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Using the World Cup as a learning opportunity

Using the World Cup as a learning opportunity. Draw a footballer in pencil or find a colouring picture. Research one of the countries playing in the World Cup Finals 2010. Fill your footballer with information about the country. A Footballer’s Diet.

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Using the World Cup as a learning opportunity

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  1. Using the World Cup as a learning opportunity

  2. Draw a footballer in pencil or find a colouring picture. • Research one of the countries playing in the World Cup Finals 2010. • Fill your footballer with information about the country.

  3. A Footballer’s Diet This task asks students to recall the features of a balanced diet and use that knowledge to plan a day’s meals for a footballer using South African delicacies.

  4. A balanced diet Fibre: this is required to help your intestines function correctly; it is not digested. Mineral Salts: these are required for healthy teeth, bones, muscles etc. Vitamins: these are required in very small quantities to keep you healthy. Carbohydrates: these provide a source of energy. Proteins: these provide a source of materials for growth and repair. Fats: these provide a source of energy and contain fat soluble vitamins.

  5. Plan a balanced diet for your player Try to select traditional South African foods suitable for your player. Food is your body’s fuel and the better the quality of fuel you put in, the better your performance. You need to make sure there is a balance between the major food groups: fats; proteins; carbohydrates; vitamins and minerals; and fibre. Breakfast Lunch Dinner

  6. Typical South African foods and dishes • Melkkos (milk food), another milk-based dessert. • Mealie-bread, a sweet bread baked with sweetcorn. • Mielie-meal, one of the staple foods, often used in baking but predominantly cooked into pap or phutu. • Ostrich is an increasingly popular protein source as it has a low cholesterol content; it is either used in a stew or filleted and grilled. • Pampoenkoekies (pumpkin fritters), flour has been supplemented with or replaced by pumpkin or sweet potato. • Potbrood (pot bread), savoury bread baked over coals in cast-iron pots. • Potjiekos, a traditional Afrikaansstew made with meat and vegetables and cooked over coals in cast-iron pots. • Rusks, a rectangular, hard, dry biscuit eaten after being dunked in tea or coffee; they are either home-baked or shop-bought (with the most popular brand being Ouma Rusks). • Samosa or samoosa, a savoury stuffed Indianpastry that is fried. • Smagwinya, fat cakes, • Smoked or braai'ed snoek, a regional gamefish. • Sosaties, grilled marinated meat on a skewer. • Tomato bredie, a lamb and tomato stew. • Trotters and Beans, from the Cape, made from boiled pig's or sheep's trotters and onions and beans. • Umlegwa, a dish made with free-range chicken. • Umngqusho, a dish made from semolina and black-eyed peas. • Umphokogo, an African salad made of maize meal. • Umqombothi, a type of beer made from fermented wheat. • Umvubo, sour milk mixed with dry pap, commonly eaten by the Xhosa. • Vetkoek (fat cake, magwenya), deep-fried dough balls, typically stuffed with meat or served with snoek fish or jam. • Waterblommetjie bredie (water flower stew), meatstewed with the flower of the Cape Pondweed. • Amasi, is milk fermented in a traditional way, which tastes rather like plain yoghurt or cottage cheese. It is very popular in South Africa. It has healthy characteristics, and today might be described as probiotic. • Biltong, a salty dried meat. • Bobotie, a dish of Malay descent, is like meatloaf with raisins and with baked egg on top, and is often served with yellow rice, sambals, coconut, banana slices, and chutney. • Boerewors, a sausage that is traditionally braaied (barbecued). • Bunny chow, curry stuffed into a hollowed-out loaf of bread. A bunny chow is called Kota by the locals. • Chutney, a sweet sauce made from fruit that is usually poured on meat, especially a local brand called Mrs Ball's Chutney. • Frikkadelle - meatballs. • Gesmoorde vis, salted cod with potatoes and tomatoes and sometimes served with apricot jam. • Hoenderpastei, chicken pie, traditional Afrikaans fare. • Isidudu, pumpkin pap. • Koeksisters come in two forms and are a sweet delicacy. Afrikaans koeksisters are twisted pastries, deep fried and heavily sweetened. Koeksisters found on the Cape Flats are sweet and spicy, shaped like large eggs, and deep-fried. • Mageu, a drink made from fermented mealie pap • Mala Mogodu, a local dish equivalent of tripe. South Africans usually enjoy mala mogodu with hot pap and spinach • Malva Pudding, a sweet spongy apricot pudding of Dutch origin. • Mashonzha, made from the mopane worm, a caterpillar which lives on the mopane trees, often fried until crispy. • Melktert (milk tart), a milk-based tart or dessert.

  7. Football Is Citizenship

  8. Football is SOCIETY and CITIZENSHIP in action for many reasons – for example, • It is a game with rights and responsibilities. • It is a game with rules. • It is a game with individual freedom. • It is a game based upon teamwork. • It is a game involving money. • It is a game with practitioners and spectators/customers. • It is a game involving diversity. • It is a game involving cooperation. • It is a game involving conflict. • It is a game involving the media.

