| Variable Names | Time: 10 minutes |
| Why use it? | To introduce each other in a fun and unique way. |
| What you need | |
| How it's done |
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| Introductions | 1. Everyone introduces him/herself as their favourite food. (I had to go around saying, "Hello! I'm Sausage McMuffin with Egg!"
2. Dalke Nash at United Way of King County (Washington) has one where you introduce yourself with your first name and an adjective that starts with the same letter. (Hi! I'm Nan. I'm feeling nutty today.) 3. Similar, back in my MYF daus (a few centuries ago) we did one where we said our name and something we were thankful for that started with both initials. So Ernie Jones was thankful for eggs and jam. (Hi! I'm Nan Hawthorne. I'm thankful for Netscape Help!) 4. One I used in my volunteer classes that I made up myself was to have each person introduce the person next to them and describe an outlandish volunteer job. I used to do this one a lot, "This is Jim. He is part of a program that puts radio receivers on penguins in Antarctica. During their winter it's Jim's job to send encouraging messages and play Hawaii music to help them handle the cold." 5. The "Koko Glenhope" one was another icebreaker. People introduce themselves with their first pet's (or doll's if they didn't have a pet) as their first name and the street they lived on as their second. So my first cat's name was Koko and I lived on Glenhope Drive. If people lived on a numbered street, they could say "the 5th" --- if I lived on 3rd Ave., I would be Koko the Third. The funniest one we had was "Sparkles Fontanelle". |
| Source | CyberVPM.com Resources for Volunteers and Volunteer Programs |
Comments
Great Icebreaker
pretty good icebreakers. The ones that promote team unity and inclusive participation are the best. For my 5th grade class, I've also used some of the icebreaker games listed at Group Games - Icebreaker games, Team Building activities. Check it out.
Ice Breaker - Have you Ever? or Postman
Have you ever? or Postman
Everyone stands or sits in a circle in front of a chair or other type of place marker (vinyl spot, bookbag, paper, et). The one person without a chair or a place marker is "it".
The "it" will say something about themselves. For example, "Have you ever gone swimming in the Atlantic Ocean?"
Anyone in the circle that has that in common must move to a new spot in the circle. Each move has to be at least two place markers or chairs from where they started.
Whoever is left without a place marker will be it and will tell something about themselves.
From Ice Breakers - Ultimate Camp Resource