Below is a list of the activities included in Learning through Adventurous Activities:
Theme 1 – Nature
Children have an almost instinctive love of nature and certainly many adults spend their leisure time engaged in activities such as bird watching or walking in the countryside. The key to this human interest in nature is in its diversity, its beauty and in its endless fascination. This awareness is strong in young children and our role as teachers is simply to encourage and nurture it. The following activities will help you do just that.
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Become a nature detective
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Take a plaster cast footprint
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Bird feeding station
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Build a bird hide to watch birds up close
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Indoor wildlife pond
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Pond-dipping expedition
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Nature games
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Grow your own tree
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Estimate the height and age of a tree
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Bark casting
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Give a hedgehog a hibernation home
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Minibeast trail
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Life cycles – butterflies
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Life cycles – frogs
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Making mini habitats for minibeasts
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Make a moth trap
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Ant town
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Build a bird box
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Rock pooling and beachcombing
Theme 2 – Science
The activities in this section will fire children’s imagination about the possibilities of science. Science is about attitude as well as methodology. From the earliest age encourage children’s natural desire to know how things work and why things happen. Take everyday opportunities such as cooking and playing with toy cars to discuss the scientific principles of our world.
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The night sky
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Make a sundial
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Weather – recording, predicting and enjoying
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Make a magnetic compass
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Make your own paper
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Build an erupting volcano
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Make an electromagnet
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Make a pinhole camera
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Make a periscope
Theme 3 – Art
Art in an adventurous style involves going out and doing artistic things with the natural world. Children use their senses to explore and gain inspiration from the natural world. They experiment with materials to create their own art. This gives them a greater understanding of the world around them as well as the opportunity to develop their own artistic styles.
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Creating a living willow dome
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What is found art?
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Making an Iron Age pot
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Using natural dyes
Theme 4 – Woodcraft
Woodcraft skills bring a sense of adventure into school life and your school doesn’t have to be in the heart of the countryside to practise them. What woodcraft skills will give your children is a real enthusiasm and excitement for learning about their world.
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Cooking on a campfire
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Building a shelter
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How to leave a trial
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Making and reading maps
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Tying knots
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Building a rope bridge
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Codes and signals
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Finding north and telling the time with the sun
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Hiking
Theme 5 – Role-play
Role-play is a fantastic vehicle for exploring all manner of complexities that affect our lives and influence our development as individuals and members of a society. We can explore conflict through role-play and learn to deal with it.
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Knights and castles
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Garden centre
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An emergency ward
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Pirate day
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Fire!
Theme 6 – Design and technology
The best design and technology projects come out of the children’s imaginations and allowing them open access to a wide variety of materials. Children generate ideas having been inspired in some way. They create their own designs from these ideas. They can make their design and evaluate it before suggesting and making any improvements.
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Big construction
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Junk dragon puppets
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Lighting up a lighthouse
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Cultural cooking
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Build an igloo
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Build your own adventure course
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Cotton reel car
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Build a go-cart
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Making and flying kites
Theme 7 – Gardening
Gardening in schools is a practical way in which you can tick a number of boxes and have lots of fun into the bargain. If you are working on the Eco-Schools Programme an organic vegetable garden fed with your own homemade compost is a winner. If you are a Healthy School then supplying your school kitchen with herbs from your own herb garden and giving the children fresh fruit from your own mini-orchard are big steps in the right direction.
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Create a vegetable garden
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Growing potatoes
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Growing vegetables from seeds
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Plant a mini orchard
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Make a wormery
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Make your own compost bin
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Keeping chickens
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African gardens
Theme 8 – Our wonderful world
History, geography and RE, what used to be known as the humanities, can all be taught in practical and exciting ways through the use of adventurous activities. This theme is all about giving children a greater understanding of the world in which we live.
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Festivals around the world (part one)
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Travel the world
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Making landscapes
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Our local geography
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Improving our local environment
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Creating living photographs from historical events
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Historical drama days
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Local history timeline
Theme 9 – Small world play
Small world play involves setting out familiar scenes such as a farmyard, a printed road carpet or a model house. Children then explore the setting with model characters, animals, toy cars and lorries etc. The purpose of this play is to give children the opportunity to explore and develop an understanding of the worlds that they will be interacting with as they grow up.
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The Pirates of Volcano Island
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Superhero HQ
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The Underwater Kingdom
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Lost in Space