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WikiHow to play hopscotch

Posted on May 22, 2009 at 11:49 am

From http://www.wikihow.com/Play-Hopscotch

How to Play Hopscotch

from wikiHow – The How to Manual That You Can Edit

Thousands of years ago, Roman soldiers played hopscotch to test their strength and speed, sometimes hopping over 100 feet carrying heavy weights![1] Today, hopscotch is a backyard game enjoyed by children (and lighthearted grown-ups) all over the world. Here’s how to play this classic game, along with some variations to make it more challenging.

Steps

  1. Draw a hopscotch design on the ground. Chalk is the best drawing medium on asphalt, patio stones or concrete. The squares should be large enough to fit one foot and to make sure that a stone thrown into the square will not bounce out too easily. While there are variants on drawing the design, a common schoolyard design is shown here.
  2. Throw a flat stone or similar object (small beanbag, shell, button, plastic toy) to land on square one. It has to land inside the square without touching the border or bouncing out. If you don’t get it right, you lose your turn and pass the stone to the next person. If you do get it, however, go on to the next step.
  3. Hop through the squares, skipping the one you have your marker on. Each square gets one foot. Which foot you start with is up to you. You can’t have more than one foot on the ground at a time, unless there are two number squares right next to each other, in which case you can put down both feet simultaneously (one in each square). Always keep your feet inside the appropriate square(s); if you step on a line, hop on the wrong square, or step out of the square, you lose your turn.
  4. Pick up the marker on your way back. When you get to the last number, turn around (remaining on one foot) and hop your way back in reverse order. While you’re on the square right before the one with your marker, lean down (probably on one foot) and pick it up, then skip over that square and finish up.
  5. Pass the marker on to the next person. If you completed the course with your marker on square one (and without losing your turn), then throw your marker onto square two on your next turn. Your goal is to complete the course with the marker on each square. The first person to do this wins the game!

Variations

  • Change the shape of the hopscotch course. Make it circular, with the numbers going in a spiral direction.
  • Vary the size and shape of the squares. Make some of the smaller so that people have to step on their tip toes. You can even make some in the shape of a shoe to control the direction in which the person faces.
  • Make some squares into islands. That way, a person needs to jump over a distance to get to it.
  • Set a time limit. Make into a game of “speed hopscotch”. The person has a certain amount of time to complete the course, or else they lose their turn.

Video

Tips

  • You can use masking tape to make a hopscotch layout if preferred. It will lift up easily and is good for indoor games.
  • The final square can be designated a “rest area” if you would like to have a break from hopping.

Related wikiHows

Sources and Citations

  1. Hopscotch By Elizabeth Dana Jaffe, Sherry L. Field, Linda D. Labbo. ISBN 0756501334

Article provided by wikiHow, a wiki how-to manual. Please edit this article and find author credits at the original wikiHow article on How to Play Hopscotch. All content on wikiHow can be shared under a Creative Commons license.

Cynthia’s new Art Blog

Posted on March 3, 2009 at 10:28 pm

We finally decided on a domain name and are starting to create a site for Cynthia to write about and display her work…

http://www.cordenthia.com/

Still under construction, but we have plans ^.^

Imagination Fair

Posted on January 20, 2009 at 4:52 pm

My eight year old just entered her first imagination fair at her school. This is an event calling students to produce a project in one of several categories including space, structures, demonstrations, animals to name a few. My daughter entered building with a miniature model of the Duluth Lift Bridge made out of toothpicks and marshmallows. From the ideas inception through the building process and the transportation to the school, with the request for a ride home to prevent damage, it was a great pleasure to witness her use of various skills, determination, follow-through and pride in her finished work. This is a great stage in her life where the possibilities are truly endless and her imagination knows no bounds and her abilities are brought together to make something out of nothing. It is real magic…

Thanksgiving

Posted on December 2, 2008 at 1:36 pm

Traditions can conjure feelings of connectedness, honor, a deep sense of value among other things. These abstract concepts were greatly appreciated by myself as I spent time with my kids printing pictures that I had carved on a linoleum block from drawings that they came up with specifically for the project. I have been printing my own Christmas cards for 10 years and this was the first with my children. They were fully engaged and thoroughly enjoying the whole printing process and the results of their work. It was a lot of work, being in three places at once, but the joy was quite satisfactory. I was full of it.

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