Go for the Gold! 15 Activities for Teaching the Olympics
by Kip Cates
The Olympic Games are a global event held every 4 years that
bring together 10,000 athletes from 200 countries for 2 weeks of drama,
excitement, and sport. The Olympics are an international media event watched by
students of English around the world and a great topic for English language
classrooms that can generate lots of language learning and language
practice!
A thematic
English lesson designed around the Olympics can engage students in reading
about Olympic history, writing about inspiring athletes, and debating Olympic
issues. It can also promote global awareness, open students’ eyes to the
diversity of our multicultural world, and encourage students to share their
thoughts—in English—about Olympic ideals of fairness, equality, inclusion,
sportsmanship, and international understanding.
This
summer’s Olympics, postponed from 2020 due to COVID-19, have been complicated
by debates on the possibility of safely holding the Games during a global
pandemic. Regardless of whether they’ll be held as scheduled, in scaled-down
form, or even cancelled, the Olympics remain a high interest topic worth
teaching at any time.
Classroom Activities
For those
who decide to teach about the Olympics, there’s a wealth of activities to
experiment with, ranging from quizzes, card games, and debates to
presentations, readings, and research. Following are some of the activities I
use in my classes. Feel free to try these out, adapt them, or improve them as
necessary!
1. Quiz About the
Olympic Games
I begin my
unit by putting students in pairs or groups and giving them an Olympic quiz.
This ensures an energetic start to the class, gets students working together,
and gives them a chance to share what they know. Why not test yourself?
(Answers at the end of the article).
Quiz About the Olympic Games: True or
False? |
1. ___ The
Olympic Games are held every 6 years.
2. ___ The
Olympic symbol is 4 rings.
3. ___ The
Olympic Games originated in ancient Rome.
4. ___ The
modern Olympics began in 1946. |
5. ___ The modern
Olympic Games were started by an American.
6. ___ The
Olympic torch relay begins in Greece.
7. ___ The
2016 Olympics were held in London, England.
8. ___ The
2020 Olympics are scheduled for Tokyo. |
2. Studying About the
Olympics
After
stimulating students’ interest with a quiz, it’s time to have them learn about
Olympic history, Olympic traditions, and Olympic events. To do this, I designed
a reading passage handout (Appendix A).
3. List of Summer
Olympics
Once
students have a basic idea about the Olympics, it’s time to focus on actual
events. To do this, I first have students brainstorm the dates, host cities,
and host nations of past summer Olympics. Next, I pass out a list I created of
all summer Olympics from 1896 to 2028 (Appendix B).
Students
always enjoy scanning this list to see the host cities, host nations, and
athlete numbers. The list can be used for both pair practice of wh– questions as well as for student research tasks. For
example:
Language
Practice (Wh– questions)
-
Where were the Olympic
Games held in 1912 ?
-
When did Mexico City host
the Olympic Games?
-
Which country hosted the
Olympics in 1952 ?
-
How many countries took
part in the Olympics in 1896 ?
-
How many athletes took part
in the Olympics in 2016 ?
Research Homework: Profile
One Olympic Event
Have
students choose one of the Olympics from the list, research it, then write a
report to explain what they learned:
-
Background: Explain the background
to this Olympics.
-
People:
What famous athletes took part?
-
Events:
What interesting events or issues happened?
-
Comments:
Why did you choose this? What did you learn?
-
Sources:
List the books and websites you used for research.
4. Inspiring
Olympic Athletes
The Olympics
provide teachers with a great chance to have students learn about and discuss
inspiring Olympic athletes. This can be done in various ways. Here are two
ideas I use in my classes.
Research Homework: Profile
An Olympic Athlete
Give
students a list of noted Olympic athletes from different countries. Have them
choose one, do research, then write a profile or give a presentation. Some
examples:
Noted
Olympic Athletes
-
Jessie Owens
-
Abebe Bikila
-
Olga Korbut
-
Spiridon Louis
-
Cathy Freeman
-
Sohn Kee-Chung
-
Yusra Mardini
-
Kip Keino
-
Tommie Smith
Research
Questions
-
Background: Who were they? What’s
their background?
-
Sport:
What sport did they take part in? What events?
-
Achievement:
Why are they famous? What did they do?
-
Comments:
Why did you choose them? What did you learn?
Athlete
Profile Cards
Another way
to engage students is to hand out athlete profiles. I use a set of “Inspiring
Athlete” cards (Appendix C) that I created for my classes. Here’s what to
do:
-
Put students in groups and
have them each choose 1 athlete card
-
Give them 5 minutes to
memorize the information on their card
-
Then give them 3 minutes
each to:
-
introduce their athlete to the group (in their own
words)
-
explain what they learned,
felt or were surprised at
5. Olympic
Issues
The Olympics
are dedicated to ideals such as peace and friendship. Unfortunately, they’ve
been troubled by problems and controversies throughout their history. The
social and global issues involving the Olympics can be divided into eight
categories:
To have
students learn about these, you can
-
assign each issue to a pair
or team of students to research, or
-
provide students with
examples of each category using “issue strips,” such as those in the “Olympic
Issues” handout (Appendix D). These can be used for reading practice, class
discussion or research tasks.
