MegaSkills® Activities: Motivation

MOTIVATION
Wanting To Do It


The FREE MegaSkills activities in this website collection are drawn from hundreds in the book: MegaSkills®: Building Children's Achievement for the Information Age. Two activities are provided for each MegaSkill ... one for younger students (approximate ages 4-6), one for older students (approximate ages 7-9). For many more activities, purchase the MegaSkills book from your local bookstores or from The Home and School Institute. Check the drop down menu above soon for more MegaSkills Activities.

 

MOTIVATION
Wanting To Do It

This House is a Mess - Younger

*Mathematics
*Recognizing and Creating Patterns

This activity is really ageless. I don't know anyone who responds to the task of cleaning up with joy and eagerness. Maybe it's because we think we have to do everything at once, and we can't. So we feel discouraged.

Just as in teaching in the classroom, where we divide a curriculum into parts, cleaning up a house can be divided into parts. Then the tasks become doable, and while children may not be whistling while they work, they do know where to start.

For the big job of cleaning house, you might do one room at a time or one task, like washing windows, in several rooms. For children, putting away clothes and toys in their rooms can be a first step. This can be followed by dusting and then by vacuuming.

Make the job more pleasant by working with someone else or even to music. Marches are known to be very effective. Rock 'n' roll moves the dustcloth along.

Turn cleaning into a game. Decide how long it will take you do the job. Then time yourself against the clock. Set the same task for yourself and your child. You can race each other to see who is the fastest cleaner of them all!


Excuses Don't Count- Older

*Study Skills
*Observing and Keeping Record

This activity teaches children that work can be organized so that it gets done and that excuses for not doing tasks just don't count - at home or in school or on a job. You need paper, pencil, and a ruler.

Make a chore chart for the hours between five P.M. and bedtime. Ask children to choose a time to do each chore. Write those times on the chart. The chart might look like this:

Chore Time Done
Setting the table 5:30 ______
Doing homework 7:30 ______

The next day, children do the tasks at the time planned. When they've completed the job, they put a check mark in the Done column.

Talk about when they did the tasks. Did they do them all? If not, did they have real reasons or excuses? An excuse might be that they forgot to set the table while playing ball. Talk about using excuses to avoid doing things. Do we know when we're using them?

Look around the house. Think about the chores that need to be done. Examples: Clean out the closet, straighten the drawers, weed the garden. What excuses do adults use to avoid these chores?