Coach P's Get Physical Page

Welcome to LaVergne Lake Physical Education Class. gym
 

Activities to Help Get You and Your Family Moving!!

1. Walking

After you’ve been cooped up awhile, taking a walk outside can do wonders for your physical and mental health. Opt for less-traveled paths or go during off-hours to minimize contact with others.

“This activity is the most easily accessible, but it may be difficult to maintain distance in more densely populated areas,” said Nagrani, medical director for Heal. “Going early in the morning can reduce the likelihood of passing others during your outing.”

If you’re strolling through a park (that is, if they’re still open in your neck of the woods), avoid using the public restrooms or other shared facilities if you can.

“Remember, the virus can survive on surfaces for quite some time, even the benches,” said Dr. Lynette Charity, an anesthesiologist and speaker. “Carry hand sanitizer and wipes. Wash your hands immediately once you’ve returned home.”

2. Running

If you abide by the same guidelines noted above, going for a jog is another option that’s generally safe right now.

“And please, no spitting or blowing snot out of your nostrils while engaged in these activities,” Charity said. “You know who you are. Suppress the urge. The virus can be in the postnasal drip you expel via your nostrils or by spitting.”

3. Hiking

“Many parks remain open and offer space to be outdoors,” Nagrani said. “Plus, being out in nature can provide additional stress relief.”

For the time being, stick to less strenuous hikes. You don’t want to twist an ankle or get an injury that’s going to land you in the emergency room when health care resources are already limited.

4. Biking

As long as you’re steering clear of crowded routes, taking a bike ride is a good way to blow off some steam.

“Carrying a water bottle on the bike will prevent the need to stop somewhere more crowded to hydrate,” Nagrani said.

Similarly, you can rollerblade, skateboard or ride a scooter, but it’s best to set a leisurely pace. Save the fancy tricks and daredevil maneuvers for a later date.

“Don’t go extreme,” Charity said. “This is not the time to go mountain biking or do a 20-mile hike or skateboard down all the railings outside the empty malls or theaters.”

5. Gardening

“With kids home from school, a family outdoor activity such as gardening can be a safe and fun alternative,” Nagrani said.

Stick to weeding, trimming and pruning the plants in your own yard rather than visiting a community garden.

 

Outdoor Activities To Avoid

Social distancing is very important, so skip group sports, like basketball, volleyball, flag football and kickball— even if you’re planning to play with people you know.

“Team sports should be avoided right now because they involve gathering players and also often spectators in one place,” Nagrani said.

