Top 12 Olympic Lessons & Classroom Activities |
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To help you make the Olympics a learning experience in your classroom, I thought I’d share my favorite Olympics-inspired ideas for lessons, classroom management techniques and fun activities.
Language Arts/ English
Olympics Poetry
List 7 pairs of Olympic-themed rhymes. It could do with your sport, athletics, competition, international relations, patriotism, etc.
Use those rhymes to write an Olympic sonnet (14-lines). Remember that the last couplet usually adds a twist to the poem’s meaning.
Sports Writing
Get those cub sports writers in gear with a reporting assignment. Since the gamesWhile you watch the coverage of the Olympics announcement, they should record the 5 W’s (who, what, where, when, why and how) and write down quotes to include in an article.
Tips:
~ Start with a strong lead: the first sentence that catches the readers’ attention and gives an idea about what the story is about.
~ The next paragraph should give a broader explanation of what happened.
~ From there, include the most important details first and the less important details last. This is called the “inverted pyramid” writing style.
For younger students, they can focus on writing headlines that wrap up the announcement using descriptive adjectives.
Social Studies
Sportsmanship Advice
If we’re hosting the Olympics, we need to welcome people from other countries and demonstrate good sportsmanship. Write a letter to future American Olympians giving them advice on how to behave properly as hosts.
Get to Know the Competition
Assign students different countries competing in the games to research. The focus, depth and breadth of this research will obviously depend on the subject and grade level you teach.
To focus the project, you may want to have students focus on their historical involvement with the Olympics, the leading national sports, flags, emblems and other ways they represent themselves internationally and customs they would recognize if they met Olympians from that region.
Explore Your Olympic Dreams with Skier Lindsay Vonn
Check out the skier Linday Vonn’s Olympic-inspired activity and all Olympic-themed lessons on the Pop Culture Printables free samples. Olympic dreams
Sign up for the subscription for the latest activities and archives that includes activities based on Michael Phelps and the 2008 summer Olympics.
Math
Olympics Go Fantasy
For students or co-workers, start a pool or Olympics fantasy team to keep an ongoing . Individual students or teams can get assigned a country. Assign a point system to medals (that will vary by grade level) and have students work out the stats as an ongoing math activity.
Since the next games aren’t until February, you can also convert this for any sports season, using different teams’ stats. For examples of different ways to allot points, check out the options on the Yahoo! Fantasy page.
(Disclaimer: The K-12 Teachers Alliance and TeachHUB.com do not promote or condone illegal gambling of any kind).
Word Problems
The Let’s Play Math blog put together a great list of Olympic word problems and games this summer.
Science
Fire-Bearer
If you were tasked with keeping the Olympic torch lit as runners brought it through your state, what materials would you sustain the fire? What material would make the base that the runner will have to hold? Be sure to explain why those materials are the best choice.
BodyWorks
Olympians’ bodies work like well-oiled machines. After reviewing the different body systems, assign students a relevant body system (individually or in groups) to explain how that body system contributes to the athlete’s ability to compete.
§ Circulatory System (heart, blood, vessels)
§ Respiratory System (nose, trachea, lungs)
§ Immune System (many types of protein, cells, organs, tissues)
§ Skeletal System (bones)
§ Excretory System (lungs, large intestine, kidneys)
§ Urinary System (bladder, kidneys)
§ Muscular System (muscles)
§ Endocrine System (glands)
§ Digestive System (mouth, esophogus, stomach, intestines)
§ Nervous System (brain, spinal cord, nerves)
§ Reproductive System (male and female reproductive organs)
Going the Distance
Adjust equation problems dealing with speed, distance, velocity and acceleration according to Olympic statistics.
Behavior & Classroom Management
Passing the Torch & Gold-Medal Behavior
To control classroom discussion, only the torch-bearer can talk.
Break your classes into teams and assign them a country. Track points for good behavior and deduct for infractions. At the end of the week, month or term, the gold medalists will earn extra credit or special privileges.
Encourage New Clubs
The Olympics promote fitness and get kids more involved by exposing students to the wide variety of sports in the summer games. Maybe your students will start the school’s first archery club or Taekwondo club.
For more Olympic-inspired lesson plans, check out:
http://www.picadome.fcps.net/lab/teacherl/lesson_plans/olympics/default.htm
http://www.lessonplanspage.com/Olympics.htm
How will you use the Olympics to inspire students? Share in the comments section!
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