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Motorbikes in Savannakhet. Motorbikes in Vientiane Province. Motorbikes in Vientiane Capital. Motorbikes in Xayabouly. Motorbikes in Xieng Khouang. Offer Amount. This one is always a crowd pleaser! First, be sure you have a large, clear space to play. Position the child in prone on his tummy on the scooter. Hold onto his feet and give him a big push! Set up a pyramid with a few cardboard blocks or empty shoeboxes. Just like the Superman activity above, position the child on the scooter on his tummy and tell him to keep his arms strong out in front of him.
This one is really fun with two kids competing against each other! Both kids will be in prone on tummies on their own scooters. Scatter a handful of small objects e. Scoot the kids forward, giving them just a quick second to try to grab one of the objects before pulling them back. Whoever can grab the most objects wins! This activity can be done in a few different ways to target different skills.
The idea is to have the child push off of the wall to see how far he can propel himself. Let him try it on his tummy, either pushing off of the wall with his feet to move forward, or pushing off with his hands to move backward!
Try it in sitting too, again pushing off the wall with either the hands or the feet! Give a scooter to each child in the group. Have them figure out how to hold onto each other, forming a long line. See if they can scoot forward with their hands like a caterpillar! This one is similar to our tape road activity for kids.
Mark off a path on the floor using painters tape or masking tape. Get creative with the pattern — curves, zigzags, twists, and turns! Give your kiddo a little twirl on the scooter in different positions see above or see if he can spin himself! Position two chairs on either side of a large space and tie a rope between the two chairs around the very bottom of the legs so that the rope is almost on the floor.
Position the child on his tummy on the scooter and see if he can pull his way from one chair to the other! Make it more interesting by placing the pieces of a puzzle on one chair and the puzzle board on the other chair — how fast can he complete the puzzle this way?
If tagged, students exit the game and do an exercise 5 to 10 times and come back in. Play for a few minutes and change the spaghetti and meatball taggers. Remember the amount of taggers you have depends on the size of your class. Activity Idea by Coach Pirillo. Set Up: How many boats you play with depends on how many gymnastic folding mats you have. I have seven and put between 4 or 5 students on each boat.
How to Play: To make mats move, the students put two scooter boards under their mat and sit on it like they would a chair. The first challenge is to drive the boat around the gym without crashing into the walls or other boats.
The second challenge is to play a game called Pirates. All of the students on their boats help collect treasure from the center of the gym yarn balls by driving their boat using their feet. Each boat can only collect one piece of treasure at a time. Play for a predetermined amount of time and see how much treasure each pirate ship can collect. The third challenge is to have two students sit on top with their feet up while another student drives the boat around the gym without crashing.
This can be used with the game Pirates also. The last challenge is to play a game called Battleship. Scatter cannonballs coated-foam balls throughout the gymnasium. Each battleship places a cone on top of their ship. The captain then drives the battleship around the gym collecting cannon balls for their battleship to use for throwing. If your battleships cone gets knocked over or down your battleship then switches drivers captains.
Activity idea by Coach Pirillo. Set Up: Divide your class into groups of three. Place these groups on the baselines of your gymnasium. Each group should get a scooter board and a net. Place balls across or in the middle of the gym. The second player is the driver and holds both feet of the scooter board player hippo. Have the third player count the objects as they are being collected. Play until each student gets a turn to be the driver, collector, and counter. They also have a video demo of how to play.
Throughout my 19 years of teaching Physical Education, I have played many different sports and activities with scooter boards. You can try scooter basketball, soccer, hockey, and football. As long as you have enough scooter boards for everyone in class, all of these activities are possible. What I love about playing these sports with scooter boards is that it evens the playing field.
Set Up: Make an oval around the gym using cones. Place 3 students behind each cone with a scooter board. In the middle of the oval, place a list of exercise for the students to perform. I usually have 10 listed. How to Play: At the signal, one student stays behind the cone and performs the 1st exercise.
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