bicycle helmet 7 3 4 image
JuliaShort
My mom is a nurse and doing a presentation on bicycle safety. (Wearing a helmet, etc...) We are already projecting pictures and my mom is doing a plastic-egg-filled-with-jelly drop as an example of someone not wearing their helmet and falling off their bike. She's also giving out coloring books to the younger ones. She's teaching two groups: 7th/8th graders and around 3rd/4th graders. Do you have any ideas on how to grab their attention and to make it more interesting? Thanks a bunch!
Answer
Make it funny...include funny stuff in between the important messages. Nothing bores people more than a well-intended lecturer presenting morbid facts and examples...like the "look at these lungs" presentations to discourage smoking. If it bores adults, it will put kids to sleep! I taught girl scouts/brownies about horse care years ago. I invented a cartoon horse, drew cartoons on large poster boards, and included the important information in a story line. Those kids are now adults and when I run into them on occasion, every one of them talks about the adventures of "Dobbin" and how much they learned. Most importantly, they actually followed the precautions and still remembered them years later. My presentations were targeting girls around 10 years old, give or take (can't remember exactly). If I were your mom, I'd draw a face on the egg, name it, make a body and bike for it, and create a story line that is 50% funny and 50% facts. For 3rd and 4th graders I'd include their issues; for 7th and 8th graders I'd create a different story line...more teen issues. Maybe give the egg a cool hairdo...even a fan blowing it "in the wind" before the fall. Develop an introduction that prepares them to be bored...then shock them with funny and keep rolling. I'm also a nurse...and a very funny but effective college instructor...humor always worked for me, and my students actually enjoyed learning!
Make it funny...include funny stuff in between the important messages. Nothing bores people more than a well-intended lecturer presenting morbid facts and examples...like the "look at these lungs" presentations to discourage smoking. If it bores adults, it will put kids to sleep! I taught girl scouts/brownies about horse care years ago. I invented a cartoon horse, drew cartoons on large poster boards, and included the important information in a story line. Those kids are now adults and when I run into them on occasion, every one of them talks about the adventures of "Dobbin" and how much they learned. Most importantly, they actually followed the precautions and still remembered them years later. My presentations were targeting girls around 10 years old, give or take (can't remember exactly). If I were your mom, I'd draw a face on the egg, name it, make a body and bike for it, and create a story line that is 50% funny and 50% facts. For 3rd and 4th graders I'd include their issues; for 7th and 8th graders I'd create a different story line...more teen issues. Maybe give the egg a cool hairdo...even a fan blowing it "in the wind" before the fall. Develop an introduction that prepares them to be bored...then shock them with funny and keep rolling. I'm also a nurse...and a very funny but effective college instructor...humor always worked for me, and my students actually enjoyed learning!
Tell me of ways to be strange and unexpected?
Yordan Tac
Don't ask why, because even I can't give you an explanation. It's just one of those things that I feel necessary for my life. I just feel this way. Just give me your best shots and don't say stuff like yelling "Pancake!!!!" to random people on the street. Think unexpected, not crazy!
Answer
I am an expert at the art of randomness:
1. Sing the Batman theme incessantly.
2. Go though the Mc Donald's drive through and tell them that you order is "to go"
3.Amuse yourself for endless hours by hooking a camcorder to your TV and then pointing it at the screen.
4. Talk only in a Wall-E voice
5. Stomp on little plastic ketchup packets.
6.Name your dog "Dog."
7.Declare your apartment an independent nation, and sue your neighbors upstairs for "violating your airspace."
8.Claim that you must always wear a bicycle helmet as part of your "astronaut training."
9.Erect an elaborate network of ropes in your backyard, and tell the neighbors you are a "spider person."
10.Adjust the tint on your TV so that all the people are green, and insist to others that you "like it that way."
11.Holler random numbers while someone is counting.
12.ONLY TYPE IN UPPERCASE.
13. As much as possible, skip rather than walk
14.Mow your lawn with scissors
15. Ask the waitress for an extra seat for your "imaginary friend."
16.Routinely handcuff yourself to furniture, informing the curious that you don't want to fall off "in case the big one comes."
17. Buy a large quantity of orange traffic cones and reroute whole streets.
18. Wear all your clothes inside-out or backwards.
19. when in an elavator, draw a circle on the floor and tell everyone that it is your "personal space"
20. Give a play-by-play account of a person's every action
I am an expert at the art of randomness:
1. Sing the Batman theme incessantly.
2. Go though the Mc Donald's drive through and tell them that you order is "to go"
3.Amuse yourself for endless hours by hooking a camcorder to your TV and then pointing it at the screen.
4. Talk only in a Wall-E voice
5. Stomp on little plastic ketchup packets.
6.Name your dog "Dog."
7.Declare your apartment an independent nation, and sue your neighbors upstairs for "violating your airspace."
8.Claim that you must always wear a bicycle helmet as part of your "astronaut training."
9.Erect an elaborate network of ropes in your backyard, and tell the neighbors you are a "spider person."
10.Adjust the tint on your TV so that all the people are green, and insist to others that you "like it that way."
11.Holler random numbers while someone is counting.
12.ONLY TYPE IN UPPERCASE.
13. As much as possible, skip rather than walk
14.Mow your lawn with scissors
15. Ask the waitress for an extra seat for your "imaginary friend."
16.Routinely handcuff yourself to furniture, informing the curious that you don't want to fall off "in case the big one comes."
17. Buy a large quantity of orange traffic cones and reroute whole streets.
18. Wear all your clothes inside-out or backwards.
19. when in an elavator, draw a circle on the floor and tell everyone that it is your "personal space"
20. Give a play-by-play account of a person's every action
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Title Post: Question for people who are experianced nurses/docs?
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Thanks For Coming To My Blog
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