Reviewing Previous Content: If you’ve already taught the tricks in previous years, or previous lessons the Follow the Leader Videos are a great way to review.There are 3 Follow the Leader Warmups (Basic, Intermediate, Advanced).This is more structured and focused than the Animated GIF Loop Video since it only displays one trick at a time. I also give audio commentary throughout the video which your students might find helpful if they are learning tricks for the first time. This video will take students through a 5 minute warm up where they try to follow along to each trick for 30 seconds.Warm Up Video going through all of the tricks.There is a total of 4 GIF Video Loop Files (Basic, Intermediate, Advanced, All Tricks).Note : You’re probably gonna want to mute it and play your own music instead of listening to the same repetitive song over and over again □.I simply let it play on my TV ( see an overview of my TV setup here ) and allow students to have 5 minutes to work on the tricks of their choice – it’s really nice because it will loop through all the tricks so students can just go up and wait on the trick they are working on to pop up. After teaching the tricks to students, I use this the following few weeks as a review tool.Animated GIF Looping Video (loops the tricks for 5 minutes).There is a total of 3 Powerpoint Files for each trick section (Basic, Intermediate, Advanced).There is also a “summary slide” section at the end with all the tricks on just a few slides that you can use as an easy way to review multiple tricks if you’d like.There is a slide with each trick so you can progress as you teach students each trick and have them displayed on the screen for students to review while learning the trick.Powerpoint Files of Animated GIFs for each Jump Rope Trick. So to review are 3 main resources in this pack: So this week I’ve launched them on my Teachers Pay Teachers Page for any folks that aren’t ready to jump into the Membership Program you can purchase them on TPT as a value pack or also each resource separately if you don’t want them all.Ĭheck out the video below for an overview of how I use this resource: Recently though, Teachers Pay Teachers came out with a streaming video feature, so I decided to post them on my Teachers Pay Teachers Page since the files is pretty large due to the video. I honestly had been trying to figure out a good system for doing this on my site, because the video files are huge and I don’t have a good way to deliver them. I originally created these videos for the folks in my Membership Program, but I’ve also wanted to make them available to others because I know how helpful they’ve been for me and how valuable they would be to other teachers (especially if you can’t physically do all the tricks). *Note: I didn’t include the awesome stickers on the GIF that I used for school… those are just to hopefully make you laugh… although now that I’m looking at it, I think my kids would probably like more with the stickers. Then after we had gone over each trick on the Trick Chart, I played a 5 minute video loop that I had created with 4 tricks per slide, so that students could quickly review any trick they wanted if they had a question, by watching the screen and waiting on their trick to pop up (see below for an example). It was so great not having to demonstrate the tricks over and over every time a student had a question and it freed me up to help more students that were struggling. I then created a Powerpoint Presentation with one slide for each trick and then put them up on the screen as I was teaching, so my students could see the trick looping over and over as we were learning each new trick. So I used all of my Follow the Leader Trick Videos to create some animated GIF’s for each jump rope trick (see below). I’ve been using my Follow the Leader Jump Rope videos for the past few years and they are great, but this year I also wanted to experiment with Animated GIF’s as well. This year, I still ran my Jump Rope Unit using the same format, but this year I upgraded it a bit with Animated GIFs. My basic fram ework for teac hing tricks is that I try to focus on Basic Tricks in K-1st, Intermediate Tricks in 2nd – 3rd and Advanced Tricks in 4th-5th. I’ve already blogged in detail about How I Organize my Jump Rope Unit, but as a quick overview of how I split up the Jump Rope Tricks, you can see the Trick Chart Below: This week I’m excited to launch an awesome new resource for Teaching Jump Rope!
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