About the Product
Junkyard Sports has these and many more features:
More than 75 demonstration games are included.
Endless variations of six major team sports can be played by almost anyone, anywhere, with just about anything.
Games are easy to implement and use low-cost or no-cost found materials for equipment.
Games build physical, social, and mental skills, including endurance, teamwork, and sensitivity to others.
Junkyard Sports in physical terms looks like any other paperback book. But in reality it is a high-octane starter kit, fueling physical activity, creativity, and fun in ways that sports have never been played before.
Teachers and recreation leaders who are looking to get away from the same-old same-old in their approach to games and sport will find Junkyard Sports a valuable tool. Part of that value comes from the more than 75 sport-specific demonstration games that
Junkyard Sports provides. A demonstration game is a starting point for teachers and studentsit provides not only a complete game description but also ideas for spawning new games from the original. These demonstration games pave the way for an exciting, nontraditional approach to a sport, and they also engender creativity, ingenuity, community, leadership skills, and other social skills as teachers and students consider further innovations to the sports.
The beauty of junkyard sports is that they work in any environment, with any group. They are fresh because they are ever-changing as their rules, equipment, and environments are adapted. They are also budget-friendly because they call for found or nontraditional equipmentbrooms, rolled-up socks, beach balls, whatever is around and not nailed down. They are also easy to implementa brand new activity can be under way in five minutes or less.
Part I introduces junkyard sports, defining the concept and exploring some of the purposes and potential benefits that led to its development. It includes sections on playing with groups of various ages and abilities, adapting sports to almost any environment, developing a junk (equipment) collection, and making flexible rules. It also explores how to coach a junkyard sport, including the invention and testing of the game, the sharing of equipment, the judging and revising of rules. Finally, it describes how to involve the entire community, giving you a strategy for implementing leadership and for sharing the fun with your peers and students.
Part II is the Junkmasters Guidemore than 75 demonstration games for six team sports: soccer, football, basketball, baseball, hockey, and volleyball. Use them as starting points on a journey toward creating something thats never been played before!
Junkyard Sports is a unique tool for recreation leaders and teachers to use in developing physical, mental, social, and leadership skills with groups of almost any age or ability. At the same time it helps teachers create an environment in which students are engaged, challenged, and enjoying themselves and each other. Winning isnt the point. Playing together is. And playing sports has never been more fun.
For more information on
Junkyard Sports, visit
http://www.JunkyardSports.com, or contact the author, Bernie DeKoven, at
Bernie@Dekoven.com.
About the Author
Bernie DeKoven is serious about having fun and about helping others have fun, too. He has been reinventing sports for more than 30 years, has designed curriculums with more than 1,000 childrens games, and has developed the training program for the New Games Foundation. The concept of New Games has had a worldwide effect on physical education and recreation. Along the way he designed and led an event for 250,000 people for the Philadelphia Bicentennial celebration, where he introduced Really Big Pick-Up Sticks (16 feet long) and Big, Big Box Blocks.
DeKoven, who has an MA in theater from Villanova University, has invented almost every kind of gameeducational, entertainment, digital, physical, social, mentalfor companies such as Mattel Toys and the Childrens Television Workshop. He is a lifetime member of the Association for the Study of Play. To learn more about junkyard sports (and to see some examples of it in action), visit his Web site at
http://www.JunkyardSports.com. To contact DeKoven about workshops (which are guaranteed to be instructive, creative, and above all, fun), e-mail DeKoven at
Bernie@Dekoven.com.
Bob Gregson is an artist who combines art and play. For over 30 years, Gregson has organized innovative events that encourage collective creativity for people of all ages. His large-scale public celebrations bring diverse communities together with such events as the Special Olympics World Games, First Night, and OpSail. Gregson received his master of fine arts degree from the Art Institute of Chicago and has worked for museums and nonprofit art organizations. He is currently the creative director for the State of Connecticut Tourism Division. As an artist he uses architectural elements, photography, and community planning to design projects that invite an interactive dialogue. His first meeting with Bernie DeKoven in the 1970s opened new creative vistas resulting in a citywide Play Day attracting 10,000 playful participants in Hartford, Connecticut. He is the author and illustrator of several popular games books for teacherslinking arts, games, and education in unique relationships. You can learn more about Gregson by visiting his Web site at
www.BobGregson.com.
Table of Contents
Idea Finder
Preface
Acknowledgments
Part I. Introducing and Implementing Junkyard Sports
Chapter 1. Introducing Junkyard Sports
Concept and Purpose of Junkyard Sports
Involvement
Diversity
Safety
Creativity
Slanted High Bar Principle
Sports for the Fun of It
Chapter 2. Creating a Junkyard Sport
People
Place
Junk
Games
Beach Basket Soccer
Chapter 3. Coaching Junkyard Sports
Demonstration Game
Invention
Testing
Sharing
Judging
The Junkyard Sports Community
The Junkmasters Guild
Going Public
The Junkyard Sports League
Part II. The Junkmasters Guide
Chapter 4. Junkyard Soccer
Chapter 5. Junkyard Football
Chapter 6. Junkyard Basketball
Chapter 7. Junkyard Baseball
Chapter 8. Junkyard Hockey
Chapter 9. Junkyard Volleyball
Where to go for more information
Audiences
A resource for K-12 physical education teachers, recreation leaders, and youth leaders. A supplemental text for methods courses focused on teaching games.
NOTE: This is nonreturnable product and all purchases are final.