Welcome to the month of November! This month I have provided a list
of many important dates that can be celebrated with your PE class.
I have included some of the games and activities my student's have
enjoyed and wanted to play over and over. These are just some of
the many possible ways to celebrate these special days.
Moreen Ferdie
Interdisciplinary Section Editor |
These
events would all be easy to tie in with health.
American
Diabetes Awareness Month
November is National Diabetes Awareness Month, and provides a reminder
that it is important to learn more about diabetes and the risks
associated with it, so that you can more effectively teach this
information to your students.
Diabetes is a serious disease that affects
the body's ability to produce or respond properly to insulin. Less
insulin results in the impaired ability of the body's cells to use
blood glucose for energy. Nearly 21 million children and adults
in the United States have diabetes, and that number is growing at
an alarming rate. Diabetes is the fifth deadliest disease in the
nation, and has no cure.
Visit The
American Diabetes Association for information about events in
your local area, and for other ways you can participate, or to learn
more about this disease. An online "Diabetes
Risk Test" is also available. Excellent materials geared
toward educating children and adolescents can be found at the National
Diabetes Education program. Look under the section for resources
for professionals to find colorful tip sheets for children on topics
such as: Be
Active, Stay
at a Healthy Weight, and Eat
Healthy Foods.
Some of the materials for adolescents
are entitled: Dealing
with the Ups and Downs of Diabetes, and Move
it! Reduce your Risk of Diabetes School Kit. This kit was designed
specifically for promoting physical activity among American Indian/Alaska
Native youth, but could easily be adapted for any population.
Lung
Cancer Awareness Month
Quit 4 Life
provides the stories of 4 teens who decide to quit smoking, and
also information on the perils of smoking.
Nutritional
Awareness Month
A great way to incorporate this event is to have a food pyramid
relay. Listed below are the steps.
Food Pyramid Relay
American
Indian Heritage Month
Archery, a shield dance, and a hoop dance are activities you can
do to celebrate this event. The Pueblo Indian's hoop dance could
be performed by holding a hula hoop and alternating one leg in,
and one leg out, to the beat of the music. I know there are more
elaborate hoop dances done by the Pueblos.
Resources: read the History
of the modern Hoop Dance. See a Hood Dance slideshow
and some videos.
Another great
video, another again,
and resources
to learn hoop dancing.
Aviation History Month
A fun game my students enjoy is Frequent Fliers. This game is explained
in Moving
to Discover: The USA book by Mike Lee and Rhonda L. Clements.
Frequent Fliers
Child Safety and Prevention Month
An interesting site to access for child safety information is kidWISEcorner.com.
You will find information on the Family Safety Fair, and on how
to become a facilitator for Out of Harm's Way - Teaching kids to
be Safe & Strong.
Nov.6-10- Kids' Goals Setting Week
Have your students work on setting fitness and/or eating goals during
this week.
Nov. 13-19- National Children's Book Week
There are a lot of great books available to combine activities with.
A few years ago my school held a Reading
in Sports Field Day. The books and activities we did are listed
below. During our event, an adult or student read the class a short
book, and then they did the physical activity.
Nov. 19-25- National Games and Puzzle Week
Balloon Puzzle Game
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There has been talk about snowboarding
in PE, but what about wake
boarding and other water sports? Does anyone know
of any school that offers any of these, or has there been
attempts? Or, is it too much of a liability and risk along
with too much trouble with boats, equipment, and other
factors that might hinder this type of activity? Please
share. |
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Nov.
3- Culture Day in Japan
My school held a Games and Dances from around the World Field
Day. We also presented a unit taught in class several years ago.
There were just too many great games and dances to do, so we had
to spread it out between the field day and the unit. These were
some of our student's favorite games and dances. These next 2
games are taken from The Multicultural
Game Book, by Louise Orlando (Scholastic Inc., 1993).
JAN-KEM-PO
Country of origin: Japan
Equipment needed: none
How to play: Just like rock (Jan), paper (Kem),
scissors (Po), but substitute the Japanese words.
Images of Buddha
This game can be played in small groups. Players stand in a circle
facing the center while striking a pose. Each person must strike
a different pose. Together they say this poem:
Rakansan, rakansan,
rakansan ga,
Sorottara-soro-soro
Hajime ya janaika
Yorija, so no so
Yorija, so no so
When the last line is said, everyone must
make the pose that the person to their left is making. The group
says the poem over and over until everyone has had a chance to
strike everyone else's pose.
The following dance is taken from the book International
Playtime, Classroom Games and Dances From Around the World
by Wayne E. Nelson and Henry "Buzz" Glass (Fearon Teacher
Aids, 1992).
TANKO BUSHI (music from the Multicultural Children's
Songs). Country of origin: Japan
COUNTS |
STEPS |
16 |
Introduction
(wait in place) |
8 |
Pretend
to hold a shovel with both hands. Face right and pretend to
dig for 4 counts, and then face left and pretend to dig for
4 counts. |
4 |
Throw
coal over your right shoulder for 2 counts, and then throw
coal over your left shoulder for 2 counts. |
4 |
Pretend
to look through coal dust while shielding your eyes with your
right hand for 2 counts, and then shield your eyes with your
left hand for 2 counts. |
8 |
Push
a coal cart with your right foot forward for 2 counts and
then with your left food forward for 2 counts.
