This site needs a newer browser to work properly.

Give Google Chrome or Firefox a go. Both are free and work great.

Get Chrome Get Firefox

Start Creating

Join 15,000+ activity coordinators worldwide

Everything you need to delight your residents

Unlimited Activities
Create, edit, and save forever
Printable Calendars
Beautiful monthly programs
AI Content Generation
Generate games in seconds
Interactive Games
Play on screen or print
avatar
By Kerry Recreational Coordinater

The Great Australian Dunny

The Great Australian Dunny The Great Australian Dunny
10 72
Members-Only

The Great Australian Dunny

Available with Full Membership. Unlock to access:

12 months of unlimited access - no recurring monthly fees
Thousands of ready-to-use activities - updated every week
Custom activity calendars and planning tools
Editable templates
Active professional member forum

Full Membership - $74.95 USD per year

No auto-renewals · 30-day money-back guarantee

Comments
10
Log In to comment
Susan avatar

Thank you also Lorraine

Susan avatar

I agree Kerry

Poetry like music is good for stimulating the brain of those with dementia

Thank you for sharing this

Kerry avatar

Solange,

I would also like to add the great fun I had with residents as a group was reciting the first 3 words of a nursery rhyme & they would continue on as a team.

"Humpty Dumpty fell" & residents would continue on, I would do approximately 15 nursery

rhymes before I done a word game.

Memories are great for our elderly

Kerry Towler

Solange avatar

Hi Kerry, that's a lovely reminiscing activity. Thanks for sharing.

Lorraine avatar

I have found poetry triggers memories for some of our residents who have dementia and I am often surprised by how often some can continue to recite the whole poem without very much prompting, especially the older poems which some had learnt at school.

Kerry avatar

I feel poetry is not used enough in Aged Care: I would place on my daily program at least one poem to read before some activity.

It may not have been a significant poem for that day, but residents enjoyed it

Plus, looks good on your program

Kerry

Solange avatar

Hi Kerry, I agree with you, poetry is so underrated. It provides inspiration and it is therapeutic for those who read and those who listen, as well as those who write poetry. Despite having a Poetry Reading group for elders being rather challenging, it can be done with patience and ingenuity. If you have any tips, please share them with us.

Lorraine avatar

I have commenced a creative writing group. There are 4 residents who attend however they have so much fun telling stories of yesteryear. The Residents give me the job of writing their stories and putting them in verse or short stories.

With their stories I have now put together 3 beautiful reminiscence booklets filled with their memories which they each treasure. They have homework each week which consists of a word or sentence to be discussed the following week. Recently we the word was " Broom" we had such fun bring up memories of how they used the broom in so many ways.

Talita avatar

I love the reminiscence booklets idea and the fact that you give them a word or sentence to ponder on for the week. What a lovely activity.

Kerry avatar

A new activity has been posted by a Golden Carers member: Poetry- Australia Day

Halloween Quiz

Quiz 3

Hot Seat Game

4

Snowman Ring Toss

Ready to plan, create and collaborate with confidence?

Join thousands of activity professionals worldwide.