Outdoor games include bubble gum, weather forecast, traffic lights, building triangles, and mouse cages.
1. Sticky Bubble Gum
All the children form a circle and clap their hands while saying, "Sticky Bubble Gum, Sticky Bubble Gum." The child asks, "Sticky where?" The teacher says, "Sticky shoulders (or other parts of the body)." Children immediately touch each other's shoulders in pairs.
2. Weather Forecast
The teacher says, "It's raining hard." The child says, "Not afraid." The teacher says, "It's snowing." The child says, "Not afraid." When the teacher said hail, the children immediately squatted down and held their heads, and the slow ones were eliminated.
3, traffic lights
The teacher made traffic lights (arms up for red lights, down for green lights), the game began, the children drove, see the red light and immediately stop, the green light can continue to drive, the error returned to the origin to start again.
4, ride the triangle
Children divided into a number of groups, each group of six children, built in the form of a triangle, listen to the teacher's command to the left, "triangle" together with the left three steps, the teacher said to the right (forward, backward), the triangle together with the right (forward, backward) walk three steps. forward, backward) three steps. Let's build a rat cage and catch you with a click." The child who plays the rat then runs around the circle around S. When it comes to catching you, put your hands down together, and the child who is in the circle will be caught.
Expanded Information
Outdoor Activity Game Benefits
1, Outdoor Activity Gives You Energy
Too tired for a few extra cups of coffee to refresh yourself? Maybe you don't need that caffeine and should instead go out and take a break. A study shows that a 20-minute break in an open outdoor area can energize your brain and refresh it like a cup of Starbucks.
2. It's easier to work out outdoors
Is there a feeling that working out outdoors is more relaxing than indoors, and that may be thanks to all that greenery. In a small experiment, researchers had cyclists ride in front of green, gray, and red shots, respectively.