A System for Children's Officers to Maximize Fun
and
Minimize Burnout
By Dame Aoife Finn of Ynos Mon
How do I go about planning Activities Now?
One of the most common ways for planning children's
activities
is
for the officers to go through the following sequence:
- Get an idea or inspiration for an activity for a
certain
event.
- Gather materials
- Make a rough schedule; assure there will be tables
and
chairs.
- Show up and hope like heck that
- You get enough help or volunteers
- You have a decent location at the event
(accessible to
parents and bathrooms)
- You have enough and not too many or too few
children to
work with, of the right ages and interests for the activity planned.
Such a sequence is guaranteed to leave you exhausted at
the
end of the day. By your second or third event, you are convinced that
your group is taking
advantage of you, that the parents are taking advantage of you, and
that you are expected to be the child-minding drudge for every event
with little or no thanks at the end of your term. You might even demand
that every parent take a turn at the children's area. Only a few will.
You'll end up very frustrated.
In short, we're talking about burnout, the biggest foe
of
Children's officers. It does not have to be that way. The method above
is very wide spread. In fact, I used it myself for a long time. Mostly
it is the first resort of children's officers because they are familiar
with it from Scouts, Church groups, Civic Organizations, etc. It works
well for those groups because they only entertain
the children for a short period of time. We in the SCA however
sometimes have
those children all day, and we often see those children over and over
again in
the course of years. So, like all other areas of our SCA children's
lives,
Children's Activities should be coordinated to meet the specific needs
of the
group you're serving, AND they should meet your needs as well. Only
then can you plan the activities around what you've learned.
How do I know what those needs are?
Children or Youth Officers need to think about the needs
of
the whole group.
For instance, do you know:
- How much help you are likely to get at events?
- How and where the children's area is situated in
relation
to the rest of the site?
- How involved parents and other adults will be in
children's
activities?
- How many children you can typically expect at
certain
types of events in your area?
- What the children's age ranges are likely to be (and
if
you're serving those age ranges)?
- What sorts of things those kids like to do?
- What you need to do at the event besides help run
children's activities?
These are all important questions, and ones you'll need
the
answers for before you can plan what activities to offer. Borrowing an
idea from a wonderful friend of mine, Mistress Graidhne ni Ruadh, I
sometimes gather the parents of my Barony together to ask them what
they want to see and to ask the kids what they want to do. It's a great
way to assess needs. But, you have needs and questions, too. Let's
address those questions one by one.
1) How much help can I expect? This
is the
first thing you need to find out, once you are asked to conduct
activities at an event. Yes, I said asked. Being the children's officer
does not obligate you to be at children's point all day for every event
held in your group unless you want to do that. You are the coordinator
of activities, not the sole source of them. So, how do you get help?
How Much help do you need?
Here's a list of activities roughly divided according to
the
amount of help
needed (anytime you schedule an activity, there must be two responsible
people
present, in order to run those activities, barring running for a
chirurgeon or
other needed person in an emergency. Thus, if NO ONE helps at all,
there are no
activities. No exceptions. This is for your protection). So, this list
will help you plan according to the amount of help you have managed to
drum up:
No Help At All. Nada. Zilch.
The best you can do is provide a safe play area. The
parents
will bring
their own toys and will supervise the area themselves. If there are not
two
adults present at the area, it's closed and the children need to stay
with their parents. You may choose to be one of the people who is
"responsible," freeing up the parents to stay there one at a time. The
parents will clean up the area of their own toys. Post signs to that
effect at troll, also mentioning that if two adults aren't there, it's
closed until enough adults are there.
NOTE: If the ages of your local children are
very
young, this may be your best option regardless of how much help you
find. We sometimes call this the "children's list" and ring the area
with chairs---you can rope and flag it if you like. Chairs make it a
great area for parents to sit and schmooze while watching their kids in
the middle of the central hall or outside near (not too
near) the Adult list field. Parents who can watch their children AND
have fun will continue to be helpful to you in children's activities in
the future.
