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How To Play The Toilet Paper Bride Game

August 27, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Toilet Paper Bride
Here comes the bride…….

Last week we showed you how to play the Toilet Paper Mummy; this week, it’s the Toilet Paper Bride. The two games are quite similar, but this version has more of a design element to it.

Resources

  • Loads of toilet paper.

Set Up

  • Split the young people into teams, with an equal number on each side (if possible). It’s also best to separate the teams by gender, as this should help reduce the risk of inappropriate touching due to the nature of the game.
  • Give each team about 3-4 rolls of toilet paper, although this will depend on the length of the rolls.

To Play / Rules

  • Each team should select one person to become the Toilet Paper Bride. If you’ve separated teams based on gender as suggested above then yes, this means boys will have to be brides!
  • The other members of the team should then dress up this person as a bride using the toilet paper. This should include a veil, train – the whole works
  • If the roll breaks, they should tuck the end in so that it doesn’t unravel, then carry on
  • Set a time limit (between 5 – 10 minutes is best) for them to “clothe” their Toilet Paper Bride

Winning Team

The winners are the team whose bride has the best design, as judged by you or a panel of your volunteers. To make it even more funny, you could have them parade their dresses up and down a catwalk.

Tips

  • The Toilet Paper Bride game uses a lot of paper so to reduce wastage, collect the toilet paper at the end and recycle it
  • This game can be really funny, so get some photos or video footage
  • If you lead a Christian youth group, this game could be used when teaching about the church being the bride of Christ or when Jesus turned water into wine (as that was done at a wedding celebration)

If you liked this idea, you may like all of our other youth group games.

Question: Would you include any additional rules when playing the Toilet Paper Bride game? Let us know in the comments below.

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Toilet Paper Mummy – Youth Work Game

August 20, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Toilet paper mummy
He’s aliiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiive

The Toilet Paper Mummy game is a fast and furious activity that you can use as an icebreaker with your young people. Here’s how to play it:

Resources

  • Toilet paper. Lots and lots of toilet paper.

Set Up

  • Split your youth group into teams with an equal number of young people on each team.
  • Provide each team with multiple rolls of toilet paper – at least 3 or 4 rolls per team, although this may vary depending on the overall length of the toilet paper roll.

To Play / Rules

  • One person should be selected from each team to become a toilet paper mummy. Although you can have teams choose who this would be, it might be better for you to choose. That way, people of equal height/size can be chosen from each team so that the game is fair.
  • When you tell them to start, the other team members have to mummify their chosen team member by wrapping toilet paper around them.
  • All parts of the body should be covered from head to toe to create the mummy.
  • If the roll breaks, teams should tuck the end in and continue the mummification process.

Winner

There are two ways that you can determine the winner:

  1. First to finish – One option is to have the winner be the team that creates a completely covered toilet paper mummy first.
  2. Best design – The second option is to set a time limit for all the teams. Once the time’s up, the team with the best mummy wins.

Tips

  • Due to the nature of the game, it’s best to have the teams be split into groups of the same gender to reduce the risk of inappropriate touching.
  • To help encourage your youth to use resources more responsibly, recycle the toilet paper after the game if that facility is available.
  • If you lead a Christian youth group, this could be a fun game to play when covering Jesus’ resurrection or Lazarus being raised from the dead.

If you liked this game idea, you might like all our other youth group games.

Question: Do you play the Toilet Paper Mummy game differently? We’d love to hear of alternative options in the comments below.

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Newspaper Tower Challenge – Youth Work Game

June 18, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Newspaper Tower ChallengeThe Newspaper Tower Challenge is a game I remember playing – and loving – when I was younger. It’s perfect when you want a team building game that involves all the young people in your youth group.

The way the newspaper business is going though, you may not have many more years to play this game!

Resources

  • Newspapers. Many, many newspapers
  • Sticky tape – one large roll per team
  • Scissors – one pair per team
  • Measuring tape

Time

You can expect the Newspaper Tower activity to take about 30 minutes in total. Allow approx. 5 minutes for explaining the activity, 20 minutes for them to work out their newspaper tower design and to build it, then 5 minutes at the end to measure all the different towers.

Set Up

Split the young people up into teams and give each team the same amount of newspapers and one large roll of sticky tape.

If you have the space, spread the teams out in different rooms so that they can’t copy each others’ design.

