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Orienteering at VLUS
8th grade
Navigation Games
What is orienteering?
Field Trip
4
Mission: work in teams to visit checkpoints
2016 vlus field day presentation
Practice at Fresh Pond
Tomorrow (Wednesday): orienteering on the
school grounds
 Preparation
 Advisory vs Advisory Relay
 Reflection
Advisory vs. Advisory
 Each advisory decides who will be on each team.
 Walking team (not timed): must visit map checkpoints in order.
 Relay (teams hand off to each other)
1. Regular orienteering, short course #1
2. Regular orienteering, short course #2
3. Regular orienteering, medium course
4. Regular orienteering, long course
5. Clue orienteering: solve map and navigation problems at each control
 Team leaders (optional, any number of people)
 Everyone cheers for each other
(Optional) Team Leader role
 Make sure everyone understands what to do
 Tell people when their turn is coming up
 Handle any problems or last-minute changes
Training session: 20 minutes
 Walk around the campus with your advisory and a map.
 Make sure everyone
 understands how to read the map in order to navigate between controls
 knows how to orient the map to match the features around you
 Can read the symbols on the map
Orienting the map
Orienting the map
Orienting the map
Orienting the map
Orienting the map
Useful navigational skills
Orienting the map
Pace counting
Useful navigational skills
Orienting the map
Pace counting
Learning map symbols
Useful navigational skills
Orienting the map
Pace counting
Learning map symbols
Grid orienteering
Useful navigational skills
Maze orienteering
Orienting the map
Pace counting
Learning map symbols
Grid orienteering
How to Relay
 Teams of 1 or more. Numbered 1-5 (for relay courses), or WALKING.
 Mass start of first teams and walkers.
 Do not follow another team; they may have different controls on their
course.
 Tag the next person(s),
 Then go to the check-in station so we can check your punches
 The tagged person(s) runs to the map board, takes their map, and
does their course.
Reflection
 What worked well?
 What skills do you want to work on?
 What did you learn?
2016 vlus field day presentation
 (Map of long)
2016 vlus field day presentation
2016 vlus field day presentation
Evalin and Isabel: North American Champs
Questions?
More information
 Barb Bryant president@NavigationGames.org 617-335-4847
 NavigationGames.org
 Cambridge Sports Union csu.attackpoint.com
 New England Orienteering Club www.neoc.org

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2016 vlus field day presentation

Editor's Notes

  • #2: Hello! This presentation is an introduction to the 8th grade orienteering program.
  • #3: Orienteering is a map navigation sport combining the ability to think with the ability to move quickly through terrain. In orienteering, your task is to visit each checkpoint on the map in order, as quickly as possible. The checkpoints are called controls. To prove you were there, you either punch a card with a mechanical punch, or use an electronic punch. The control locations are in the center of the red or purple circles on the map.
  • #4: Next week, you and your classmates will spend a day in the woods.
  • #5: You will work in small teams and use maps to find checkpoints.
  • #6: When you go to the woods, you will need some navigational skills. Over the next week, you will have a chance to learn and practice these skills.
  • #7: On Thursday, you and your fellow students will practice your strategy and teamwork at Fresh Pond.
  • #12: Today, each Advisory will run a different station. The station locations are marked on the map. At each station students will learn skills useful in orienteering. For example, at one station, you will learn how to orient your map by turning it until it is correctly positioned.
  • #17: At other stations you will learn things like distance estimation,
  • #18: How to read the specialized orienteering map symbols
  • #19: How to keep your map oriented in a grid map
  • #20: And even how to navigate in a maze.
  • #22: Third, you will return the equipment to station 7 and go back to your classrooms.