This DIY Sports Booklet is a hands-on, creative sports unit designed for children in Grades K–6. This unit introduces children to a range of popular sports while giving them the freedom to create their own separate sports book as a final project.
Rather than simply reading about sport, children are encouraged to sketch, label, write, photograph, and present what they learn. Each sport page can be used as a starting point, guiding children to notice the basic equipment, learn key vocabulary, practise spelling words, and write short sentences about the sport. Children can then transfer their learning into their own booklet by drawing equipment, labelling their sketches, adding photos, and recording simple facts or personal reflections.
The unit is flexible enough for younger children to complete with simple drawings, copied words, and oral discussion, while older children can extend the activities with more detailed writing, independent research, photography, and neatly presented booklet pages. Once finished, children can hole punch and bind their sports book with string or ribbon, laminate selected pages, or keep it as part of their learning portfolio.
Perfect for active learners and sport-loving children, this unit combines movement, art, vocabulary, handwriting, writing, photography, project-based learning, and presentation skills in a fun and meaningful way.
This DIY Sports Booklet is a hands-on, creative sports unit designed for children in Grades K–6. This unit introduces children to a range of popular sports while giving them the freedom to create their own separate sports book as a final project.
Rather than simply reading about sport, children are encouraged to sketch, label, write, photograph, and present what they learn. Each sport page can be used as a starting point, guiding children to notice the basic equipment, learn key vocabulary, practise spelling words, and write short sentences about the sport. Children can then transfer their learning into their own booklet by drawing equipment, labelling their sketches, adding photos, and recording simple facts or personal reflections.
The unit is flexible enough for younger children to complete with simple drawings, copied words, and oral discussion, while older children can extend the activities with more detailed writing, independent research, photography, and neatly presented booklet pages. Once finished, children can hole punch and bind their sports book with string or ribbon, laminate selected pages, or keep it as part of their learning portfolio.
Perfect for active learners and sport-loving children, this unit combines movement, art, vocabulary, handwriting, writing, photography, project-based learning, and presentation skills in a fun and meaningful way.