T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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205.1 | Try the Library | 32FAR::JBOUCHER | | Tue Jul 31 1990 23:33 | 6 |
| Lorrie....I am part of a group that is organizing a block party to be
held soon. Just last week I was at the library with my son and found
some great books on games in the childrens section. Although I havent
gone thru it yet in detail and cant give you some specific games, after
a quick glance I was glad I found them....Good luck...Jennie
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205.2 | two Girl Scout games that work well in large groups | TLE::RANDALL | living on another planet | Wed Aug 01 1990 09:15 | 30 |
| See if you can find a Girl Scout leader who will loan you her copy
of "Games from Around The World." It includes things like "Spot the
Tiger" and "Crossing the River" that my daughter and her friends
(both sexes) used to just love.
"Spot the Tiger" is a variety of hide-and-seek; the kids hide
their eyes while an adult taps each one of them on the back,
between the shoulders. Only you leave a strip of tape on one
child's back. When everybody opens their eyes, they try to figure
out who the tiger is, and when they do, they go to a corner of the
play area and try not to giggle too hard. When the child with the
tape figures out she's the tiger, she roars. If she figures it
out before she's the only person left on the field, she wins.
"Crossing the River" takes a package of rock-colored construction
paper, a space at least 12' wide -- a living room, a street, a
driveway, a lawn -- and a die. The space is the river; you lay
down the sheets of construction paper to make the rocks on which
the players will cross the river. The adult in charge rolls the
die and calls out the number, and everybody tries to move ahead by
that many "rocks." If you put your foot down anywhere but on the
paper, you fall in the river and you're out of the game. It's
more fun the more people you have, because it develops elements of
musical chairs if there aren't enough rocks for all the kids. You
can also use different colors of paper, and divide the kids into
teams by color, so that on one turn, the red team moves on red
rocks, the next turn the green team moves on green rocks, etc.
The team who has the most people finish, wins.
--bonnie
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205.3 | balloon popping game | ATSE::KATZ | | Wed Aug 01 1990 12:36 | 9 |
| This went over real well. Its a relay race where you place an inflated balloon
on the chair so that the child will sit down on it and pop it, then run back
to tag the next kid in line who sits down in the chair to pop a balloon.
You will have to take the time to inflate a lot of balloons, expect at least
two iterations for one race, maybe four. The kids we used this on were 5-7
years old. I figure the younger ones might get scared by the popping sound. Use
your judgement, try it out before the party.
I think the element of relay race gets the kids up and screaming.
|
205.4 | some ideas | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Thu Aug 02 1990 11:27 | 23 |
| A game that was played at our clambake last year was actually for the
adults but the older kids (maybe 6 and up) wanted in on it and ended up
playing it for a long time.
It's chair basketball. You line up chair in 2 rows facing each other
and each person sits opposite an opponent and next to an opponent - a
stagered affect of the team members. You also have a person who stands
at each end of the rows and acts as their teams basket by holding out
their arms on a circle. You try to bat the "basketball" (actually a
balloon) down to your "basket". One point is scored for each basket and
we played until 10. You can do this with any number of people/kids. You
can either rotate players or maybe play a round-robin and determine a
winning team. Hope this was clearly explained.
This was great fun for the adults because the they soon realized that
the "basket" could move and made scoring a little easier.
Egg races are always fun - eggs balanced on a spoon.
The orange under your chin and pass it to the next team member is fun
for kids.
Have a fun day.
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205.5 | even more ideas | SHIRE::DETOTH | | Thu Aug 02 1990 12:07 | 26 |
| The great success at the last birthday party was...
a "costumed" obstacle race... Let me explain : we had 12 kids so it
was 2 teams of six each.. A pile of old, outsized clothes, and an
obstacle course which consisted of a large tarpaulin (crawl under), a
ladder on the ground (walk in the holes), upsidedown flower pots (walk
on without falling off..), a tennis ball (catch 10 without dropping), a
jump rope (skip 10 times without missing). The race starts with
running to the spot where all the clothes are. Each participant must
put all the clothes on (not carry them), they then proceeded through
the obstacles, returned to the "clothes" spot and took all the clothes
of and raced to tag the next team member.
