One Minute Warrior. A mindfulness exercise to teach focus, attention, patience, and confidence.
Inside Out Character Class: Team work and Believe.
“It is literally true that you can succeed best and quickest by helping others to succeed.” – Napolean Hill
In this class, we played the memory card game to foster teamwork, focus, and believe. We played it where one person try to find as many pairs as possible. Then we had the team to help him, showing the ease of success.
Inside Out Character Class: 2019 New Year
Beginning of the year. New students. New start. This week, we taught our students about Believe and Teamwork. We want our students to grow up having self-belief and learning to see themselves not just as individuals but part of a team community. With good beliefs and teamwork, success can easily be achieved. These two principles were taught using games and fun activities.
To view photos, click on the facebook icon “f” on the top right of the photo montage.
Inside Out Character Class: Teamwork and Creativity
Inside Out Character Class: Teamwork and Creativity.
“Imagination is everything. It is the preview of life’s coming attractions.” ― Albert Einstein
Our children are taught to think freely. Create! And work at your creation as a team. Creativity and teamwork, together, are powerful. This is what makes brilliant ideas work.
Activity: With two pieces of large paper and other simple materials, each team working together must design their most creative costume for their model. Each team has children of all ages. All the team members must work together. Teams are not allowed to rely on just a few. Older members must guide and assist the younger.
Enjoy their creative inventions in the video!
Inside Out Class: Patience (Video)
“Patience is a key element of success.” Bill Gates
We had another class on patience. When we master patience, we will master a key ingredient to love. And love makes a person complete.
Our patience activity were:
1. Counting plastic cups inside and out
2. Stacking and unstacking plastic cups without them falling apart.
Patience is what makes it successful. Not speed. And with patience, the speed increased.
Inside Out Character Class: Patience
“Patience is a key element of success.” Bill Gates
We had another class on patience. When we master patience, we will master a key ingredient to love. And love makes a person complete.
Our patience activity were:
1. Counting plastic cups inside and out
2. Stacking and unstacking plastic cups without them falling apart.
Patience is what makes it successful. Not speed. And with patience, the speed increased.
To view photos, click on the fb icon at top right corner of the photo box
Inside Out Character Class: Patience
Patience is not simply the ability to wait. It’s how we behave while we are waiting.
by Joyce Meyer
Inside Out Class: Cooking Competition
“Creativity expands the mind, stretches it beyond ordinary human comprehension, resulting in the mind being elastic and capable of transcending and discerning complex ideas.” ― Michael Bassey Johnson, The Infinity Sign
We love adventures. Our children loves adventures. Trying new things. Doing something that they have never done before. The thrill of failing. The joy of success. It is all in there.
Today the children were given a change to cook. For most of them, this is the very first time for them to cook. They had to come prepared with their own recipes and try their very best at making a sumptuous meal. All the children did a marvelous job cooking. And they did it on their own for the very first time. Hurrah to the children.
Note: to view photos, click on the top right hand corner fb icon
Inside Out Character Class: Patience video
Great works are performed not by strength but by perseverance – Samuel Johnson.
Love is patient (1 Corinthians 13:4). To learn patience is to learn love. Patience is that calmness in our hearts when everything else around us urges us to run, to be aggressive, and to not wait. But when we are patient with others, it helps them feel loved; thinking “I am important enough to you that you are willing to wait for me.”
Patience Activity
1. Split to groups with equal number of students
2. With a straw, blow the cotton ball from one end of the line to the other.
3. The key is not which group finishes first. Rather, which group has the least amount of deviations of the cotton ball from the line.
In our exercise, one of the teams finished quickly. But because they were not patient, their group had the most number of cotton balls being blown off the line. So from first place, they had to settle for last place.