Read 817 times

  • seltow
  • Adventurer

    • 34

    • April 02, 2019, 11:16:13 am
    • South Korea
Pacific Survival Summer Camp
« on: August 19, 2020, 08:53:07 am »
I'm quite proud of this one.
We had a three day Summer Camp focusing on Central America, Pacific Islands, and Australia.

The camp starts off with a plane crash in a rain forest, where we meet the Maya and Aztec.
From there we escape to a Pacific island (none in particular) where we learn about war dances, totems, and the like, breaking codes and playing a bunch of word games,
We then leave but are captured by Blackbirders and taken to Australia where we learn about the first people.

I added the lesson plan i had set up, but in the end we deviated a little and spent one day in each area, instead of overlapping as I'd originally planned.

Please install fonts if you want to edit, or if I missed a spot for embedding the text as a picture.  (everything is in the Drive folder).

Also to add there is so much info I may have missed or left out, unfortunately we were pressed for time so I could not go as detailed as I would have liked, however I think that may have worked out for the best. For the Australian section in the it contains a lot of pictures, I mostly just spoke about it instead of writing stuff down. I tried to touch on the pre-colonial past, the atrocities of the colonial, the fight to beat oppression (relevant because of the current BLM movement), and what has improved and what is still an issue today. The thing my co-teacher and students struggled to get was the concept of the dreaming. So I would either leave that out or maybe find a better way to explain it if possible.

The mini notebooks I had them fold in the beginning served as a place to write down vocab, notes, and prompted pieces, about why they chose their design, or whatever. In the end we had them write what they learned and what they enjoyed about the camp. (unfortunately no photos of those because i for got to get any).

For the snack at the end we used Rice Krispies treat (it works better than the No Brand version as it sticks together better, available from coupang or costco), Crunchies (Honeycomb Chocolate from Australia, sometimes available from CU, can replace with malteezers as they are also from Aus), and yellow coloured decorating chocolate (available from daiso or coupang).
To do: Mould the treats around a piece of crunchie, we used two treats each and about a 1.5cm cut piece of crunchie. Cut some green paper to make leaves, place between the two treats, and drizzle yellow chocolate (Chocolate from cacao, Mayan "gold") over it to make it look like a pineapple (a fruit originating from the pacific islands, Hawaii if I'm correct).

Anyway enjoy if you do use this, I built the PPTs and Code breaker from scratch, so try enjoy it ^^
My co-teacher said it was quite fitting for a summer camp as the theme tied in well with summer.

Anyway I'll add some pics too.


the link to my Drive (let me know if it doesn't work):

https://drive.google.com/drive/folders/1nBCbJnC8qOVO19UexYivG9k1aiphUPl-?usp=sharing

« Last Edit: August 19, 2020, 09:10:07 am by seltow »


Re: Pacific Survival Summer Camp
« Reply #1 on: August 31, 2020, 08:11:57 pm »
Fantastic ideas, although my only objection is mentioning BLM. I'd stay away with politics in class, so this is the only thing I'd skip. Other than that great job :)


  • seltow
  • Adventurer

    • 34

    • April 02, 2019, 11:16:13 am
    • South Korea
Re: Pacific Survival Summer Camp
« Reply #2 on: September 02, 2020, 01:49:12 pm »
Normally I would stay away from politics but it was part of a core lesson in school and my students did work on it with my co-teacher. Also I think it's an extremely important movement nevertheless  in a time where it is contemporary news. Our school seems to really focus on getting the kids engaged in current world issues, so it went down well during camp. My co-teacher seemed quite happy that Protests were mentioned due to the topic coming up in class and it actually being part of a growing world movement (a Social movement, not a political one, unless you're talking about the act that was passed in the 60's that was mentioned).
Besides it is only mentioned, there is no detail on the topic except for the fact that it is relevant current news in what is happening. None of my personal views were mentioned, only facts stated.
Feel free to leave it out if you feel weird talking about it with your students.


Re: Pacific Survival Summer Camp
« Reply #3 on: September 03, 2020, 03:20:56 pm »
Fantastic ideas, although my only objection is mentioning BLM. I'd stay away with politics in class, so this is the only thing I'd skip. Other than that great job :)

I disagree. Social movements are very important to teach kids. Especially if they make waves here. I mean, that's like saying we shouldn't teach about MeToo since that's also political. Also, BLM has a big following in Korea and its important to teach kids about what's in the news.
Newbie


Re: Pacific Survival Summer Camp
« Reply #4 on: September 03, 2020, 03:22:23 pm »
This camp looks so good. Hopefully they'll loosen up the rules for winter camp and I can use some of the material
Newbie