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.... ··- ·- '"' -·- _·:.�-·- ·•··· - -. ILLUSTRATION LIST Sl(ILLSP� LlfE Pages 1-27: All illustrations by Rae Dale Pages 28-29: 'Mirror, Mirror' and 'Wanted' by Liz Carlsund First edition © 2005 Guides Australia Inc. Update 2016 Girl Guides Australia Inc Page 30: Meagan Tickell Pages 31-32: Concept: Dr Bronwyn Gould, AM Authors: Fione Russell Julie Townsend Editors/ contributors: Di Vernon-Reade Lorraine Cunningham Diane Brokenshire Illustrations: Rae Dale Liz Carlsund Meagan Tickell (see illustration list) Cloud illustrations by 'Faces' and 'Trees' illustrations by Liz Carlsund Pages 33-35: lllustrations by Rae Dale Page 36: Speech and thought balloons by Meagan Tickell Page 37: 'Other People' and 'Friends' by Rae Dale Pages 38-39: 'Family Tree' and 'Valentine' by Liz Carlsund All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the written permission of Girl Guides Australia Inc. Girl Guides Australia is a member of Copyright Agency limited. Statutory education licence no.: 2859 Guides Australia gratefully acknowledges the financial support of the Mazda Foundation In publishing this original resource. SKILLS fn, LIFE 1 Contents Page INTRODUCTION �;p) So, what are llfe skllls? ............... ,u, , . . . , a r . . .. , 3 -:W,1 The role of Leaders and support materials ........ ... .... ............ . . ...... .. 4 �w.� Life skills and the Promise and Law .. .......... 5 Making and keeping friends P19: Working together and cooperating �"'.: Respecting and Including others . . .... . . . .... .. 20 �W,1 Dealing with bullying and teasing .. ...... 21-22 23 ........................ LO...... 24-26 Personal strength and positive attitudes ..... 6·8 Developing personal strength Encouraging positive attitudes Positive self-talk: what is it? PART TWO: ACTIVITIES AND RESOURCES �W,1 Recognising and expressing feelings . . .. . . . 9·10 P9: P10: P10: :t: Expressing feelings activities Create some feelings games to play Learning self-control Coping with challenging feelings .... P11: P11: P12: P13: u •• •• • • 11-13 Identifying body clues Stress or 'eustress'? l\eeping calm - staying cool Helping girls to cope with grief and loss -;W,1 Communicating with confidence ........... 14-15 ·:�; Problem-solvlng and decision-making . .. . 16-17 P16: Pi 7: 2 P18 �;p) Personal safety P6: P7: P8: �i� �"'.: Friendships .............. ...... .............. ..... 18·19 �W,1 Building support networks .............. .. .. .. ... PART ONE: LEADER'S NOTES Assisting girls as they develop skllls for life �W.: Page SKILLS pn, LIFE Finding solutions to problems Careful decision-making �;p.: Activity pages for your Unit � • • I • • • • I • • L I • • • I • 28-39 P28: Mirror, Mirror P29: Wanted P30: Every cloud has a silver lining P31: Expressing feelings P32: Precious memories P33: Being a good listener P34: Quick quiz: are you a good friend? P35: Finding a new friend P36: Advertise for a friend P37: Respecting others P38: My family tree P39: Circle of family and friends Other resources and references ................. 40 CONTENTS This publication provides Leaders with interlinl<ed Almost all Leaders will come across situations materials to assist in the development of life that fall outside of their training. A good Leader will not be afraid to seek advice either from skills for girls and young women. It is important for Leaders to acknowledge the vital role they can play in promoting skills which will help girls within her Guiding network or from other organisations set up to advise about specific and young women to meet and deal effectively social issues. with the challenges of life. In undertaking this task, it is essential that Leaders develop Additional support materials strategies for dealing with some of the sensitive issues these materials may raise. The materials in the Life Skills pack complement each other and include: Do I have to be an expert? • Activity pages: Individual work sheets that will Skills for Life contains activities focusing on some personal issues that girls face as they grow toward adulthood. While running these activities, you might find that girls open up about personal experiences, and not all of these will be positive. Discussing these issues will require compassion, understanding and acceptance of individuals. You need to be prepared to respond appropriately and recognise the rights of the individual. supplement sl<ills development. These may be photocopied as required. • Information leaflet: Information that may be copied and distributed to parents to keep them informed and involved in the development of life skills with their daughters. Parents and significant others who support and encourage this program can reinforce the development of sl<ills in the home situation. • On Track for Life: A personal journal to give You may also need some basic awareness of the each girl a record of activities and a reminder subjects discussed. Some general information of the skills gained. To support this program, is provided in these pages, and you might wish to supplement this with background reading. each Guide will need her own copy of On Track for Life (a copyrighted, non-reproducible However, you are not expected to be an expert. resource), available in State Retail Centres. Confidentiality and disclosure If personal issues are discussed within the Guide Unit, you should understand the importance of confidentiality and disclosure procedures. If you have any concerns about anything that is discussed or raised by any girl, please contact your State Office to discuss what is an appropriate course of action. Each State has different Child Protection laws which must be followed. 