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Landmine Awareness Activities |
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Summer 2003 JUST TRY ONE MORNINGGrades 1-6, 20 minutes Inform students that they will start the day at school by trying to empathize with landmine victims. About 28 percent of mine victims lose one or both legs. Give students ropes or scarves and ask some of them to tie their legs together at ankle level or to immobilize one leg somehow. Instruct other students to tie up one arm, go blindfolded, or block up their ears to simulate the loss of an arm, eyesight, or hearing. Have students continue their normal morning activities with their new disability. After some significant time, discuss together the difficulties faced. Debriefing:
IDEAL CITYAll ages, 20-30 minutes Divide the class into groups of 6-8 students and provide each group with a large piece of paper and markers. Instruct each group to design its ideal city, reminding them not to forget the things a city needs: water, hospitals, housing, streets, schools, parks, shopping area, etc. Give the groups 10-15 minutes to complete the task. Announce that the groups are now at war, and let each group strategically plant landmines (use pennies or red stickers) on another group's territory. Alternatively, the teacher or facilitator can walk around and place the landmines on each city. For a variation, prepare in advance pieces of paper that have mines drawn on them. Place the cities over the paper and show the students that their city was mined (this emphasizes the idea of mines being hidden). Debriefing:
I THOUGHT WE COULD PLAY HEREAll ages, 10 minutes Set up several areas of the school or yard with reflective tape and "Danger: Landmines" signs. Make sure these are places where students normally walk, gather, or play. Observe how students react to the notices. Discuss the difficulties caused by "shrinking" trail routes and recreation/play areas. A complementary activity is to set out everyday objects - a pop can, a child's toy, a pencil box, a ball, anything that students might be curious about - before they arrive. They will then see these objects, perhaps be curious, and touch or move them. You could also "booby trap" desks with colored stickers or place them on heavily used areas of the floor. Debriefing: Ask how many students handled the objects. Then explain that these objects could easily have been mines. Why would children in mine-affected countries pick up unusual plastic or metal objects? (Most toys are homemade from natural materials, many children work in fields.) Why would adults pick them up? (Unaware of danger, selling scrap metal.) Discuss how it must be for children in a community full of landmines always having to be on guard.
OTHER IDEAS
Summer 2003 |
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