Weeks of : March 4 – March 15
Theme: Your Amazing Brain
Date News Greeting Sharing Activity
Mon
EF
|
Happy Monday!
Let’s look at the week
ahead…
Open your planners and
let’s talk about what’s coming up…
|
Share Greeting
|
n/a
|
Advisor guides the process
of planning for the week
|
Tuesday
a.m.
|
This week and next:
YOUR AMAZING BRAIN.
We will learn more this afternoon in the Gym about your FREAKISHLY
AMAZING brains, but for now, let’s play a familiar game that replicates a
little bit of how information travels in your brain.”
|
Ball Toss Greeting
|
n/a
|
[The greeting is also the
activity. See Note below.]
|
Tuesday
p.m.
|
same
|
All School Greeting Game?
|
n/a
|
Full Group in Gym
|
Wed
|
What are some things we
can each do to make our brains run at optimal efficiency? Jot your ideas on the board.
|
Formal Greeting
|
Fueling Your Brain
Optimally: Group Share
|
n/a
|
Thursday
|
|
|
|
n/a
|
Friday
|
|
|
|
|
Monday, EF
News: Happy Monday!
Let’s look at the week ahead… After our Monday Greeting, let’s open your
planners and talk about what’s coming up…
Greeting: [We are going to do
the same greeting every Monday, so that you all know where to start on Mondays
without having to rush to check your Bulletin. Mondays will be systematized for an easier flow.]
Share Greeting: “How was your weekend?” – Advisor starts by greeting an advisee by name
and asking, “How was your weekend?”
Advisees practice the “Expand and Ricochet” social skill by replying “It
was good/lousy/meh, I ____________________.
How was your weekend, (another advisee)?”
Activity: Note to Advisors: As we help our middle-schoolers “wire” their
pre-frontal cortexes with EF Skills, one way to do this is to wire their “planning
and organization” sections by teaching them to “think ahead” and mentally
visualize the events and demands of their week.
Ask everyone to open their planners and begin to map out their week. Circulate around the room as you guide
advisees to write down quizzes, tests, project due dates, play times, game
days, etc… etc…Include personal obligations too, like “Mom’s birthday dinner,”
because students need to learn to plan around their social events, too.
Tuesday, – a.m.
News:
“For this week and next: YOUR AMAZING
BRAIN. We will learn more this afternoon
in Rooms ________ about the way your brain works, but for now, let’s play a
familiar game that replicates a little bit of how your brain works.”
Greeting: Ball Toss Greeting - a soft, indoor ball or
equivalent (bean bag, stuffed animal, etc…) is tossed by a selected student,
who greets another student and then tosses that student the ball (safely,
on-target and underhanded toss). The
recipient tosses the object to another student and greets that student. Play continues until everyone has been
greeted (including the advisor). To emphasize the brain-based
information we are teaching over the next two weeks, have each student memorize
to whom he/she tosses the ball. Play for
several rounds and try to beat your time on each round (sticking to the same
“neural pathway” helps). If time
allows, after getting good at throwing to the same person, ask each student to
throw to the second person to the left and notice what it does to your
time. It probably will take longer and
this is because the “neural pathway” that was more practiced was smoother.
AMAZING BRAIN
FACT: If the ball in this Ball Toss Game
is the electricity in your brain that flows from cell to cell, we would have to
throw the ball 260mph to be as fast as your brain!!
Tuesday, p.m. -
Please bring advisees to gym
promptly.
Please be prepared to
co-facilitate the greeting game.
Please be prepared to learn
this information along with the students because you will be guiding this brain
unit after this group lesson. This is
the foundation that will guide activities for this week and next.
Wednesday
News:
What
are some things we can each do to make our brains run at optimal
efficiency? Jot your ideas on the board.
Greeting: Formal Greeting – Students need practice formally greeting
adults. A good time to remind students
about our policy of “Seacrest Courtesies.”
Directions: Students use only
last names with one another, as if they were greeting an adult (Good Morning,
Mr. Peel. Good Morning, Ms. Davis). Rather than greeting one at a time while
others watch, everyone greets simultaneously to the left and to the right,
waiting if a partner is greeting someone else).
Share: Group Share: “In your own experience, what fuels your brain best?” Include what the
experts say (in topics of nutrition, sleep, exercise). Do students’ opinions match the experts? What about music? laughter?
Thursday,
News:
Greeting:
Share: n/a
Activity:
Friday,
News:
Greeting:
Share: n/a
Activity: Testing out what helps you think better
– concentration game first; then activity that group thinks might help
concentration – activity or music then concentration game again. check to see who did better. Adolescents can be contrarian, so helpful to
remind them that each person will have his or her own recipes for brain
efficiency. Some people very affected by
one night’s poor sleep; others not as much.
Same for nutrition, music (rock or classical), etc….
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