4, SKILLS fn, LIFE INTRODUCTION A "code for life" The Guide Promise I promise that I will do my best To be true to myself and develop my beliefs To serve my community and Australia And live by the Guide Law The Guide Law As a Guide I will strive to: • respect myself and others • be friendly to others • use my time and abilities wisely • • be considerate, honest and trustworthy make choices for a better world • be thoughtful and optimistic • live with courage and strength , .·. · The Guide Promise. and. the Gulcle. Law provide girls wUh a.code for life. As with any program activity, it is important that .Leaders co11stc1ntly model anct provide the links to: . a) .demonstrate that th� .Promise .and Law are. intrinsic . Look out for these symbols: The following symbols have been used to show interrelationship and links with other materials: · .. , parts of the Guiding experience; and �) as�ist girls to. understand. the r�levance of their Promise in their ever yday lives.. · ..·· · ·· The link between Hfe skills and the Promise and Law . · is indicated in this publication .with a trefoil. INTRODUCTION for links to the Promise and Law I' . . for personal journal in On Track for Life for individual activity sheets. SKILLS fn, LIFE S Create some feelings games to play Use the pictures of feelings on Activity Sheet "' #4 (page 31) to make the following games: \lb e e •. t. I e e I I I I I I ,II•. 't •• •II I I II I II I II I I I I I II I• I I I I I It I I I I I I II I If I I I I II I "How would you feel?" Make a set of feelings cards. Use the pictures to encourage discussions: - "This person is feeling ... - "I would feel like this If ... Girls discuss how they could tell which emotion was being acted and whether some feelings were easier than others 11 to act out or to guess. 11 Mime a feeling Field of feelings Divide the feelings cards into different envelopes Two teams have a contest to see how for each Patrol or small group. In turn, girls select many feelings they can think of. Players a card and mime the feeling shown on the card brainstorm and write feelings down without speal<ing a word. T he tasl< is to guess on a big piece of butcher's paper. There the feeling being acted out. Repeat until all the are more than 100 feeling words for cards are used. girls to choose from. Learning self-control Expressing our feelings is far better for our health and wellbeing than not expressing them. It's up to each of us to make sure our needs are met, "I will strive to respect our feelings are expressed appropriately and no-one is hurt in the process. There are many ways to express our feelings - talking, writing, music, a nature walk, exercising, playing a game, drawing a picture or just relaxing for some "quiet thinking time". myself and others" Giggle Gaggle Poor Kitty Girls line up opposite each other in two teams. Girls sit in a circle. One is the "Kitty" who must Team A tries to make all the players in Team 8 crawl to each girl in turn pretending to be a cat and smile or laugh. As each player smiles or laughs miaow. Each girl must pat the cat and say "Poor they are out. The first team to get all the opposite Kitty" three times. However, if she laughs at all she team out wins. is out and must now become the cat in the centre of the circle. 10 SKILLS/01, LIFE LEADERS' NOTES Expressing difficult and painful feelings Is hard for most people, whatever age they are. Feeling sad, embarrassed 1 angry, anxious or confused Is no fun, but It's a part of life. Leaders can help girls deal with these particular feelings by Identifying the physical symptoms and offering some useful coping Ideas . ••.......•.••••••••••......••.•.......••••.•••............••••.....••••••••...••••...........•••••••••••••.......••• Identifying body clues Our feelings are our body's way of telling us what's going on inside us. If we're in danger or in an can help them to identify stress indicators and to prepare for appropriate actions. uncomfortable situation, our body will give us clues through our feelings. It's important to pay attention to these "uncomfortable" feelings as they There are many typical body clues that may be experienced in difficult situations. They vary from are pretty good at letting us know when we're in some sort of trouble or danger. Encouraging girls person to person. They are caused by adrenaline to worl< out what their body is trying to tell them Stress Indicators may Include the following: .:H• dry mouth "ii ..�= breathlessness ..�= tears ..�= aching jaw -�= poor memory ..:{.. need to toilet ..H- heart pounding II = +· � .. II= "'1i �n-= II lump In throat stiff neck trouble sleeping grinding teeth voice shakes ..