So if you’ve been following along, one of the activities I
have to do before I start school is plan and implement a summer camp for my
community. Not an easy feat when you lack materials, money and oh I don’t
know…basic communication with vendors, students and others alike. However my
camp ran really smoothly thanks to the help of my two counterparts and my
sister and her friends. They helped me out with translation and guidance when I
needed it.
The camp was 5 days long with each day being a different
theme. Themes are as follows: Introduction Day, Sports Day, Arts & Crafts
Day, Pop Culture Day and Nature Day. I
would open each day by passing out an attendance bead to each of the
campers…this served as an incentive for the campers to come back each day. By
the end of the week the campers who attended every day of camp would have
enough beads to make a summer camp bracelet. After the bead passing and roll
call, the students and I would warm up by dancing the call and response song
called “Funky Chicken”. After “Funky
Chicken” I would give the day’s vocabulary lists to the campers and go over
each word to make sure that they knew them. Afterwards we would do various
activities and games that involved the words from the words list of that
particular day.
I tried yet again to teach kickball to another group of
Georgian students….just as hard as the first time but by the end of the hour
they had a pretty good grasp on the rules and such.
I think they activity the kids loved the most was the
clothing relay game. I brought some articles of clothing for this activity and
asked each student to bring one article of clothing for this activity as well.
I divided the clothing into two piles, each pile having the same amount of
shirts, pants, hats etc. as well as equal numbers of colors and patterns. I
would shout out an article of clothing or a color and each time would have to find
the item and then run to the other side of the room and dress their other team
member. They got so into it!
The other activity that was a huge success was the making of
God’s Eyes. This was a craft that my family and I would do when we would go
camping. All you need is two small sticks and some yarn and presto a cool craft
and as I have come to realize from my memories of family camping… a way to easily
keep kids occupied and in one place.
Besides god’s eyes, the clothing relay game and kickball we
also did the hokey pokey to learn body
parts, made collages from magazines (each student had to spell their name, I
love Georgia, include a picture they liked and spell out one new word that they
learned that day), wrote poems with 3 new vocabulary words, went on a nature scavenger
hunt, a human treasure hunt (students had find other students in the classroom
who had something in common with something on their list…asking questions in
English of course), watched and English film (Finding Nemo), made team posters
and team songs, and had a celebration picnic at the end of our last day of camp
Though the camp had a lot more work/planning/improvising
than I had originally anticipated…it all worked out in the end.
Below are pictures from my camp…my counterpart Zaira took
most of these photos
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Playing Everybody who has... |
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Maka, one of my students, and her collage |
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I know you all are jealous of my beautiful handwriting... |
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Just a sample of some of the god's eyes made...my students picked the craft right up |
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Checking off the Nature Scavenger Hunt list...(and for your information I'm thinking...not picking my nose) |
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Last day of camp supra picnic |
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The infamous clothing relay |
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Learning body parts and action words with the help of the Hokey Pokey |
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Kickball! The sheets of my summer camp schedule also doubled as bases |
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Nature hike exploring |
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Pictures and collages time! |
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One of the team posters...We had team Funny Children (poster above) and team Smile |
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Woot Go Sagarejo's 2013 Summer Camp! |
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