Craffft · Educational Framework
Ngā Kōrero o Mua — The Stories That Came Before
From the Big Bang to a New Zealand factory floor — understanding how systems evolved over billions of years isn't just about the past. It's the only way to understand where we are now, and the only way to design what comes next.
The Cosmic Timeline · Te Ao Hōhonu
From the first light to the first human step
Scientists divide the history of everything into two great timelines: the Cosmic Timeline — the history of the universe — and the Geologic Time Scale — the history of Earth. Together they are the ultimate exercise in systems thinking. Every pattern, every crisis, every breakthrough in New Zealand's industrial story is a tiny echo of forces that have been operating for 13.8 billion years.
13.8 Billion Years Ago → Present
The universe began as an infinitely dense, hot point. In its first stars — vast stellar factories — every element that would one day make a kiwifruit, a steel beam, or a human body was forged under unimaginable pressure. The history of manufacturing begins in the heart of a star.
The Geologic Time Scale · Te Hītori o te Ao
4.6 billion years of trial, extinction, and flourishing
Earth's story is the history of systems under pressure — oceans forming, atmospheres shifting, mass extinctions clearing the board for new forms of life. Every adaptation that survived did so because it solved a problem the previous system could not. The pattern has never changed.
4.6 Billion → 541 Million Years Ago
Almost nine-tenths of Earth's history happened before any creature complex enough to leave a fossil. Yet this is where the foundations were laid — oceans, oxygen, and the first cellular life.
541 Million Years Ago → Present
In geological terms, everything humans recognise as life — fish, forests, dinosaurs, mammals, and ourselves — fits into the last 12% of Earth's history. It has already been punctuated by five mass extinctions, each resetting the ecological board.
~1750 CE → Present (Industrial Revolution) / or ~1950 CE → Present (Mid-20th Century)
For the first time in Earth's 4.6-billion-year history, a single species has become the dominant force shaping the planet's geology, climate, and ecosystems. The four systems at the heart of that transformation are precisely the four Craffft pillars: Food, Fibre, Factories, and Transport. Earth has survived massive changes before — but the current rate of change is the first one driven entirely by a single species' industrial systems.
Aotearoa New Zealand · Te Hītori ā-Ahumahi
How New Zealand's four pillars evolved — from te ao Māori to the machine age
Understanding the historical timeline of an industry is a fundamental piece of the Craffft methodology. The timelines of Food, Fibre, Factories, and Transport within Aotearoa teach systems thinking — not memorisation of dates. They reveal why the world looks the way it does today, who built it, and what decisions we now need to make differently.
The Craffft Pillars · Ngā Pou Whiria
Interactive histories of the systems that shaped Aotearoa
Each of the four Craffft pillars has its own deep history — stretching from Māori origins through colonial industry to today's digital transition. These interactive timelines make that history navigable, tangible, and alive.
Why Timelines? · He Aha te Take?
Te Mātaiaho · New Zealand Curriculum
Understand, Know, Do — the framework at the heart of Aotearoa's educational reform
Craffft's industrial timelines align directly with Te Mātaiaho — the New Zealand Curriculum refresh. By using the historical evolution of Food, Fibre, Factories, and Transport, Craffft addresses the "Understand, Know, Do" framework not as rote memorisation, but as applied, systems-thinking skills embedded in real New Zealand contexts.
Aotearoa New Zealand's Histories Strand
Tūrangawaewae me te taiao — Place, environment, and the decisions that shaped them
English & Literacy Strand
Reading, writing, and reasoning through real-world industrial contexts
The Ultimate Pedagogical Goal
The world today can feel static and overwhelming to young people — like a game where the rules have already been written, and all you can do is play the character you were assigned. Timelines are the antidote to that feeling.
When students analyse the history of food, fibre, factories, and transport — from the Big Bang to a New Zealand factory floor — they discover something profound: every system that surrounds them was invented by regular people, often recently, often in response to a crisis, often imperfectly.
The present day is not a finished product. It is the latest milestone in a very long story — and the next chapter has not been written yet.
"The students who understand timelines become the architects of the next era — not the inhabitants of the last one."
Begin Exploring · Tīmata Mai