  9. Tasks: • After reading the above, list as many rights a footballer has as you can. • Then do the same for her/his responsibilities. • Then do the same 2 things for spectators. • Then do the same 2 things for referees. • Then do the same 2 things for the media. • Now imagine you have been selected to organise a 5 a side world cup competition for 32 schools from around the world. You have the right to choose the places from which the schools come. Explain how you would organise your tournament in no more than 10 bullet points. (Do this in groups and report back). • Then write codes of conduct for your world cup for each of the people mentioned in the questions above. • Then do the same for this World Cup, 2010.

  10. Weekly Wages – Investigation:How much is work worth?

  11. Task • Each of you will receive a set of cards, some will have amounts of money on them others will have job titles • The money represents a weekly wage – you job is to try to match the job with the wage • What can we learn about global inequalities from this exercise? • The correct answers are at the end of this powerpoint

  12. £460

  13. £2,600

  14. £1.25

  15. £5 - £10

  16. £30

  17. £13,000

  18. £31.50

  19. £11.30

  20. £82.90

  21. £296.40

  22. Average wage in the UK

  23. Average wage in Thailand

  24. Average wage in Kenya

  25. A footballer in the English Premiership

  26. Average wage in India

  27. A footballer in the Kenyan Premiership

  28. Thai sports clothing stitcher

  29. Indian football stitcher

  30. UK minister of culture, media and sport

  31. UK Teacher

  32. Answers • UK Teacher £460 • UK minister of culture, media and sport £2,600 • Indian football stitcher £1.25 • Thai sports clothing stitcher £5 - £10 • A footballer in the Kenyan Premiership £30 • A footballer in the English Premiership £13,000 • Average wage in India £31.50 • Average wage in Kenya £11.30 • Average wage in Thailand £82.90 • Average wage in the UK £296.40

  33. To put the Premier League in context… • Follow this link • http://www.telegraph.co.uk/sport/football/leagues/premierleague/7527796/Premier-League-footballers-not-the-richest-on-the-planet-revealed.html

  34. George Weah – An Inspiration? Have you ever heard of him? Not only was he an inspiration to millions with his feet he is now making a stand for good with his mouth…

  35. A True Legend • Ask pupils to find out about George Weah, an inspirational footballer from Liberia in Africa. • The following websites are useful for this research: • http://www.unicef.org/people/people_george_weah.html • http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Weah • http://news.bbc.co.uk/sport1/hi/football/africa/1434214.stm

  36. Experiences of African Players Paired work investigation

  37. Player 1 - Alimamy • Name: Alimamy • Position: Striker • Country: Sierra Leone • My name is Alimamy Kamara and I’m 13 years old. I was a child soldier fighting with the RUF rebels during Sierra Leone’s civil war – I was abducted to fight when I was just 11. I was afraid for my life. I finally escaped by hiding in the back of a truck. My life is different now since coming to the Makeni Project. The project is for children like me who were once child soldiers. I love playing football – it’s so much fun. It’s a great healer because it brings together children who once fought against each other. It unites us in friendship and team spirit. My dream is to have perfect peace. Never let this war repeat itself.

  38. Player 2- Guelor • Name: Guelor • Position: Left-back • Country: Democratic Republic of Congo • My name is Guelor Tama. I have lived on the streets of Kinshasa for most of my life. I left home because I was being mistreated. I slept on the streets and had to beg to survive. Now, thanks to Humanité Nouvelle, my life is changed. This project helps me to look after myself and is helping me to become somebody. I love playing football and I want to be a famous footballer. I’m studying to be an electrician because if I can’t become a famous footballer I’d like to be an electrician. Football is just the best sport for us and the Congolese are really good at it. I like it because I feel relaxed when I’m playing. I play every day with my friends. My hero is Ronaldo.

  39. Player 3 - Erykah • Name: Erykah • Position: Midfielder • Country: Eritrea • My name is Erykah. I play football for Praxis Panthers women’s team in London. When I arrived in this country two years ago from Eritrea, I was very lonely. I was a stranger and didn’t feel welcome. Since I heard about the football team they have become like my new family. We all come from different backgrounds and different countries around the world. We are different but we are all equal and we try to understand what each other has been through.

  40. In pairs, have your group act out a post-match interview – one takes the role of one of the players above, and one the interviewer. Make sure they take time to think up the questions and to get into role. Alternatively, they could take on the role of a football commentator, describing each player in turn. • Have your groups compare the different experiences of the players. In what ways has football helped them to overcome their difficulties? What benefits can you get from playing team sports?

  41. The Global Footprint of Playing In South Africa This task asks you to assess the organisation of the cup in South Africa by looking at the distance between the stadiums and considering the impact of traveling around South Africa in order to play the games

  42. Travelling to the Host Cities A table showing distances between host cities Distances measured in kilometres (km)

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