Helium Stick

Revision as of 23:22, 6 January 2008 by Teamadmin (Talk | contribs) (Reverted edit of 222.190.96.195, changed back to last version by Smarbin)

Revision as of 23:22, 6 January 2008 by Teamadmin (Talk | contribs) (Reverted edit of 222.190.96.195, changed back to last version by Smarbin)

The object is to lower the Helium Stick to the ground

Objectives

Icebreakers/Warmups | Communication | Collaboration | Team Strategy

Group Size

Materials

Tent Pole (or similar Long, Thin, Light Rod)

Set Up

Setting up for the Helium Stick Activity

None


Directions

Line up team in two rows which face each other. Introduce the Helium Stick - a long, thin, light rod. Ask participants to point their index fingers and hold their arms out. Lay the Helium Stick down on their fingers. Before you let go, get the group to adjust their finger heights until the Helium Stick is horizontal and everyone's index fingers are touching the stick. Explain that the challenge is to lower the Helium Stick to the ground. The catch: Each person's fingers must be in contact with the Helium Stick at all times. Pinching or grabbing the pole in not allowed - it must rest on top of fingers.

Reiterate to the group that if anyone's finger is caught not touching the Helium Stick, the task will be restarted. Let the task begin....

Warning: Particularly in the early stages, the Helium Stick has a habit of mysteriously float up rather than coming down, causing much laughter. A bit of clever humoring can help - e.g., act surprised and ask what are they doing raising the Helium Stick instead of lowering it!

Often times the Helium Stick rises first

For added drama, jump up and pull it down! Participants may be confused initially about the paradoxical behavior of the Helium Stick. The secret (keep it to yourself) is that the collective upwards pressure tends to be greater than the weight of the stick. Often the more a group tries, the more it floats. Some groups or individuals (most often larger size groups) after 5 to 10 minutes of trying may be inclined to give up, believing it not to be possible or that it is too hard. The facilitator can offer direct suggestions or suggest the group stops the task, discusses their strategy, and then has another go.

Less often, a group may appear to be succeeding too fast. In response, be particularly vigilant about fingers not touching the pole. Also make sure participants lower the pole all the way onto the ground. You can add further difficulty by adding a large washer to each end of the stick and explain that the washers should not fall off during the exercise, otherwise its a restart. Eventually the group needs to calm down, concentrate, and very slowly, patiently lower the Helium Stick - easier said than done.

Variations

Use Hula-hoop instead of stick

Debrief Questions

  • What was challenging about this activity?
  • What led to the eventual success?
Success!!!