Creating Community Spirit/ Warm-Up Activities: - The Question Web
Creating Community Spirit/ Warm-Up Activities: - The Question Web
Creating Community Spirit/ Warm-Up Activities: - The Question Web
Desert Island
Masks
However many M&Ms they have in their hands, that is how many facts they have to tell. For
example, if they have three blue, they would have to say three facts about their family.
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Secret Identity
3. "Playdough pictionary" - get the teams to number each member in their team and ask the
number ones to come up. Give each of them a lump of play dough and a word that they have to
sculpt (nouns are easiest, adjectives are hardest) send them back to their teams and when they get
the word right player two runs back to get the next word to sculpt and so on. Give the game
about 8 or 9 minutes. A good team will get about 16 words in this time.
4. "What's that line" - Project the logo of a well known company and get the teams to write down
the slogan of that company. A hard slogan can carry more points than an easy one.
5. "TRL" - create a music track combining a few seconds of about 8 or 9 songs. Play the track
through and get the teams to identify as many of the songs, artists and, for bonus marks, albums
from which the songs come.
Categories can be modified, depending on the nature of the group, or some specific theme.
Duration: 30-60 mins
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Poetry in Motion
Create a Commercial/Advertisement
Diversity Activities
Materials:
None; although a list of hello in different languages is handy.
Time:
Approximately 10-15 mins.
Brief description:
This is a fun, warm-up, cross-cultural activity. The group tries to come up the
word(s) for "hello" in as many different languages as possible.
Optional: Ask participants to see if they can guess how many people there are in the
world and how many different languages are spoken. (There are ~2800 languages and ~6
billion people. If an equal number of people spoke each language, that would be ~2
million people per language. You might relate this to local city/town size.).
Challenge the group to come up with as many different languages for "hello" as possible.
When somebody volunteers (e.g., Bonjour!), make sure they say it or repeat it clearly for
the rest of the group who then repeat.
Optional: Before people start making suggestions, ask the group to have a guess how
many collective languages the group will be able to come up with. Don't allow
discussion - just do a quick whip around each person's guess and take a rough average that's the group's estimate.
Was the final number of "hellos in different languages" close to the group's guess? If the
group underestimated, they may not realize the knowledge within the group that might be
used to their advantage. If the group's guess was an overestimate, why did they
overestimate their knowledge resources? Discuss.
Optional - to make more difficult or to add variation, try asking for these basic phrases:
o Hello...Goodbye
o Hello, My name is...?
o Hello, How are you?
o Yes...No
o Please...Thankyou
o Do you speak English?
o Numbers 1-5 or 1-10
Optional, but recommended - have a list of hello in lots of different languages from
which you can read out (see Jennifer's Language Page). This is especially useful for
groups who don't know many different languages, as well as to learn, have fun, and
illustrate the range of different languages.
Links:
Pronunciations: "Say Hello to the World": Provides pronunciation sound files for "hello"
in lots of different languages.
http://users.elite.net/runner/jennifers/index.htm
http://www.ipl.org/div/kidspace/hello/
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Materials: None
Time: ~30 mins
Brief description:
Where does your name come from? Share the story of where your name comes from and what
your name means. Everyone's name has a surprisingly interesting origin. Helps to build
intercultural respect and understanding.
This is an interesting, novel way for people to introduce themselves to others, especially
in ethnically diverse groups.
Ensure that an appropriate group atmosphere is established in which people have already
done some initial warm-up activities and name games.
Ask participants to turn to a partner and explain what your name means (if anything) and
where it comes from.
Most people reveal a surprising amount of interesting information about where their
name comes from and what it means.
The greater the ethnic and cultural diversity in the group, the better this exercise tends to
work.
Can be specifically used to help build intercultural respect and understanding or to more
generally help develop self-identity and open respect and sharing.
Optional: Ask each person to introduce his/her partner to the larger group and to explain
what his/her name means and where it comes from.
Optional: The activity can be extended into revealing the background behind other names
e.g.,
o
Nicknames
Pets
Names of children - or what would you name your children if you have them?