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65 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
65 lines
3.7 KiB
Plaintext
SOURCE: /mnt/d/GoogleDrive/Cercetasi/carti-camp-jocuri/Non-Contact Teambuilding Exercises.pdf
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CONVERTED: 2025-01-11
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==================================================
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--- PAGE 1 ---
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Non-Contact Team Building Exercises
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Games
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Girl Scouts build their teamwork by playing games together. One Girl Scout team
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building favorite is Apples to Apples.
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For Health and Safety reasons this may not always be an option, but part of the fun
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would be challenging your girl scouts to come up with a way to play that keeps
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everyone safe. Dice games, where everyone has their own set of dice may be an
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option.
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Minefield
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Use masking tape to mark off a square or rectangular shape on the floor that is large
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enough to hold eight to 10 girl scouts at once, along with multiple, randomly placed X
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shapes (also made with tape on the floor) and multiple soft, squeaky items (such as dog
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toys). The X shapes are mines. To start the game, eight to 10 girl scouts should put on
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blindfolds and step just inside the rectangle, lining up together on one side. To play the
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game, those standing outside the rectangle will call out verbal instructions to those
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inside to help them navigate safely to the other side without stepping outside the taped
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boundary or onto a mine. When someone does accidentally step on mines, they are told
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so they can freeze until another someone else inadvertently steps on a squeaky item.
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The squeaking sound signals that all frozen scouts are released to move again. This
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game helps girl scouts develop their listening and communication skills along with their
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ability to trust and rely on one another.
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(MarathonKids.org)
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Eye Contact
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This is a great activity to support nonverbal communication skills. Choose 10 girl scouts
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to participate in the first round. The others can gather around the edges and watch.
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Designate a player one. To begin, player one makes eye contact (no words or hand
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motions) with another player (player two) and gives them a signal that means go. When
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player two says go, player one starts moving slowly toward them to take their place in
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the circle. Player two then makes eye contact with another player (player three) and
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gives them a signal meaning go and starts moving toward them. The objective of the
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game is to time each player’s command so that each player makes space for the others
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in time. After the first round, switch out the teams until everyone has had a chance to
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play.
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(weareteachers.com)
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1
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--- PAGE 2 ---
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Non-Contact Team Building Exercises
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No-Hands Cup-Stacking Challenge
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This hands-on group challenge is an exercise in patience and perseverance, not to
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mention a total blast! Decide how many girl scouts you want in each group and tie that
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number strings to a single rubber band, making one for each group. Each person in the
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group holds onto one of the strings attached to the rubber band, and as a group, they
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use this device to pick up the cups (by expanding and contracting the rubber band) and
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place them on top of each other in order to build a pyramid.
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(weareteachers.com)
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Marshmallow-and-Toothpick Challenge
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Divide into groups of equal numbers. Pass out an equal number of marshmallows and
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wooden toothpicks to each group. Challenge the groups to create the tallest, largest, or
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most creative structure in a set amount of time, each member taking turns doing the
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actual building. Afterward, have each group describe what they made.
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(weareteachers.com)
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Storytelling Round-Robin
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This activity helps girl scouts pool their creative resources. Sit in a circle. The leader will
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begin with the first line of the story, for instance, “Once upon a time there were three
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children walking through the forest … .” One by one, each girl scout adds one sentence
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with new details to the story. The story cannot end until everyone has participated.
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(weareteachers.com)
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