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Grades 9–12 + Adult 60–90 min Life Skills / Caregiving Prevention Bingo
Recognize early signs that an aging or vulnerable family member may need support with daily living activities.
Demonstrate compassionate, dignity-preserving communication when discussing care needs with a loved one.
Explain how to coordinate with siblings, family members, and professionals to build a care team.
Apply evidence-based strategies for caregiver self-care and preventing burnout while supporting loved ones.
🎣 Hook 5 min
Ask students: "When you visit a grandparent or elderly family member, what small changes do you notice? A messier kitchen? Missed appointments? Less socializing?" Most people notice changes gradually, but miss the cumulative signal that help is needed.
📖 Caregiver Roles Preview 8 min
Discuss: What does "stepping in" mean? Why is dignity important when helping? What are common barriers to asking for or receiving help? Frame caregiving as "stepping in together" — not taking over, but supporting autonomy.
🎮 Gameplay 35 min
Round 1 (18 min): Students complete at least 6 squares independently, focusing on the Learn It tab to recognize signs. Round 2 (12 min): Complete Live It actions (having the conversation, coordinating care). Round 3 (5 min): Share what they learned. Score 80%+ of squares to earn a spin on the EARNED It Spin4Rewards Prize Wheel!
💬 Debrief 15 min
1. Which sign was hardest to recognize? Why? 2. What makes having "the conversation" difficult? 3. How would you coordinate care among siblings or family members? 4. What support do caregivers need to avoid burnout?
🔗 Extensions 5 min
Interview: Talk to an actual caregiver in your family or community about their biggest challenge. Case Study: Analyze a family scenario and design a care plan. Volunteer: Offer to help an elderly neighbor with a specific task this month.
Standards Alignment ISTE 1.3: Knowledge Constructor ISTE 1.4: Innovative Designer NHES 2: Health Information NHES 4: Communication NHES 5: Decision Making SHAPE America Standard 4 ASCD: Healthy, Engaged, Challenged

Tone is critical: This topic touches real family challenges. Emphasize that recognizing change is compassionate, not judgmental. Avoiding intervention because something "feels rude" can lead to preventable harm.

Normalize caregiver stress: Many students are already caregivers — for a parent, grandparent, or sibling with disability or illness. Create space to acknowledge this reality without shame.

Dignity language matters: Never say "the person is declining" — say "changes in function." Never say "can't" — say "may need support with." Always center the person's agency and preferences, even when capacity is limited.