
This made me think seriously about the
game and what all it could teach the kids. Accordingly, I planned certain easy
activities for different age groups focusing on the game and at the same time
introducing them to certain life skills. I tried them on my daughter and her
friends and was happy to find them enjoying these activities. See if you can
use them with your bundle of joys:
Suitable for: age group below 10 years
Material required: Newspapers, writing material, double tape, chart
papers, satin ribbon
Focus: Observation, General Knowledge
Activity: Ask the children to search the newspapers for the pictures
of various countries which are participating in the World Cup. Tell them to
paste the basic information related these countries such as their flag and the
captain’s name. Once they are done ask them to display the flag by pasting it
on a chart paper. Display all the flags in a row with the help of a satin
ribbon and ask the children to speak about any one country which they feel is a
major competitor for India.
Suitable for: 08-12 years
Material Required: Newspaper cuttings
Focus: Planning, Reading, Speaking, Comprehension
Activity: Ask the children to choose their favourites from teams
other than Indian cricket team with the help of articles published in
newspapers and/or online. Then tell them to prepare a poster and talk about
their chosen ones with reference to: the player’s style of playing, his forte,
his weakness, his recent performance and mainly why Indian team should consider
him as a threat. Once they have finished, conduct a Memory Game similar to a
quiz where you show them the pictures of favourite cricketers and ask them some
already discussed qualities of these cricketers.
Suitable for: Teenagers
Focus: Planning, communication skills, decision making, leadership
skills
Material required: Writing material, model of a cricket field.
Activity: Make chits with names of various team captains on it.
Divide the children into different teams and ask them to pick one chit each.
Then, tell them to make a strategy for playing a match against any one team.
Their strategy should basically focus on what would they want to chose o do if
they won the toss, how much score they would want to make, what would be their
batting strategy and similarly how would they want to field and bowl in the
second innings. Give them 10 minutes to discuss amongst themselves and come to
a common conclusion. After that give them 05 minutes to express their strategy
with the help of a small model of the cricket field in front of others one by
one.
Suitable for: Teenagers
Focus: decision-making, life skills, problem-solving
Activity: Make some small chits with different
kinds of situations related to the game of cricket. These situations can be
both fictitious and based on certain real life incidents such as ball swearing
on ground, dressing room banter, interaction with media and film stars, wrong
decisions by umpires, ball tampering, match fixing, death on ground and so on. Put
the chits in a bowl and pass the bowl to each kid present. Let them pick up one
chit at a time and read loudly the situation written on the chit. Then ask the
kid to express his reaction. Tell the others to rate the reaction on a scale of
01-05 in the order of (05 for the most convincing reaction to 01 for the least
convincing one). Once all the chits are discussed, tell the kids to look for
the ones who got maximum 05s on their reactions. They would be the winners.
Suitable for: age group 05-08 years
Focus:Observation, Communication skills, Comprehension
Activity: Play a dumb charade based on terms specific to the game, such as spinner, googly, third Umpire, gully and so on. Call a pair of kids and let them enact one term and let the others guess what they are trying to say. Once the term is guessed,you can tell them to add some fun facts about the term if they know any or you can keep some fun facts ready with you.
Any sport introduces a child to a new way of life.
Similarly, cricket too teaches children to work hard for achieving success. But the beauty of this game is it teaches them one of the best way to tackle
failures. Life is not over if you are bowled out or if your bowling is expensive for the team. In the second innings you dust off your failures and restart life with new vigour and
enthusiasm. So with this World Cup, come let us celebrate together with our
kids the game of cricket as well as the Art of Living.