MegaSkills® Activities: Common Sense

COMMON SENSE
Using Good Judgement


The FREE MegaSkills activities in this website collection are drawn from hundreds in the book: MegaSkills®: Building Children's Achievement for the Information Age. Two activities are provided for each MegaSkill ... one for younger students (approximate ages 4-6), one for older students (approximate ages 7-9). For many more activities, purchase the MegaSkills book from your local bookstores or from The Home and School Institute. Check the drop down menu above soon for more MegaSkills Activities.

 

COMMON SENSE
Using Good Judgement

Guessing - Younger

*Science
*Formulating Hypotheses
*Checking Evidence

Everybody has to be able to guess. The fancy word for it is "hypothesize." The better guesses are the ones based on as much information you can pull together beforehand. For this activity you need a yardstick and a scale.

Ask "guessing" questions and let children ask them of you. How wide is this room? How long is the driveway? Get out the yardstick and check these guesses.

Talk about weight in general terms. Then guess how much different things weigh. A typewriter? A book? Mother? Brother? Put them on the scale and check.

These activities help children make judgments based on what they know to be facts or guesses.


Checking - Older

*Thinking
*Evaluating Information

Checking is common-sense practice, and it can be taught in a straight forward way with a series of questions.

Have we checked to see, for example, that:

*There's gas in the car before starting out on a trip?
*There are no crack in the eggs that we buy at the supermarket?
*The seams are tightly sewn in clothes we're planning to buy?
*There are no cars coming before we start across the street - even if the light is green?

We can get children in the habit of doing these checks. With all the checking in the world, there will still be plenty of surprises, but some of the everyday, unpleasant ones can be avoided this way.

To keep kids on their toes, try this. Show youngsters the good side of a wormy apple. Ask, "Is this a good apple? Can you eat all of it?" Then turn the apple around. It shows children they have to know both sides of the question. It's a trick with a valuable lesson.