The children will start off with some fun cone grid activities to teach them the basics of keeping the map orientated. Then, I've created a load of orienteering courses, each with three controls (there will be 23 controls out there in total) and I've coloured them green, orange and red according to difficulty for the various grades (1 to 6) that I'll see during the week. The plan is that once we've done the cone grids, the children will get maps showing controls and they'll run to the three controls on their map (lots of variation) and then back to me. Depending on how much time we've got, they could get in two to four courses. Children don't often wear watches so I can't say, "Be back in 20 minutes".
The children know their school so getting lost won't be a problem and I'm only using part of the map - the buildings and the fields to the right.
Phew! It has been lots of prep and map drawing but I'm quite excited about my week ahead. I'll put out my controls this afternoon so that they're all in place for the morning. It will take me a while to set out the grids and my first class is at 08h00.
Cards for the 'Counting Coloured Cones' game |
An 'obstacle' cone grid. I use metal droppers (4x4) with candy tape to create the 'walls'. The children have to run around the 'walls' to get to the correct controls. |
3 comments:
hi
I am from Canberra orienteering Australia OACT I wondered if I could have an electronic copy of your 12 colored cone maps so I can run orienteering in schools here
david Poland -- todavid at webone.com.au
Hi David - I've emailed you directly.
For anyone else wanting these - and other orienteering games - http://www.orienteering.co.za/development/school-resources/
Enjoy!
Hi David - I've emailed you directly.
For anyone else wanting these - and other orienteering games - http://www.orienteering.co.za/development/school-resources/
Enjoy!
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