Equipment: one ball for each person in the group
Objectives
First, ask your group who can demonstrate
juggling (There is usually at least one person who can juggle). Ask, “Who can
juggle the most balls?” Two or three balls are usually the limit.
Now have everyone (usually best with 8-12
people) stand in a circle about arm’s length apart.
Ask the participants to throw the ball to someone in the circle that is not standing next to them. each person catches the ball only once except it must start and end with the same person. tell them you are creating a pattern; they need to remember to whom they threw the ball and who threw it to them.
Ask the participants to throw the ball to someone in the circle that is not standing next to them. each person catches the ball only once except it must start and end with the same person. tell them you are creating a pattern; they need to remember to whom they threw the ball and who threw it to them.
After the ball has made it around the group
once, send in more balls until there are two less than the number of people in
the group, or until they start dropping a lot. Try it two or three times. Ask
them to be more efficient each time.
Discussion
How much more can a group accomplish than an
individual?
What happens to the process when one person drops a ball? How does the group compensate?
What happens to the process when one person drops a ball? How does the group compensate?
Whose responsibility is it?
What does it take for a team to be successful?
Variations
Use stuffed animals instead of ball and use the
story of Noah’s Arc and tell them water is coming in and we must juggle the
animals to keep them from falling in the water.
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