Active Play-Active Learning: Brain Breaks Guide
Active Play-Active Learning: Brain Breaks Guide
Active Play-Active Learning: Brain Breaks Guide
ACTIVE LEARNING
Brain Breaks Guide
Active PlayActive Learning Brain Breaks Overview
The Active Play-Active Learning Project (APAL) aims to incorporate more physical activity into the
school day via fun, low-cost and practical strategies. APAL is based at the Michael & Susan Dell Center
for Healthy Living at the University of Texas School of Public Health-Austin Regional Campus and was
developed with input from classroom teachers, PE specialists, students, and physical activity
researchers.
In this guide, we present a range of easy-to-implement Brain Breaks- short activity dynamics that can
be implemented by the teacher in the classroom setting. The guide is structured in two sections: 1.)
General Brain Breaks that can be applied across classes and academic topic areas during any part of the
day; and 2.) Academic-specific Brain Breaks that directly correlate to subjects.
While we present just a selected number of Brain Breaks here, we encourage classroom teachers to
seek out additional Brain Breaks on our APAL website, explore other resources such as video-based
Brain Breaks, and/or create their own Brain Breaks. As a classroom teacher, you are in a unique position
to shape the physical and cognitive health as well as the learning experience of your students. Thank
you for helping to enhance the healthy development and academic achievement of your
students! Please feel free to share with us your ideas for Brain Breaks via our Facebook page or directly
with the emails below.
https://www.facebook.com/APALproject
Creating a Physically Active Classroom through Brain Breaks
What?
Energizing Brain Breaks, also known as energizers, brain boosters, and activity breaks, are
quick activities for the classroom that aim to both engage children in physical activity while
enhancing their learning experience . They take virtually no preparation and no extra materials
to perform. Students and teachers love them because they are fun and make people
laugh. They also challenge the brain. Brain Breaks have been found to improve students
time-on-task1,2 and may have the greatest effect on those students with the most difficulty
remaining on task.3 Brain breaks can also improve students concentration and performance
on standardized tests,4-7 Consider using Brain Breaks periodically throughout the day with
your class. The more students are active throughout the day, the more focused they will be.
Movement also helps to anchor the information students are learning.
How?
Children seem to have an endless source of energy that carries them through their day. They
run rather than walk, jump rather than step over, and drop down rather than sit. Brain Breaks
are designed to help channel that energy into the academic activities of the day. In this guide,
we present a variety of easy-to-implement Brain Breaks that include step by step instructions.
Variations are provided to easily change an activity to a different academic focus. These
activities take into account the busy academic day and are meant to only provide bursts of
activity to satisfy even the squirmiest of students as well as provide transition time to refocus
to a new topic. Teachers can choose one activity for the day or choose several activities for an
extended break. Consider conducting Brain Breaks with your students:
to begin the day or an activity. (e.g., a test!)
whenever students need a break from an extended learning period.
whenever students are transitioning from one subject/activity to another.
whenever students are waiting in line to go to specials, lunch, library, etc.
whenever the teacher sees the need.
Activity: Students act out the following routine in descending order, pausing momentarily between
each task:
12 Jumping Jacks
11 Raise the Roofs
10 Knee Lifts
9 Side Stretches
8 Side Twists
7 Giant Punches
6 Kicks to the Front
5 Air Squats
4 Jumps
3 Muscle Arm Curls
Activity: Students are scattered in their own self-space. Using a line on the floor, or a linear object like
a pencil placed on the floor, students will complete a jumping task over the mark for 10-seconds on
command. Students are encouraged to count their own jumps. Upon a start signal, cue students to
jump side-to-side over the line for 10-seconds. Students record their jumps and prepare to repeat the
task, encouraging them to beat their previous score. Other jumps include, but not limited to, forward
and back jumps, scissor jumps, and one-foot hops.
This also works well if student are in pairs and alternate turns being the jumper while the non-jumper is
the counter. Easily incorporate math into the game by having pairs add, subtract, multiply and/or
divide their total jumps to eliminate the distracting competition amongst pairs.
Chill Break
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: Before a test or quiz have a 5-minute walking break or stretching break to help students relax.
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Estimation Destination
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: Have students guess how many steps it will take to reach an assigned destination. Have
students write down their estimation prior to walking and their actual steps taken after returning. As a
class everybody walks together, silently counting their own steps.
The destination can be, but not limited to, a landmark outside of the classroom (e.g. the school flag
pole or a playground marking) or a series of destinations inside the classroom (e.g. from their desk, to
one wall, to something blue, to something oval, to a window, and back to their desk.
