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Ms Jones 3rd Grade Class
Home of the Smart Butterflies

Australia
and
The Olympics


NEWSPAPER GAME OLYMPIC

Newshound
Game

Newshounds detective can put their verbal creativity to the test in this writing exercise.
First, help your students sweep through old magazines or newspapers for interesting photographs of people, buildings, animals or landmarks they would find in Sidney Australia.
After cutting out several pictures, the kids can sort through them and compose new headlines or captions for each one about the Olympics in Sidney Australia.
Here the students can go for goofy captions, such as "
Amazing animal fly over the tallest building” or “
Crawling kangaroo wins the skating games”
Kids can write the captions on stick-on notes or masking tape, and affix them to the pictures.
An entertaining follow-up project is to have your children place all of the captioned pictures on a table or a desk, and randomly place them in a long row.
Starting at the left, your kids can make up a hilarious chain story that incorporates all of the pictures.
Alternatively group or pair activity is that:
children can pass their pictures around, one at a time, to the others, who must read the captions and continue the story, creating some wild twists and turns.

RELAY RACE OLYMPIC

RELAY RACES

With this silly race, your students can pretend they are:
a kangaroo, koala, duck, deer or any animal they would like to be.
To make each pair of feet (two sets are required to race), you will need a large piece of cardboard or foam core, an empty tissue box, craft paint, and glue.
Student draw the outline of the animal foot (about 14 inches from heel to toe) on the cardboard and use a craft knife to cut it out (a teacher's job).
Make the matching foot by placing the first one face side down on the cardboard and tracing around it.
Cut the tissue box into halves and glue them on top of the feet with the box bottom facing up.
Paint the feet a color that would match the animal they choose.
To race, divide a group of kids into two teams.
On the far side of the room, set up a chair for each side.
When the race starts, the first player from each team, wearing animal feet over his shoes, must circle his team's chair and return to the starting point while making the animal sound and moving his arms and body like the animal.
There, the next child in line puts on the shoes and takes a turn.
The first team to finish wins.
For more indoor games, pick up ANIMAL CRAFT FUN (Boyds Mills Press).

PUPPET OLYMPIC

ANIMAL PUPPETS

  • Making the heads:
Have children choose which animal they would like to make that are native to Australia, a kangaroo, koala bear, dog, lion, bug, pig, alligator or deer.
The children draw a suitable head and ears on a piece of construction paper.
Then cut out the shape and glue it onto the body.
You can Glue on googly eyes and add distinguishing details, such as a pom-pom nose, a mane fashioned from snips of string, waxed-paper wings, or twist-tie antlers.
Let the students be creative.
  • A PIGLET

With a small half circle, form and glue a paper cone.
Flatten the tip of the cone with your thumb to create a pig snout.
Glue on big floppy ears and attach the head to the body with tape.

  • AN ALLIGATOR
Match up a pair of 2 1/2- by 1 1/2-inch rectangles with the shorter edges at the top and bottom.
Glue together the very tops, then fold back the glued portion and make a crease.
With pinking shears, trim the sides and bottoms of the rectangles to create a tapered, toothy jaw.
Glue the folded edge to the back of the body.
Finally, glue on a pair of googly-eye stalks.

  • BODY BASICS
Ideas and material for creating the body.
Use scissors to shape the puppets' midsection from a 3-inch square of craft paper--perhaps a round potbelly for a pig or a rectangular body for an alligator.
For legs, roll and glue four 1 1/2- by 3-inch paper strips into cylinders.
Make them wide enough to fit your child's fingers, so they can walk the puppet around.
Attach each leg to the midsection with a piece of masking tape, pressing one end inside the cylinder and the other onto the back of the body.

olympic books

Books on Australia and the Olympics

The book ‘Koala Lou’ by Mem Fox is great! The characters prepare for the "Bush Olympics". I've been using this book for several years and the children participate in a mini olympics
themselves. The heroine of this story does not win, but her mom loves her just the same...there are many directions to take with this story: Australian type food (Anzac cookies, Pavlova-excuse spelling); sing "Tie Me Kangaroo Down Sport" and waltz to "Dancing Matilda";explore Marsupials, continents, fitness,
hemispheres...

OLYMPICS.SITE

Here's a list of the URL's for some of the sites I've got bookmarked for the Sydney Olympics. Enjoy!