You and One or two Volunteers all day
long
Your best bet in this scenario is to do one of three
things:
A) Have a few (ie: two or three) scheduled
classes
for kids, with specific activities. Not every activity needs to be
crafts. When the activity is over, the children return to their parents
until the next scheduled activity. Encourage your assistants to plan
the activities. They may have hidden talents!
B) Have a low-maintenance type of activity.
Quests,
treasure hunts, "gentle" hunts (children find specific examples of
people at events: who's the king, name a Pelican, etc...), and the like
are all planning intensive but end up being personnel cheap. You hand
out papers at the beginning, collect them at the end, "grade" them,
announce winners and hand out prizes. It's always nice to have one or
two big prizes and then a small one (candy, baubles, etc.) for all
participants as these types of activities are quite challenging and
often require the kids to join forces.
C) Think of who you know that might know
something
interesting the kids might like. Know someone who likes to make
sotelties? Ask them to do a marzipan modeling class for 1 hour only.
Know a Knight? Ask him to come and model his armor and talk about being
a knight, or how to make chain mail or to help show them what to look
at when watching the list field. Know a Bard? Most bards will happily
run on and on with a captive audience and have a store of funny
stories. Know a Brewer? Ask her to show how to make fruit syrups or
herb vinegars, etc... Be sure to thank these persons profusely and a
small gift won't go awry---maybe they'll help you out again in the
future. Networking is a good thing, and with enough networking, you get
to sit down and enjoy the show as much as the kids.
I have so much help, I get to go watch
the
fighting/fencing/archery/A&S while my staff runs Children's
Point.
Congratulations. I'd like to shake your hand. You don't
need
my help, and
I possibly may need yours!
You can see that the more people you manage to talk into
helping you, the
less you will actually have to do the day of the event. It pays to
ensure that
people are involved with children's activities. Not only do you get to
take it
easy, you also have a ready source of replacements when you decide it's
time to
retire.
2) Where is the kid's area? Any time
you
plan where to put the children's area, you need to keep in mind the
following questions:
- How close are the Bathrooms? You can't leave the
group to
take kids to the restroom.They must be able to go there and back on
their own without getting lost.
- How easy is it for parents to find you and check up
on
their kids?
- How far would you have to go for help if something
happened?
- Is the area safe for kids?
3) How involved are the parents?
It's sad
but true, many parents aren't that involved with their kids while at
SCA events. That may be for a number of reasons, but you should feel
able to approach those parents when you need help. A good way to do
this is to talk to them all somewhere besides the event, and the
meeting I mentioned earlier in the article is a good way to do that in
a positive way, without singling any one person out.
4) How Many Children goes hand in
hand
with 5) What are their age ranges and 6) What
do they like to do?
Plan activities that they like to do, that are age
appropriate, appeal to both boys and girls, and take into consideration
the other things that might effect kids at events such as youth
fighting or youth archery, etc..... And if you had a meeting of parents
and kids to find this out.........
7) What about my other obligations?
No one expects you to spend all day at Children's Point
without relief. You have the right to schedule activities around your
needs, so long as they are also convenient for the children, parents,
and the event planners. So if your Lord is fighting for you in a
challenge tourney, go ahead and block out an hour of time in the
afternoon to watch him fight, or find someone to fill in for you. If
your Lady is competing in the big Bardic Challenge, you are allowed to
watch so long as you planned that into the schedule. Keep in mind there
will be unusual times when it's good for you to have activities (during
court, for instance, or at the second half of a very long feast).
Sound like a lot of work? It Is! But only if
you try
to do it alone. Once you have figured these things out (and it only
takes once or twice), then it is
fairly easy to decide which of your activity inspirations are sure
bets, and
which are best saved for another time.
By planning for help FIRST and then planning
activities around that help, you stand a better chance of lasting in
the office for as long as you want.
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