Variety of activities to do during this down time:
  1. Have each kid pick a topic they'd like to learn about and spend 30 mins each day on that topic
  2. Spend one day reading every single picture book we have in the house
  3. Go through all the old mail laying around (ok, that one's not for kids although they do enjoy helping tear stuff up)
  4. Bake something every day
  5. Have each kid write a letter and/or emails to a different friend or family member each day
  6. Use all of our building toys on one giant structure
  7. Wash our hands!!!!
  8. Races of various kinds in the backyard (hopping on one foot, crabwalk, walking backward, etc.)
  9. Face time someone you miss and can't see right now.
  10. Inventory the plants & wildlife (from bugs on up) in your yard.
  11. Learn the parts of plants/flowers & how they function (bonus if they learn the Latin names).
  12. If you aren't too squeamish & have a spare clear shoebox-size tote or 5-10 gallon tank, catch some pillbugs (rolly pollies, sowbugs) & observe them (if you really do this, i can tell you how to set them up. i have about a thousand of them currently because it's too cold here to thin the herd & they've been reproducing all winter. they're pretty interesting).
  13. Write a short story & illustrate it.
  14. Learn how to do simple bookbinding.
  15. Make paper (from your old mail!)
  16. Have the kids help with yard work in between playing games outside. They're little, but they like getting dirty and "working" in the gardens.
  17. GoNoodle! Great for guided movement, relaxation, etc.
  18. Board games, card games
  19. Legos.
  20. Dot to dot books (1400 dots) that the kids love, especially the 5-year-old!
  21. Lots of reading, playing with the dog or pet.
  22. Working on learning to sew using stuff we have on hand.
  23. Card making/scrapbooking projects (mostly for me but kids can do it too).
  24. Getting the garden ready, we need to weed and work the ground. I might get seeds and we'll set up to have our own starts this year.
  25. Make tents and reading caves : ) flashlights, tidy snacks, books, and pillows!
  26. Have a shadow show in the reading tent (we used blankets over chairs or a table)
  27. Get binoculars and learn about the birds near your house, look them up on google and search for their birdcalls on YouTube
  28. Learn how to make a stuffed animal
  29. Play with cornstarch and water and cheap action figures
  30. Many educational websites are waving fees if your student's school is closed. Here’s a list of all of them that are waving fees.
  31. Collect a bunch of tape markers and cardboard boxes. That'll keep them busy for a day or two.
  32. Watch all the handwashing videos & vote on your favorite. Discuss why each good, helpful, funny. The Holderness parody one is hilarious, the Vietnam Tiktok one is great choreography, some have good songs etc.
  33. Also, pick your favorite song with a 20-second refrain or verse perfect for handwashing length of time.
  34. Family puzzles. Ones that are 500-1000 pieces and a challenging but not frustrating picture s.
  35. Team up and really clean and organize each kid's space, making a donation box for each. Parents are included.
  36. Have a board game 
  37. Kids can also make their own games! Board games, card games, you name it! 
  38. Write a story cooperatively. One person picks a character and the other picks a setting and then go gangbusters together.
  39. The folding picture story one! We called it “eat sleep you cat” one person draws a small picture across the top of a paper the next person writes a sentence that describes that picture and folds Over the paper top of the paper hot dog style to cover the picture. So the 3rd person only sees a sentence and they have to draw a picture. They fold over the sentence.
  40. Any and all art is fun at home: beading, painting, drawing, playdough or kinetic sand, sewing, etc. when my daughter was young we could do art all day.
  41. Massive board game tournament with all the (mostly forgotten) board games we own!
  42. If your school is going on quarantine and running school online, get GlobalKids for the special price of just $10.98. Take a screen-free, curiosity + creativity boosting, global empathy + engagement trip around the world, from the comfort of your home
  43. Yoga at home. There are kid-friendly YouTube videos and printed cards with poses.
  44. Zumba or Dance -Pinterest has tons of ideas for activities, games, etc.
  45. Draw self-portraits on blank faces
  46. Color-coded different interesting places on a map.
  47. Draw maps of places and then make directions from one place to another to see if someone else could follow it.
  48. Scavenger hunts, indoor treasure hunts where they follow clues through the house to a "treasure" at the end (could be candy, a movie, whatever), and a lot of charades.
  49. There are a few easy "kitchen chemistry" type science experiments that are easy to do, like making slime, baking soda and vinegar reaction, etc.
  50. Put food coloring under the baking soda in a mini muffin pan and used Pipette to drop vinegar in and then you can see the color!
  51. Experiment to learn what each ingredient does for a cake (so make one following the recipe, one without eggs, one without milk, etc.). Then compare and contrast the different cakes ... Then eat a lot of weird cake.
  52. Checkout STEM ideas from around the world!
  53. Give the dogs a bath and brush
  54. Wash and clean out the car.
  55. Mow the lawn, plant a tree or bush, make a flower garden.
  56. Play sidewalk chalk outside
  57. Glow stick party
  58. Popcorn + movie marathon
  59. Listen to kid podcasts - love story pirates and smash boom best.
  60. Declutter toys!
  61. Have an Olympics with a bunch of events competitions - funny ones, helpful ones like cleaning and really fun ones like minute to win it style.
  62. Learn new card games
  63. Learn to cook something new. 
  64. Lots of art projects!
  65. Dig up all the activity books, presents, etc that never got played with, and use those!
  66. There’s always time tested building a tent in the house with blankets and chairs. 
  67. Bust out the hiking gear and try new hiking paths. As long as you stay away from overpopulated areas you will naturally stay a safe distance from others and sick people generally don't hike!
  68. Do a study on planets, then have the kids create their own planets- how big is it, where in the universe is it located, atmosphere conditions, can it sustain life, how long is a day/year, name it, etc. You could even spread the planets out around the house to show "approx." distance from each other.
  69. Design a new spacecraft, draw plans, then create out of legos or household items. Spend some time pretending you're on different planets with different gravity, you could seriously spend a whole week on just fun space activities.
  70. But that's not limited to space- these ideas would work for animals, geography, body systems, historical events/time periods, etc. Beyond that, do some fun physics experiments like making a bridge out of straws, egg drop protectors, paper airplanes, etc.
  71. PuppetMaster: an app where you can animate anything from a drawing to a stuffed animal.
  72. Puzzle races: put several puzzles (20+ piece puzzles) in a paper bag and shake it up. Pour pieces out and give each person the puzzle box they are to put together. Go! (Cooperation tends to be a result as pieces are traded.)
  73. Dig through cabinets and figure out recipes for that thing you got at the grocery store and thought "this is interesting surely it can be used for something!" And then make it!
  74. Be active and have fun!!! 
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