before investigation begins. The timestamp on the collected statement is the integrity record.
HPE tasks regularly engage with topics that are personally significant: body image, mental health, whānau wellbeing, or experiences of physical ability and disability. Students should never be required to write a position that discloses personal health information. The position is about a claim regarding the topic, not about the student's own circumstances. If a student's position statement moves into personal disclosure, redirect to the task focus with care and without drawing attention to the disclosure in any shared class setting.
Position First Protocol (core): the foundational strategy this resource adapts for HPE at Years 11 to 13.
Try First, Then Check — Health and PE Years 7 to 8: the earlier year-band introduction to Position First in this learning area.
What Students Can Account For After the AI Helped — HPE Years 9 to 10: the Reconstruction Check strategy that pairs with Position First for tasks involving AI assistance during investigation.
When AI Speaks, Students Position First: the teacher practice resource explaining the protocol's application across voice AI contexts.