Exercise Recommendations: assign two exercises per round. If the coach selects students, they
choose one, or both, exercises to participant in.
Jumping Jacks
Air Squats
Kneed Lifts
Jumps
Side Twists
Sit Ups
Side Stretches
Make up your own stationary exercise
Freeze Dance
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: Have students spread out across the room and play one school-appropriate song. Let kids
dance along until the music stops. Encourage students to hold their position until the music restarts.
Repeat sequence as desired.
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Quiz Me 5
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: While reviewing a topic/subject, prepare a number of true-or-false questions. Dedicate one
wall of the room as the true area and the other wall the false area. Ask the review question, and
permit students to stand near the wall that corresponds to the correct answer. After all students are at
their wall, provide the answer. Students stay put and wait for the next question.
Try using quadrants in the classroom, respectively assigning the corners as option A, B, C, or D, and
now you have a multiple choice review activity.
Trading Places 3
Academic Focus: General activity
Yoga 2
Academic Focus: General Activity
Activity: Students are scattered in their own self-space facing the teacher. Moving slowly and quietly, with
emphasis on slow, steady breathing, students go through a variety of posses:
o Acorn Pose kneel down, sit on your heels, bend at the waist bringing your chest to your thighs trying to
place your forehead on the floor. Place arms along your legs with palms facing up.
o Superman lie on your stomach with arms out in front of you. On an exhale breath, raise your head, arms,
and legs, leaving only your stomach on the floor. Hold pose for 2two full breathes and relax in starting
position. Repeat as desired.
o Lizard lie on your stomach with your hands under your shoulders (similar to preparing to do push-ups).
Push up, extending arms fully, while leaving your waist, hips and legs on the floor. Hold pose for two full
breathes and lower your chest back to the floor and relax in starting position. Repeat as desired.
o Camel kneel down with your legs shoulder-width apart, slowly grab your heels, and slowly arch your back
while allowing your head to fall back towards your heels. Hold pose for two full breathes relax in starting
position. Repeat as desired.
o Half Moon with your feet together, hold your hands together above your head. While keeping your hands
together, stretch your arms to one side as you stretch your hips to the other. Hold pose for two full breathes
and relax in starting position. Stretch to the opposite side. Repeat as desired.
o Triangle stand with a wide base. Stretch your arms parallel to the floor. Stretch your left hand down to
your left shin and reach your right arm towards the sky. Hold pose for two full breathes and relax in starting
position. Stretch to the opposite side. Repeat as desired.
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Zero In
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: One student is selected to stand in front of the room while facing the class. The class is given
direction that they are going to help the student (a.k.a the guesser) guess a secret number without
talking or using hand gestures. A secret number is held up behind the student. The guesser will call out
a number. If the guesser needs to guess higher, the class will cue him/her by jumping up and down. If
the guesser needs to guess lower, the class will cue him/her by squatting up and down. The class
continues to give active, silent, cues until the guesser guesses the secret number.
Instead of using a number, hold up a math problem that the class has to solve before the guesser begins
guessing. The guesser must guess the answer to the problem (of course, without seeing the math
problem).
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As If 4
Academic Focus: Storytelling, Vocabulary practice, Language Comprehension.
Activity: Teacher reads sentences to class. Have students act out each sentence for 30 seconds.
Frozen Vocabulary 4
Academic Focus: Practicing new vocabulary words.
Activity: Begin by having students do an activity standing at their desks for at least 30 seconds:
o Jumping
o Twisting
o Jogging
o Jumping Jacks
o Hopping
o Knee Lifts
o Playing air guitar
Students continue activity until teacher calls out a vocabulary word at which point the students freeze.
Teacher calls on a volunteer to use the vocabulary word properly in a sentence. Resume activity or
begin new activity when a student uses the vocabulary word properly.
Letter Toss 1
Academic Focus: Practicing new vocabulary words.
Activity: Teacher places a letter for the day on the board and hands a yarn ball to one student.
Students stand around the room in a circle. One student will state a word that begins with that letter
and then toss the yarn ball to another student who will then say another word. Students continue
passing the ball, without passing it to a student that has already had the ball.
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Over-Under-Around-Through 6
Academic Focus: Vocabulary.
Activity: In groups of three, have two players face each other and hold both hands or hold a scarf
between them. The teacher will call out a specific sequence for the third player to accomplish as
quickly as possible. For instance, over, under, around, through. The player will go over the joined
hands, under the joined hands, circle around both hand holders, and through the middle of the joined
arms. Mix the sequence up and do some several in a row. Time each attempt as an incentive to go
faster. Switch positions frequently.
Set Up: Students form a circle around the perimeter of the room. Teacher hands out one card to each
student.