To Play

The challenge is for the young people to work out how to build a newspaper tower that’s the tallest. They can only build the tower using the newspapers, tape and scissors – no other resources are allowed.

The newspaper towers have to be free-standing – team members can’t support it or have it resting against a wall.

Set a time limit on how long they have to build the tower, including enough time for them to discuss a strategy before they start building.

Winner

The winning team is the one with the tallest tower. On the off-chance that you have two teams with towers that are the exact same height, there are a couple of tiebreaker options you can use:

1) Design – award the win to the team that you judge to have the best design. This can either be:

  • The most aesthetically pleasing newspaper tower design, or
  • The one that has the most creative design

2) Stability – award the win to the team that has the most stable structure. There are a couple of ways of doing this too:

  • Make the teams carry their tower into another room and place it on the floor without being allowed to reconstruct it if it comes apart. The team which then has the tallest tower wins
  • Set up a desk fan to blow against each tower, starting with the lowest speed. The winning team is the one whose tower can withstand a stronger wind than the other

If you like this idea, check out our other youth work games.

Question: Do you play the Newspaper Tower Challenge in a different way to this? If so, let us know what you do differently in the comments below.

You can also connect with us by:

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Image courtesy of binarydreams, Flickr

 

Following Directions – Youth Retreat Theme

June 11, 2012 By Stephen Pepper Leave a Comment

Following directions youth retreat themeThis week’s youth retreat theme is all about Following Directions. We know that we get both faith based and non-faith based youth workers visiting our site, so we try to tailor our youth retreat themes so that they’re useful no matter what type of organization you work for.

In this Following Directions theme, the first part of each activity or discussion point can therefore be used by both faith based and non-faith based youth workers. There’s also a second section beneath most of the activities which have additional ideas for faith based retreats. I’ve written them as a Christian, but I’m sure many of the principles can also be used for those working with young people who are Muslim, Hindu, etc.

Following Directions – Game 1

Organize a treasure hunt/scavenger hunt that splits the youth into groups and sends the groups in different directions, but which ends up at the same finishing point.

Discussion: Explain that we’re all unique which means the directions we receive might be different to those received by someone else. For example, if your grades aren’t as good as your brother or sister, your parents might want you to spend more time on your homework. On the other hand, a sports coach may think you have more potential than other students, so may push you harder than he does with them.

Either way, it can be frustrating to receive different directions to other people, but that doesn’t mean the person giving the instructions doesn’t care about you – it could in fact be because they care so much that they’re giving you different directions to fulfill your potential.

Christian youth retreat: God has different plans for each of us that will take us on different paths. He’s also given us all different abilities and talents. This is great as it means that he treats us as unique individuals. And despite the different paths, we all have the same treasure waiting for us – eternal life with Him, no matter what path we take in our journey.

Following Directions – Game 2

Organize another treasure hunt, although this time only give half the youth correct directions. For the other half, you could miss off the final clue or give them a different final clue that sends them off somewhere else.

Discussion: Point out that it can be easy to trust that directions people give us are accurate, but sometimes they’ll take us down the wrong path and into trouble. This can therefore be a good opportunity to talk about issues relating to peer pressure – sex & relationships, stealing, integrity, etc.

Christian youth retreat: Encourage your youth to question things they’re taught as Biblical truth, including things you teach them. There can often be things that are taught as “Christian”, but which are more like cultural viewpoints than things the Bible says. Encourage them to be like the Bereans and search the Bible for themselves, instead of blindly believing things that they’re told.

Following Directions – Game 3

Have two youth come up to the front. One is given a picture and the other a flipchart that he has to draw on – make sure everyone in the room can see what he’ll be drawing.

The young person with the picture has to describe to the other young person how to draw the picture line by line, but without telling him what the picture is. For example, “Draw a horizontal line 6 inches long. At the end of the line on the right, draw a straight line upwards for 9 inches. At the end of that line, draw a diagonal line up and to the left for 4 inches, etc”.

Once they’re done, bring out an enlarged picture for everyone to see what it should have looked like.

Discussion: How different was the original picture from what was drawn? Following directions blindly can result in the wrong outcome if we’re not careful or listening to the wrong people.

Christian youth retreat: Similar to the point about the Bereans above, this is why it’s important to read the Bible for ourselves, rather than solely relying on what others tell us.