Australian Olympics

http://sunsite.berkeley.edu/cgi-bin/searchkids.pl?searchtype=all&keywords=Olympics&title=Olympics

Metric Olympics

http://www.teachucom.com.au/resources/OlympicLinks.htm

Olympics

http://www.sofweb.vic.edu.au/resource/olympic.htm

http://www.thepla.net/~cartoon/Olympic/olympic.html


Hang out with BC alumni.


Australian Native Songs
song Tie me Kangaroohtml

Tie Me Kangaroo Down, Sport

There's an old Australian stockman, lying, dying, and he gets himself
up on one elbow, and he turns to his mates, who are all
gathered 'round him, and he says:
Watch me wallaby's feed, mate
Watch me wallaby's feed
They're a dangerous breed, mate
So watch me wallaby's feed

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Keep me cockatoo cool, Curl
Keep me cockatoo cool
Don't go acting the fool, Curl
Just keep me cockatoo cool

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Take me koala back, Jack
Take me koala back
He lives somewhere out on the track, Mac
So take me koala back

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Let me abos go loose, Lou
Let me abos go loose
They're of no further use, Lou
So let me abos go loose

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Mind me platypus duck, Bill
Mind me platypus duck
Don't let him go running amok, Bill
Just mind me platypus duck

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Play your didjeridoo, Blue
Play your didjeridoo
Keep playing while I shoot through, Blue
Just play your didjeridoo

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

Tan me hide when I'm dead, Fred
Tan me hide when I'm dead
So we tanned his hide when he died, Clyde
And that's it hanging on the shed!

All together now!
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down
Tie me kangaroo down, sport
Tie me kangaroo down

- Rolf Harris





"Animals that Live in Australia"


Western Grey Kangaroos

(Macropus fuliginosus)

One of the three largest species of kangaroos, they are the least common in American collections, yet they are the most adaptable to different climates. Eastern and Western grey kangaroos are two distinct species, and are visibly and behaviorally dissimilar. As their name implies, Eastern greys live in the eastern third of Australia. Western grey kangaroos are native to the southern and western coastal areas of Australia. They have a soft, charcoal-brown colored fur with white fur on the throat, chest and abdomen. Males can reach over 7.5' in body length from the tip of the nose to the tip of the tail; females can be over 5.5' in total length. A large male may weight 180 lb., while a large female averages around 70 lb., but some may be heavier. They have a gestation of 30 days.

The joey stays in the pouch for 8 months before venturing out, and does not leave the pouch permanently until 10 months of age. The joey will continue to nurse from the mother for at least another 6 months, even longer if the mother allows it. The W. greys have a very close social bond, and retain family connections for years. A daughter often stays close to her mother even after she has a joey of her own. In captivity, they have proven to be very intelligent animals. When they are defensive, they will growl like a dog, which sounds quite intimidating.

Young kangaroos will box playfully. Adult males will box to determine dominance, with the strongest male becoming the head of the mob. ( A group of kangaroos is called a mob.) They prefer to eat leaves and tree bark over grass, if available. In captivity, they are fed a pelleted grain (like a horse or cattle feed) and some fruits and vegetables like bananas or apples, and hay. In captivity, they can live to around 20 years, but are lucky to survive even 10 years in the wild.


Red Kangaroos

(Macropus rufus)

When most people think of kangaroos, they think of red kangaroos. They are one of three species of kangaroos that are kept at many centers. The picture at left is of Jaffa, one of our mature male red kangaroos.Mature male kangaroos red coloring closely matches the red soil of the Australian desert outback, giving them a natural camouflage. Red kangaroos don't see very well close up, but can spot the slightest movement at great distances. Young reds become independent from their mother at an earlier age more than the grey kangaroos.

Eastern Grey Kangaroo
(Macropus Giganteus)

Slightly smaller than red or western grey kangaroos, Eastern grey 'roos have steel-grey fur of a coarser, curlier texture. Eastern and Western grey kangaroos are two distinct species, and they are visibly and behaviorally dissimilar. As their name implies, Eastern greys live in the eastern third of Australia. Western greys live in the south and western two thirds of the continent.These joeys live outside of the pouch, but sticks their head inside the pouch to nurse.
Most of the information provided can be found in The Vertebrate Body, sixth edition by Romer and Parsons published by Harcourt Brace Jovanovich College Publishers, 1990


 

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