Activity: Students identify suit of card and perform activity that corresponds to that color for 10-15
seconds:
When teacher says Pass it On, students then pass their cards to the student to their right and
perform the activity that corresponds to their new card.
Spelling Mix- Up 1
Academic Focus: Students practice spelling new words with team members.
Equipment: One piece of paper with a letter of the alphabet for each student.
Activity: Divide the students into two teams. Give each student a piece of paper containing a letter of
the alphabet. Call out a spelling or vocabulary word. Each team will arrange themselves to spell the
word. The team that spells the word the quickest and correctly receives a point.
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Spelling Words Relay 1
Academic Focus: Spelling/Reading
o The students stand in a line and the first student of each group will be given the spelling word and
they will use the dry erase marker / chalk and write the first letter on the board.
o The student will then move quickly to the next person on their team, pass the chalk / marker off
o This procedure will continue until one of the teams has completed the spelling word.
o The team must say and spell the word to the class. If the word is correct they get a point. If it is
incorrect the other teams have a chance. If all four teams spell the word incorrectly, then the teams
get 30 seconds to fix their word.
Activity: Create a poem or song using vocabulary words that all start with the same letter. Every time
a word starting with that letter is said or sung have students stand up or sit down.
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Stop and Scribble 4
Academic Focus: Spelling/practicing new vocabulary words
Activity: Students stand at desks with partners. Need a piece of paper and pencil for every 2 students.
Teacher calls out physical activity:
o Jumping
o Twisting
o Jogging
o Jumping Jacks
Students begin activity and continue until the teacher calls out a spelling word. Students freeze and
partners work together to try to spell the word correctly on a piece of paper. After 10-15 seconds,
teacher calls out new activity. Continue until all spelling words are used. As students cool down,
teacher will write correct spelling on board and students will check their work.
Teacher then gives students a movement to do (ex: jumping jacks, run in place, march, etc.). Teacher
then calls out a word phrase (Period) and students will STOP. Or (Exclamation Point) and students will
go faster and then return to a normal speed.
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Vocabulary Scramble 1
Academic Focus: Recognize level appropriate sight words and content vocabulary, identify
level appropriate vocabulary, use conventions of spelling in written composition.
Equipment: Letters of the vocabulary words written on separate sheets of paper; paper and
pencil (for the records)
Activity:
Wiggles 4
Academic Focus: General activity
Activity: Students stand at their desks and jog in place while doing the following activities:
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Chair Aerobics 5
Academic Focus: Math
Activity: Have students pull their chairs out from their desk. Students should sit up straight, keeping
their ankles together to do leg lifts by extending their legs to a 180-degree angle for 20
repetitions. Then have students stand behind the chair and while holding the back for balance, extend
their right leg out to the side to a 45-degree angle for 20 repetitions. Then repeat with the left leg.
Location: This activity is best in an area with more space than the classroom.
Activity: Have every student get a partner and sit cross legged on the floor facing their partner 2-3 feet
away. Place a hacky-sac or other object between them. Have students perform the following actions:
When the teacher calls out a math question, students try to be the first to grab the hacky-sac. Repeat
5 times.
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Fitness Math 1
Academic Focus: Review of math concepts; even and odd numbers.
Set Up: Teacher divides students in groups of four and gives each team a die.
Activity: Teacher instructs the students to take turns rolling the dice, and with each number rolled,
students identify it as either an even or an odd number and perform the physical activity associated
with the number rolled.
o 1=Push Up
o 2=Jump & Stretch
o 3=Toe Touch
o 4=Curl Up
o 5=Arm Circles
o 6=Jumping Jacks
Activity: Teacher will choose two students to come to the front of the class to represent different
fractions. The teacher will give each of the two students a fraction flashcard. Next, the teacher will
choose a PACMAN from the remaining students to represent greater than or less than. The
student will then correctly arrange himself/herself between the two students to correctly solve the
equation. Once the equation has been correctly solved, the PACMAN will choose an exercise for the
class to do (jumping jacks, jog in place, jump up and down, etc.). Game continues with new students
representing fractions and a new PACMAN.
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Shoot 11
Academic Focus: Counting
Activity: Divide the class into groups of 4-5 students, each group standing in a circle. The object of the
game is for the groups to try and total 11 fingers displayed without telling anyone what number they
are going to show. Students do this by, standing in a circle with their left hand behind their back.