As a follow-up activity, give them a list of phrases where they have to determine if the phrase is from the Bible or not. Pick some phrases from the Bible and mix them in with the following phrases that sound like they’re from the Bible, but aren’t:

  • God helps those who help themselves
  • Cleanliness is next to godliness
  • The Lord works in mysterious ways
  • Money is the root of all evil
  • Charity begins at home

Following Directions – Activity

Go on a long hike with the young people. Do some planning in advance and find a route that requires some map-reading/orientation skills, or at least requires them to follow directions in order to find their way – make sure the youth are in charge of leading the way.

You could also turn the hike into a nature scavenger hunt.

(n.b. If you’re planning on doing both of the treasure hunt ideas, this might be too similar of an idea – the youth may get bored doing three similar activities over the course of the youth retreat)

Following Directions – Talk Ideas

If you’re going to be having meetings at the youth retreat, here are some further ideas for talks or discussion starters for small groups that can be expanded on:

One Degree Of Deviation

It can be easy to go slightly off the path and not follow directions. This can have natural and logical consequences though and can mean we end up much further away further down the path without realizing it.

Explain the concept of one degree of deviation. If you’re flying an airplane, being just one degree off means that for every mile you travel, you miss your target destination by 92 feet. It may not seem like a large gap, but the longer you travel in the wrong direction, the further you’ll be from where you should be.

Using the pilot analogy, if you set off flying along the equator and are one degree off, you’d finish almost 500 miles off target by the time you’d flown around the world.

The same goes for tunnels built from opposite ends. Show the video clip below – imagine how embarrassing this would have been if they’d been one degree out in their calculations!

Christian youth retreat: Explain that this is why it’s important to say sorry to God and get back on the right path.

GPS

It can be annoying having to follow directions from people all the time – parents, teachers, youth workers! Most of the time though, the directions we give young people are for their benefit.

When going on a road trip, you either ask for directions, look at a map or use a GPS. These all give directions so that you can find the right way to go – you follow these because you know they’ll take you where you want to go.

Christian youth retreat: It’s easy to think of God’s directions as just a bunch of rules and that He’s this super-controlling God. The directions are for our good though because He loves us and wants us to avoid the hurt and pain that can happen when we ignore them. Because He loves us so much though, He’s still given us the ability to choose whether or not we want to follow them.

Sports

Have the youth imagine sports without any directions or rules:

  • Soccer – where you can pick up the ball
  • Basketball – where you can push each other over
  • Football – where the defense can tackle before the ball is snapped
  • Volleyball – where you can catch the ball before hitting it back

They wouldn’t enjoy it – in fact, people would complain that it was unfair or not fun. We actually need rules and directions; not to prevent fun but because of the opposite – they often mean that we can have fun and enjoy ourselves.

Question: What activities do you use to address the issue of following directions with young people? Share your ideas in the comments below.

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World Awareness Games Part 2 – Youth Work Session Plan Idea

June 7, 2012 By Shae Pepper Leave a Comment

World Awareness GamesAt Youth Workin’ It, we value diversity and think it’s important for young people to learn about the world around them. We’ve shared three world awareness games before and today we have another one.

This world awareness game might be useful before discussing children’s rights around the world or participating in an event like Slum Survivor, since the purpose is to get youth thinking about the richest and poorest countries in the world.

Richest and Poorest Countries Activity

Resources

  • World Map
  • Piggy Bank Markers
  • Blue tac or tape
  • List of GDP per Country

Instructions

  • Place a world map on the wall
  • Split the youth into two teams
  • Explain what GDP is. (Very basically, it’s the amount earned by everyone in the country divided by the number of people in that country each year)
  • Give each team a set of rich and poor piggy bank markers
  • Ask the youth to guess which countries they think are the richest in the world and which are poorest by placing their piggy bank markers on each country
  • Go through the markers and discuss which countries are the richest and poorest, as well as where the ones chosen by your youth fall on the list

Keep this world awareness game light and fun, otherwise it has the potential to be a less fun activity. Consider having some interesting facts available about the five richest and poorest countries, or provide access for the youth to find fun facts about the countries they do choose.

Question: How would you introduce the topic of wealth and poverty among countries to your youth? Share your ideas in the comments below.

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