�..�- being released into the body to prepare the body for a "fight or flight" response to a situation. tense muscles �- shaking or shivering confusion ..:.;1= hair stands on end '"fi= sweaty palms ..fi= poor concentration ..�= knees trembling ..:,�= n ..H- II goose bumps -�= change in appetite " •,i-' face goes red or blushes headache .d�- butterflies in stomach Positive stress or "eustress" By appreciating that stress indicators are not necessarily always negative, girls can begin to realise that recognising body clues can actually assist in unl<nown or new situations. Positive stress or eustress occurs for Olympic ath· letes at the start of big races and can actually help people to perform better. When girls learn to recognise these stress Indicators, it can help them prepare for action in dangerous situations or to do well in challenging situations. "I will strive to live with courage and strength" Leaders can explain that by appreciating body clues and responding to them, girls can develop strategies to manage or cope with any situation that comes along. LEADERS' NOTES SKILLS j<>1, LIFE 11 ,rs Leaders can help girls to understand that good communication Is more than Just talking about what Is happening for the speaker. It Is a two-way conversation. Both people need to J-' really listen to what the other person Is saying and try to Jv '-"understand what they mean and how they feel. <k __A,IJ- JA!� , 1 / ···················································································································· Make some pictures to show girls how effective communication will use many different parts of the body: � A mouth can talk, yawn, smlle or frown. Eyes can crinkle up to laugh, cry or look Interested In the other person. Hands can comfort, wave or gesture. Communication activities Listening and not listening The whole body Is used to communicate and to show interest In what another person ls saying. the message still the same? Then have everyone come back and sit in a big circle and choose someone to start off a message. What happens Girls sit facing a partner and take turns telling to the message when it finally gets whispered a special memory. The "listener" acts out the back to the first girl? Has it changed at all? role of someone who is not interested without Discuss with the girls that it might seem funny saying anything aloud but just letting their body communicate non-interest. Girls then take turns telling each other what they had for breakfast. This time, the "listener" will not talk but use her body to show great interest. As a group, discuss how it felt in each situation. Short and long Chinese whispers 14 Ears can listen, not just to words but to feelings behind the words. in Chinese whispers to hear things and pass them on but it is not so funny if rumours like these start in the playground. This "whispering" can also be called "gossip". It may seem like fun to pass on gossip and change it a bit here and there to make it even more interesting but gossip can really hurt people. It can even end up This is a variation on a well-known game. Firstly ruining friendships in Patrols, sit in a circle with one girl thinking when someone finds up a message and whispering it Into the ear of out that whispers her neighbour. Each girl whispers it to her have been going on neighbour until it gets back to the first girl. Was behind their bacl<. SKILLS pt, LIFE "I will strive to be considerate, honest and trustworthy" LEADERS' NOTES Making and keeping friends For younger children, the family is the centre of their world. However, as they grow, the influence of peers and the importance of friendships outside the family become more significant. The ability to make and keep friends is a learned sl<ill, together with the realisation that a good friend is more than just an acquaintance. Remind girls of the saying "to mal<e a friend, you must be one" and give them skills in identifying what are the qualities of a friend and then developing strategies to initiate contact and sustain friendship. Friendship activities Friendship voting with your feet Recipe for a friend Draw a line on the floor. Girls place themselves Girls brainstorm and record the qualities that mal<e a friendship. The group discusses the relative importance of each quality. Qualities become the ingredients and are measured in along this line depending on whether they AGREE {extreme right-hand side) or DISAGREE (extreme left-hand side) with the statements: ell= friends should tell on other friends if they amounts according to their decisions about break the school rules which are impor tant in making a good friend. This is then written up like a recipe, listing the ..�= places besides having you as "best" friend quantity of ingredients and method. Girls might try out the recipe over the following week and report bacl< on how the recipe worked. ,�= it's better to keep new friends than risk losing them by not fitting in with others Friends are in the bag ..x.