Instruct the groups to say out loud, 1, 2, 3Shoot! On Shoot, each student will display either:
0(closed fist), 1, 2, 3, 4, or 5 fingers on their right hand. Once all the fingers are displayed, the students
in the group quickly add up the total of all the fingers shown. If the groups total equals 11, the group
gets a point (students high-five each other). If the groups total is less than 11, then everyone in the
group does that number of jumping jacks (e.g., if the group total was 7, each student in the group
would do 7 jumping jacks). If the groups total is greater than 11, the group must subtract 11 from their
total and do that many squats (e.g., if the group total was 16, each student in the group would do 16-
Sports Galore 4
Academic Focus: Math
Activity: Teacher calls out the following sports skills to mimic for 10-15 seconds:
Shooting a jump shot
Running through tires
Batting a baseball
Serving a tennis ball
Downhill skiing
Spiking a volleyball
Swinging a golf club
Throwing a football
Juggling a soccer ball
Shooting an arrow
Shooting a hockey puck
Swimming underwater
Fielding a ground ball and throwing it to first base
Dunking a basketball
Variations: Teacher can integrate skills into word problems and have students repeat the number he
or she calls out: If Juan took 5 jump shots (students act out) and 2 went in the basket, how many did he
miss? 3.
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Task Master 5
Academic Focus: Math
Activity: Have students stand up and push in their chairs. Teacher explains that he/she is going to give
them a series of tasks and the goal is to complete them as quickly as possible. Direct students that
once they have completed the task, they should stop where they are and raise their hand. For the first
task have students touch 10 chairs not in a row. For the next task have students touch elbows with 8
classmates. For the last task, touch toes with 6 classmates wearing 6 different colored shirts.
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Take a Tour 5
Academic Focus: Social Studies
Variations: Discuss the origins of the sports acted out by students. Additionally, talk about the
countries that are known for each sport.
Activity: Break students into groups of 2 or 3, and assign a topic related to a current social studies
lesson that students need to discuss while taking a 5-minute walk. They should report their discussion
back to the class.
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Animal Instincts
Academic Focus: Science
Activity: Pick one student to call out an animal and have everyone mimic how that animal moves. Go
around the room until every student has an opportunity to call out an animal and the class has
mimicked that animal.
Calm Down 5
Academic Focus: Science
Activity: Lead students in stretches to help loosen up tension. Have students each hold for 15-20
seconds each: reach for the sky, touch toes, arm circles, neck circles, knee to chest, etc.
Rainstorm 5
Academic Focus: Science
Activity: Have a rainstorm in your classroom. Have students follow your lead; begin by having
students very lightly rubbing their hands together, then lightly snap, slap their thighs, slap their thighs
and stomp their feet (the rainstorm is at its peak!). Then stop stomping their feet, just slap their
thighs, return to lightly snapping, rubbing their hands and stop. Do each action for 20 seconds.
Shake It 5
Academic Focus: Science
Activity: Students remain seated and raise their hands in the air. Have them start by shaking their
right hand 10 times, left hand 10 times, left foot 10 times and right foot 10 times. Repeat counting
down the number of shakes from 9-1. Speed up or slow down the counting to keep it interesting.
Variations: Tailor this to science concepts by reviewing the skeletal/muscular system while students
complete the activity.
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Take a Seat! 5
Academic Focus: Science
Activity: Have students stand up and pull their chairs away from their desks. They should stand in
front of their chair (seat facing out). Have students quickly sit, then stand, sit then stand 8-10
times. Next, quickly repeat sitting halfway down and standing, repeating 8-10 times. Last, have
students barely sit (just touching the chair) and stand quickly repeating 8-10 times.
Variations: Call out a fruit/vegetable/ dairy product. If its a GO food, students should sit, stand, sit
then stand 8-10 times. If its a SLOW food, students should sit halfway down and stand, repeating 8-
10 times. Finally, if its a WOAH food, students should barely sit and stand quickly repeating 8-10
times. Repeat by calling out different foods.
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REFERENCES
1. Active Academics. (2005). Learning on the move. In Active Academics. Retrieved from
http://www.activeacademics.org/LessonIdea.asp?ID=60
2. Modified from Coordinated approach to child health: CATCH physical education. Retrieved from
CATCH Physical Activity Box
3. Minds in Bloom. (2011). 20 Three-Minutes Brain Breaks. Retrieved from http://www.minds-in-
bloom.com/2012/04/20-three-minute-brain-breaks.html
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based program on physical activity and on-task behavior. Med Sci Sports Exerc. 2006;
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5. Fuel Up to Play 60. (2011). In-School Activity Breaks. Retrieved from
http://school.fueluptoplay60.com/tools/view.php?id=15749467
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from University of Texas School of Public Health website: http://www.sph.uth.tmc.edu/catch/
PDF_Files/Iowa_AHPERD_Nov%2008.pdf
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