6. Critical Thinking:
Three Ways to Count Olympic Medals
At each
Olympics, the media, national governments, and excited fans eagerly count the
number of medals won by each country. A basic count, however, is simplistic. To
promote critical thinking, use the “Olympic Medals” handout (Appendix E) to
have students guess, then discuss, the top 10 medal winning nations listed by
medal count, medals per capita, and medals adjusted for GDP (Gross Domestic
Product).
7. Olympic
Debate
To have
students think more deeply about the Olympics, why not engage them in a lively
debate on the following theme? Just divide them into teams and have them
brainstorm ideas like the following.
Topic: “Do
the Olympic Games promote international understanding or only narrow
nationalism?”
International
Understanding |
Narrow Nationalism |
- it’s a global event watched by the whole world
- it brings together athletes from around the globe
- it features peaceful competition that replaces war
- it’s a multicultural festival of our shared humanity
|
- it’s based on national rivalry: Who got the most medals?
- many spectators only cheer for their own country
- Olympic competition promotes an “us vs them” mentality
- athletes compete, so they can’t socialize or be friends
|
A second debate, if desired, could address the
current COVID controversy and engage students in debating the
question:
“Should this
summer’s Tokyo Olympics be held during a global pandemic?”
Extension Activities
1.
Countries, Flags, and Anthems
At each
Olympics, students will encounter a rich variety of foreign countries, national
flags, and national anthems.
-
Flags:
Teach students to identify world flags, study their designs, and explain the
story behind selected flags.
-
Anthems:
Teach students to identify national anthems, discuss their lyrics, and study
the story behind each song.
-
Countries:
Have students locate some of the nations taking part on a world map and study
their peoples and cultures.
2. Host City and Host
Country
Have
students study the host city and country, then share what they learn via posters
and reports. For the 2020 Olympics (to be held 23 July–8 August 2021), study
Tokyo and Japan. For the 2022 Winter Olympics (to be held 4–20 February 2022),
study Beijing and China.
3. Adopt a
Country
Have
students form pairs and adopt a foreign nation as “their country” to research,
report on in class, and cheer on during the Games.
4. Sports English and
Olympic Events
Teach
vocabulary related to “Sports English,” then have students research and report
on the origins, history, rules, and traditions of selected Olympic
sports.
5. Olympic
Worksheet
If you’d
like to keep students active during the Games, give them an Olympic Worksheet
(Appendix F) to fill in day by day. The worksheet I designed has data hunts,
sports matching, interviews, media literacy, and more!
6. Quotes About the
Olympics
Engage
students with Olympic ideals and issues through inspiring and thought-provoking
quotes by Olympic athletes. See Appendix G for a small sample. Have students
read the quotes, choose the two they like best, then discuss—in pairs or
groups—the quotes they chose and why.
7. Other International
Sports Events
The Olympics
is the world’s most famous international sports event. Yet, it’s not the only
one. Have students research, write about, and present on other global sports
events. Examples could include:
See:
Wikipedia’s “List
of multi-sport events”
8. Redesign the
Olympics
Finally, if
you have advanced students, why not challenge them to consider and discuss ways
to redesign the Olympics (see Appendix H, “Redesign the Olympics”
handout).
Conclusion
The Olympics
provide English language instructors with a “teachable moment” for promoting
language skills, global awareness, critical thinking, and international
understanding. By teaching this theme, we can help students view the Olympics
not just as an aggressive “nation vs. nation” competition but as a global
celebration of sporting achievement by athletes from around the world. I hope
the activities listed here prove useful for Tokyo 2020 and future Olympics. For
more activities, do an online search for “teaching about the Olympics” or contact me for a copy of my “Teaching the Olympics”
PowerPoint presentation.
Resources
Books
Websites
Online Videos
(YouTube)
The Olympic Games Quiz
Answers |
- False (every 4 years)
- False (5 rings)
- False (in ancient Greece)
- False (in
1896)
|
- False (by a Frenchman)
- True
- False (in Rio de Janeiro)
- True
|
Kip
Cates is professor emeritus at Tottori
University in Japan. He is active in the fields of global education, peace
education, and language teaching as a writer, speaker, and teacher trainer. He
is past chair of TESOLers for Social Responsibility, founder of JALT’s Global
Issues in Language Education Special Interest Group (GILE SIG), editor of its
quarterly Global IssuesNewsletter, and a guest lecturer on
the Japanese NGO Peace Boat.