Clap hands.
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Repeat
dance |
This next game was found in Multicultural
Games by Lorraine Barbarash (Human Kinetics, 1997).
Japanese Tag

Nov.
3- Sandwich Day
One idea for this day is to teach and explore with your students
the question of what are healthy sandwich choices. You could expand
this idea by organizing a relay where students need to find pictures
or plastic food items that are part of healthy sandwiches.
Nov. 6- Recreation Day in Tasmania, Australia
My students enjoyed these next 2 Australian games that are found
in the book Children's
Games from around the World by Glenn Kirchner (WCB/McGraw
Hill, 1991).
SNOW WHITE
Country of origin: Australia
Equipment needed: 8 hoops and 4 cones
How to play:
KICKBALL
Country of origin: Australia
Equipment needed: 1 soccer/kick/utility ball and 1 bowling pin
or cone per group of 3
How to play:
Nov.
13 - World Kindness Day
A quote from www.kindness.com
states that, "The purpose of World Kindness Day is to look
beyond ourselves, beyond the boundaries of our country, beyond
our culture, our race, our religion; and realize we are citizens
of the world. As world citizens we have a commonality, and must
realize that if progress is to be made in human relations and
endeavors, if we are to achieve the goal of peaceful coexistence,
we must focus on what we have in common."
National
Influenza Vaccination Week - The Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention (CDC) has announced the week after Thanksgiving,
November 27 to December 2, as National Influenza Vaccination Week.
This year, Tuesday November 27, 2007, is set aside as Children's
Flu Vaccination Day, with a focus on vaccinating high-risk children.
Each year, over 20,000 children are hospitalized as a result of
influenza. This day will help raise awareness about the value
of vaccinating children - especially high-risk children - and
their close contacts.
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AND STILL MORE
IMPORTANT DATES |
Nov. 14 National
Memory Screening Day
Some fun memory games include:
Giant Memory Game
Memory Ball or Warp Speed - (uses 1 or 2 balls)
This game was found in the Great
Activities Newspaper.
Operation Cooperation
Supplies needed: jump rope, a base, team color code sheet, master
color code sheet, colored markers, and 10-15 cones. All team members
must hold the jump rope and move as a unit as they try to find specific
colored markers. The object is to find out how quickly your team
can complete all the assignments given.
I discovered this next game in Character
Education by Donald R. Glover and Leigh Ann Anderson (Human
Kinetics, 2003).
The Maze
- Supplies needed: index cards with red #1-24, maze key cards The
team must take turns stepping on the index cards to complete a predetermined
path.
Nov.
13- National Young Reader's Day
An easy way to participate on this day is to promote the BOOK
IT! Reading incentive program; this program was co-founded
by Pizza Hut and the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress,
and has been an annual event since 1989.
Nov.
24- National Flossing Day
You can find at edhelper.com a theme unit that can be printed off
(if you are a subscriber).
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CULTURAL CURRICULUM (added
by webmaster) |
Cultural
Dances and Stories from Around the World: A
Discovery of World Cultures through Dance and Drama, Curriculum
Designed for Grades K-5
In 2005, the University of Hawaii at Manoa
ArtsBridge America program and Friends of Ali'iolani Elementary
School allowed an MFA candidate in Youth Theatre Studies to implement
a sixty hour creative dance and drama curriculum for kindergarten
through fifth grades during the 2004-2005 school year. This fine
arts curriculum was designed to address the lack of fine arts instruction
within the school, and provide students opportunities to partake
in arts instruction. If it was not for Friends of Ali'iolani, the
school would have had no choice but to continue without fine arts
instruction due to lack of state funding.
This curriculum represents a collaborative
study of how dance and drama enhance curriculum subjects such as
math, science, reading, history, language arts, physical education,
geography, and writing. "Cultural Dances and Stories From Around
The World" was designed to provide children creative opportunities
to learn about different world cultures through dance and drama.
Three teaching methods were used: learning
through dance and drama, learning about dance and drama, and learning
about oneself through dance and drama. Learning through drama activities
provided children with situations in which they solved and evaluated
problems in small groups. Learning about dance and drama allowed
students opportunities to learn and apply basic dramatic elements
pertaining to theatre and dance as performance art forms. Lastly,
activities that focused on learning about oneself and others through
drama opened doors for children to express themselves and their
imaginations in a safe and nurturing environment.
These concepts addressed the State of Hawaii's
Educational Standards from the aforementioned eight areas of instruction.
These concepts were explored in and out of the classroom through
various problem-based and performance based learning activities.
Problem-based learning activities included pre and post assessments
administered to track how well students were retaining and transferring
what they learned kinesthetically to paper; analysis of literature,
poetry, and children's stories from around the world; script writing;
and sharing in oral form. The third through fifth grade students
participated in an original play performance that they themselves
wrote, adapted, and premiered in for their peers, teachers, school
faculty, parents, and community. Download the curriculum
paper- source: e-scholarship
repository
Dance:
Cultural Dance Festival - This lesson is one example of how
you can implement the practice of Involving Families and Communities.
In this activity, you will organize a cultural dance festival to
help students and parents learn more about the dances of various
cultures.
Brain-Compatible
Dance Education - In this unique teacher reference, creative
dance specialist Anne Green Gilbert presents her ideas regarding
the positive impact that dance can have on brain development.
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