Planned number of rounds was 2 goes.... The children actually played
this with great relish for about 20 minutes non-stop !
At the last DEC picnic, they had clowns and make-up specialists... All
ages really enjoyed this; the make up jobs were mask-ish,clown-ish or
"animal" faces (e.g. tigers, dogs, cats even butter flies) and scenes
(e.g. a beach scene, a surfer on a wave)...
P.S. Just make sure you get some good helpers on your side !
Good luck - and more important - hope you all have fun !
Diana
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205.6 | Ideas for young children | OBSESS::RAK | | Thu Aug 02 1990 13:57 | 10 |
| A few ideas that may appeal to the younger children ( ages 1-5).
Hide the peanut - just like an Easter Egg Hunt but use peanuts for eggs
and paper bags could be used to collect them.
Bobbing for apples - my children love this especially in the summer
when getting wet is part of the fun.
Duck, Duck, Goose - most preschoolers know how to play this.
Face painting and relay races - mentioned earlier are great.
Sounds like fun. Enjoy! Louise
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205.7 | Another idea | MAJORS::MANDALINCI | | Mon Aug 06 1990 10:37 | 12 |
| Another fun (not necessarily a game) activity is to put a name tag on
everyone's back with the name of a character or person they should
know. They ask everyone else questions trying to figure out who they
are. It's kind of like "What's My Line?" only it's "Who Am I?". Use
characters like Kermit the Frog, Bugs Bunny, Darth Vader, Fred
Flintstone, Opie, etc. You could even divide them into age categories
so the character really fits the age group.
You can complicate it with only being able to ask each person one
question.
Andrea
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205.8 | KEEP 'EM COMING! | GENRAL::MARZULLA | | Mon Aug 06 1990 17:11 | 5 |
| These are all great suggestions! Keep 'em coming - I am really getting
nervous!
Lorrie
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205.9 | digging for treasure | NRADM::TRIPPL | | Fri Aug 24 1990 08:58 | 14 |
| The one we used to use at the fire dept picnics, which always was a
hit, was to get a mound of either sawdust or sand and bury little
prizes or coins in it. The object is to find the buried treasure.
This generally works for a wide age span, like 4 to whatever. We
usually broke it up into age brackets, like 4-6 7-10 and 10 and over.
We used little prizes, like jack sets, small toy cars, coins wrapped in
a wad of foil to make it golf ball size and the kind of things ToysRUS
sells in their party favor section. They also used this kind of thing
at our town's Founder's day this year, it was a real hit!!
Best of all relax and just let the kid's do their thing!!
Lyn
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205.10 | PICNIC SUCCESS | GENRAL::MARZULLA | | Mon Aug 27 1990 13:04 | 20 |
| I am glad to say that the picnic is over and the games were a hit! We
hung hula hoops from trees and had the kids throw frisbee's through
them for a prize and had the little kids throw a ball through. Even
the two year olds were successfull (standing real close) - but they did
it for that prize. We also hung piniatas through basketball hoops -
two (one for each age group) - blindfolded the big kids and just let
the littler ones bang away. Also had sack races (can't find the burlap
bags here so had the grocery stores save some onion sacks - 50 lb.)
and they worked just as well. Also did the old egg in the spoon game.
Used plastic eggs that you find at Easter time and that was a real
hit. And last - - the water balloon game - did the traditional toss,
they since we had 150 of them, we just let the kids whip them around.
They had a good time, it was hot and the play didn't get out of hand.
All in all, the thing that I would do differently is put the prizes/
candy in some kind of carpenter belt, since it was cumbersome to carry
the bags of this stuff around. I was certainly amazed that even the
littler kids caught on to what was happening and also had a good time.
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