Foreign Language & Child Study Team
1) Peer Leaders - role modeling a skit that portrays typical problems younger students might encounter, then asking audience to come up with ideas on how to handle problem
2) using finger puppets - beginning, middle, end / problem, solution
3) musical conversation - allow two students who are experiencing conflict to "talk" through drums if they are not able to use words to communicate effectively
4) in foreign language (FL) - in a written skit, have planned improv sections where actors can take risks with language and change direction of skit - still allows teachers to grade something that has been prepared/written, but allows students opportunity to use language more spontaneously as well
5) Acting out a fable with different characters - after students are familiar with a fable in a FL, assign characters and allow students to act out the story. For differentiation, lower-level students could simply re-enact the story, while the higher-level students could be challenged to make a creative twist (change characters, change setting, change outcome, etc.).
Specials
Physical Education
(K-2)
·
Use jump
ropes to create shapes – have the students completed exercises in the shapes
they have created.
·
Have the
students pretend they are various animals – such as an egg hatching into a
chicken, an elephant walking around the zoo, a lion stuck in a cage.
·
To calm the
students down have them become “silent sardines” (hands to the side, quite,
straight legs).
Health (6-8)
·
Play
“World’s Worst” for the relationship unit.
For example the prompter will call out World’s Worst Boyfriend/Girlfriend,
World’s Worst Husband/Wife, World’s Worst Friend.
·
Play
“World’s Worst” to demonstrate incorrect techniques for various sports. For example, World’s Worst baseball player,
World’s Worst Dancer, World’s Worst Jumping Jack.
Art
·
Read a
story about a specific artists and have the students paint the story (from
their perspective).
·
Act out
various artistic styles.
·
Pass ball
around and name particular things such as shapes, lines, artists, and art
mediums.
·
One person
begins a piece of art and passes it along to others to add to it – by the end a
final piece will be created.