Traditional Children’s Games: Hopscotch

Around the world, children have enjoyed drawing grids on the sidewalk or on the ground and then jumping or hopping from one end of the grid to the other.

They draw different kinds of grids. Some are like the one in the photo. Others are round and curl in a circle. Still others are a large square with many small squares inside.

Here are descriptions of two versions of hopscotch games provided by students: one from Colombia and another one from Indonesia.

When I was a little girl, most afternoons I used to play games with my friends in our neighbourhood. Rayuela, as it is called in Spanish, was my favorite game.

How to Play Rayuela

Source: howstuffworks.com

There can be any number of players, and a stone is the only object you need to play it. If you are the first player, you draw a figure on the floor with a piece of chalk.

Then you throw the stone inside square one. After that, you have to hop into each square, starting with square 1 and ending in square eight.

If there are two squares together, you jump landing with one foot in each square; but if there is only one square, you must hop on one foot.

When you reach squares 7 and 8, you have to turn back jumping again until square 1. Then you continue playing the next level.

This time you begin by throwing the stone into square number 2. In the next level, you throw it into square number 3. You continue until level 8.

The first player who does all the levels is the winner. The most important thing is that the player has to skip the square where the stone is.

Special Rules of the Game

The game has some rules. If an of the following things happen, the player has to stop and another player takes a turn.

  • The player can’t put his/her foot or feet on the lines of the square.
  • The player can’t jump with two feet in squares 1, 2, 3, and 6.
  • The player can’t fall down.

It is nice to remember playing games like Rayuela because it reminds me that I had a happy childhood surrounded by special people who always loved me.

One-Leg Jump (Hopscotch in Indonesia)

Source: hopscotch.in

When I was a child, my friends and I used to play many traditional games from my country, Indonesia, and a game I played a lot was called One Leg Jump.

How to Play This Game

This game is very simple. We only need chalk if we play on the floor, or something like a stone if we play on the ground.

To play this game, we had to draw rectangles or squares arranged side by side. We drew four or five rectangles or squares about 1 foot by 1 foot each.

Any number of children could play. To play this game, each player had to hop to the first rectangle, then to the second one, and then to the third one, and so on.

After reaching the fifth rectangle, the player had to turn around still on one leg and hop back from the fifth rectangle to the first one.

Special Rules of the Game

While hopping, the player must not step on the line between the rectangles, and must keep his balance. If, for instance, the player’s other leg (the one which is lifted) touches the ground, the player fails. If a player breaks a rule, as punishment, the failed player must stand on one leg for about 5 minutes.

More traditional children’s games: