LEGOeducation.com Ouch, a Broken Leg! Learning values • Learning about health and safety • Exploring roles within a hospital • Expressing feelings about being injured • Showing empathy for a friend who is injured Recommended materials • 9209 Community Services Set Vocabulary Encourage the use of these words during the activity: • Hospital • Doctor • Nurse • Ambulance • Wheelchair • Cast • Crutches • Accident • Injury Connect • Ask the children to remember their last visit to the doctor. What did the doctor and nurse say and do? Have children share with a friend one action the doctor or nurse performed on their last visit. • Facilitate a discussion about hospitals. Ask the children if they have ever seen a hospital or been inside one. If so, what was it like? Who goes to hospitals? Who works in hospitals? Encourage children to think about all the different responsibilities of doctors and nurses. • Tell the children about a character named Mrs. O’Neil. She was on her way to the library to find a book she really wanted to read. She was in a hurry because the library was closing in 15 minutes. Mrs. O’Neil began to cross the road but was in such a rush that she did not look both ways. A car ran right into her! The driver of the car called emergency services immediately and the medics told Mrs. O’Neil she would be alright, but probably had a broken leg and needed to go to the hospital. Use the illustration to support the Connect story Use the illustration to support the Connect story LEGO, the LEGO logo and the Minifigure are trademarks of the/sont des marques de commerce de/som marcas registradas de LEGO Group. ©2012 The LEGO Group. 045284. LEGOeducation.com Construct • Have the children create and build a scene where Mrs. O’Neil is being taken to the hospital in an ambulance and examined by a doctor and nurses. Share the scene with friends. Check for evidence of learning Have the children: • Name or demonstrate one or more actions performed by doctors and nurses. • Describe or show one or more reasons a person would go to the hospital. • Demonstrate or describe one or more emotions related to a person being injured. Suggested model solution Contemplate • Ask the children how they think Mrs. O’Neil felt when she got hit by the car. Encourage them to use vocabulary to describe her emotions and thoughts. How did she feel once the doctor and nurses made her feel comfortable? • Talk about the healing process. What will Mrs. O’Neil need to help her move around if her leg is in a cast? What could be some problems she will have while her leg is healing? Encourage the children to think of solutions to these problems. • Discuss the role of doctors and nurses. What tools do they need for their jobs? Depending on the responses, discuss items like x-rays, stethoscopes, bandages, etc. What kind of information do doctors and nurses need to know? Why do we need them in our community? Continue • Discuss other reasons someone might need to go or stay in a hospital. Create a different scene where someone needs an ambulance to take them to the hospital. • Sometimes people stay in hospitals for a long time. It becomes a second home to them. Have the children brainstorm ways to make a hospital a fun and happy place to stay and build these solutions. LEGO, the LEGO logo and the Minifigure are trademarks of the/sont des marques de commerce de/som marcas registradas de LEGO Group. ©2012 The LEGO Group. 045284. LEGO, the LEGO logo and the Minifigure are trademarks of the/sont des marques de commerce de/som marcas registradas de LEGO Group. ©2010 The LEGO Group. 045284. LEGOeducation.com
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