As Quiet as a Train
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Description
Can you sneak past the conductor and collect all the carriages without being heard?
This activity is for part of the first requirement of the Cubs Personal Safety Activity Badge.
The Rail Industry has five key messages to keep people safe around railways. This activity focuses on ‘Trains are quiet, you can’t hear them coming’ and talks about how quickly trains run.
"You can’t outrun a train. And even if you could, you wouldn’t hear it coming. Today’s trains almost silently reach speeds of 125mph and they run 24 hours a day."
The Rail Industry
Resources
Scrap paper
Coloured pens or pencils
Scarves or blindfolds
See the full description at https://www.scouts.org.uk/activities/as-quiet-as-a-train/
Instructions
Understand speed
Everyone should gather together, and the person leading the activity should give everyone a piece of scrap paper and a pen or pencil.
The person leading the activity should read the key message from the box above. They should explain that this safety message comes from The Rail Industry. Everyone should talk about the message – was it surprising? How should people act around railways?
The person leading the activity should remind everyone that trains can reach speeds of 125mph. Everyone should write down how fast they think people walk (on average) in miles per hour. They should also write down their best guesses for how fast a cyclist travels, how fast a car goes, how fast a cheetah can sprint, and how fast a plane is when it’s taking off.
When talking about cars, encourage people to think about how fast they go in the local area – what’s the most common speed limit?
Once they’ve jotted down their answers, everyone should fold up their paper and pop it in their pocket (or at the side of the meeting place).
Play the game
The person leading the activity should read the key message again.
Everyone should spread out around the meeting space – no one should be close to anyone else.
The person leading the activity should choose one person to be the train engine and one person to be the train conductor. Everyone else is a train carriage.
The train conductor should put on a blindfold. They should stand in the middle of the meeting place. When the game begins, they should listen out for the train engine. When they think they’ve heard the train engine, they should point to it. They can guess up to three times.
The train engine should move so the train conductor doesn’t know where they’ll start from. When the game begins, they should move quickly but silently around the meeting place, tapping the train carriages on the shoulder.
The person leading the game should count down from three, then say ‘go’ to start the game.
The train engine should begin to collect carriages. When a carriage is tapped on the shoulder, they should join the back of the train, gently holding the shoulders of the engine or carriage in front of them.
If the train conductor manages to point to the train engine, they win. If the train engine collects all of the carriages without being caught (or if the conductor runs out of guesses), they win.
Everyone should play again with a different conductor and engine.
Put it all together
Everyone should gather back together. The person leading the activity should ask if anyone was surprised by how tricky it was to listen for the train during the game. Everyone should chat about how, even when a train’s moving fast, they can be very quiet.
Everyone should get the piece of paper they wrote their speed guesses on.
Anyone who wants to could share some of their guesses, then the person leading the activity should reveal the answers one at a time.
Everyone should chat about the answers. Were any surprising? Other than the plane, none of them were as fast as a train.
Tags
- game
- Personal Safety
- railway safety
- trains
Badge Links
- Personal Safety - Dangers
- Teamwork - Team game
- Teamwork - Team game