= it's alright to have different friends for Each member of the Patrol or group brings a secret item, which is special to them and places it in a bag. In turn, each person in the group withdraws an item and tries to identify the owner. "I think that this belongs to ... because ... " "I will strive to a best friend can have friends at other different things I ..X= you should always put your friend first ell= bullies make good friends because they can protect you Activity in Skills for Life: � A GOOD FRIEND (Activity Sheet #7, page 34): A quick quiz for girls to identify be friendly to others' 18 SKILLS fo'z, LIFE the characteristics of friendship they believe in. � FINDING A NEW FRIEND (Activity Sheet #8, page 35), LEADERS' NOTES Living In a country like Australia that benefits from a rich cultural diversity, it is important that girls respect and accept differences between the people in their communities. About 43 per cent of Australia's population were born overseas or have one parent who was born overseas. Twenty per cent of Australians have a disability, and 1 in 3 Australian marriages end in divorce. This means that, in their daily lives, girls will come into contact with people whose cultural backgrounds, lifestyles and home situations vary wldely. This could also include children who are victims of bullying or abuse, which may affect how they interact with others. Understanding differences activities Know your own potato Each girl is given a potato and has five minutes to get to l<now her potato. After this time, the Leader collects all the potatoes and puts them in a large container. Later in the meeting, the girls sit in a circle and take turns going up to the container and trying to work out which Is her special potato, explaining to everyone else how she k nows which one to pick. Discuss with the group how the potatoes are a bit like all the people in their fives. Although they seem to be unlike each other, there really are more things the same than there are differences. No matter how odd a shape of any potato, they all make good potato chips! Activity In Ski/ls for Life: � RESPECTING OTHERS (Activity Sheet #10, page 37) � An activity to appreciate people of different ethnic origins or with physical or Intellectual disabilities. Other activities to stlmulate discussion and appreciation of differences �I: ... Multicultural activities develop appreciation of the food, dance, beliefs and lifestyles of people from other cultures. Find out about Harmony Day activities (http://www.harmony.gov.au), not for Just one day but throughout the year. Invite people with different ethnic bacl�rounds to visit the Unit and share experiences, not �J.: games and activities from every part of the world. People with disabilities can be invited to visit the Un i t a n d s h a r e t h e ir experiences. Community organisations will organise guest speakers and opportunities for girls to discuss challenges of living in a different society. The and understand disabilities or different lifestyles. These Include Guide Dogs for the Blind,. MS Society, Mission Australia and others in your Guides Australia publication One World, Six local area. only from their country of origin, but of the 20 BIiiion People Is a useful reference. It contains SKILLS f,1, LIFE LEADERS' NOTES Family support Latest research indicates that in Australia there are many different types of families. In fact, the nuclear family of Mum, Dad and the children of that family all living in the same home is a minority. Many of the girls in a Guide Unit may have different family structures and it is important that Leaders acknowledge and communicate with all significant adults involved. The saying "You can choose your friends, but you can't choose your family" is right. Girls may live in all sorts of family constellations and lead ver y different lifestyles. Some of these arrangements may be rather different to our preconceived ideas of what makes up a family. However, as long as there is respect for the individual, mutual support and encouragement, each is a viable family unit. As Leaders, it is essential that we acknowledge, support and celebrate a// families. Family network activities Activities in Skills for Life: All families are different � All the girls in the Unit contribute � CIRCLE OF FAMILY AND FRIENDS (Activity Sheet #12, page 39) to a mural depicting families. This FAMILY TREE (Activity Sheet #11, page 38) • could be on a long piece of butcher's paper and include multiple houses Be prepared for any emergencies and space for an airport or railway Pages 14 and 15 of On Track for Life give station to allow for long distance girls a list of questions to make sure that they are family members. prepared for any emergency in their own home. Rights and responsibilities in the family unit Girls have rights to be fed, clothed, cared for, loved and educated. They also have the right to be heard and to feel safe all the time. Girls may sometimes need reminders that, with their rights, they have responsibilities towards others in the family: �f: �J., to accept the rules developed by the family; and to respect the rights of other family members. Discuss with the group their responsibilities towards others in the family and to friends. LEADERS' NOTES "I will strive to be thoughtful and optimitic SKILLS p,,, LIFE �