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Celebrations:
1. Create a media event by getting a commitment from every
4-H'er for individual service projects during National 4-H
Week. Print their pledges in the newspaper and encourage
the members to supply photos of their work. Better
yet, send the newspaper photographer to catch the 4-H'ers
at work.
2. Have a reception at the courthouse, or downtown, or
at the mall. Serve limeade!
3. Distribute green bottles of bubbles. Invite everyone
to have a green bubble-blowing party and 4-H Week reception.
4. Have a green balloon day. Give away 4-H balloons.
5. Have an ice cream social with 4-H'ers, county officials,
and volunteers. Showcase youth projects and exhibits.
6. As Anne Sortor ingeniously suggested, Select
a National 4-H Week baby! The first baby born
during 4-H Week in the county (if you have a county hospital
that delivers) is named the 4-H baby. Get sponsorship from
local vendors for diapers, gas to carry baby home, milk/formula,
flowers, baby clothes, etc. Give baby a 4-H membership card.
7. Have a National 4-H Week street party under a big 4-H
banner.
8. Have a car show...anything from 1914 to 2003! After
all, there have been a lot of changes in vehicles and
4-H since 1914!
9. Have an up-to-the minute fashion show and 4-H Week reception.
Include an outfit from 1914 as a reminder of how 4-H has
changed since 1914.
10. Have a gala premiere of your newest video (or slide
set) of 4-H highlights from the past year.
11. Kick off 4-H Week with a Battle of the
Bands. Invite everyone.
12. Have a county-wide 4-H scavenger hunt. Advertise a
list of items (a real four-leaf clover, a 4-H enrollment
card, the autograph of a 4-H volunteer, the autograph of
a 4-H donor, a snapshot of a 4-H'er, etc.). The first person
to bring all the correct items to a designated volunteer
or the Extension office, receives a savings bond or nice
donated prize.
13. Ask local churches to acknowledge 4-H Sunday (October
1) and 4-H members who are present.
14. Invite outstanding local 4-H alumni for an autograph-signing
party.
15. End the week with your annual 4-H awards banquet. Give
it a new twist with make-your-own-omelet, make-a-crepe,
world's longest sandwich supper, late-night breakfast, chili
cook-off, salad supper, fish fry, outdoor chicken barbeque,
finger-food-fellowship, spaghetti - 17 ways, the 4-H diner,
funniest 4-H video contest, 4-H academy awards, Unsolved
4-H Mysteries (with skits about 4-H'ers and leaders), a
TV Guide party (with 4-H related spoofs from a variety of
shows), a Wheel-of-4-H Night where participants are chosen
from the audience to guess (and fill-in the blanks for)
major 4-H successes from the past year, a 4-H Survivor event,
4-H... the Strongest Link Show or other ideas from your
4-H'ers healthy imaginations.
Media
& Marketing:
16. Provide the local newspaper with articles written by
members, volunteers, alumni and donors for a 4-H insert.
17. Select a dozen entries in a call for PSA's on 4-H.
Let the authors tape the spots for local radio stations.
18. Have fortune cookies made, with a 4-H message inside
each one. Distribute them in restaurants and in other public
places.
19. Schedule 4-H members and/or adult leaders to present
PTA and civic meeting programs.
20. Distribute a thought-for-the-day for each day of National
4-H Week. Send them to all the churches in your community,
for enclosure in their bulletins.
21. Put a 4-H message on grocery bags.
22. Make 4-H badges or buttons to wear and distribute.
23. Get 4-H balloons. Distribute them everywhere!
24. Have a call for 4-H bumper sticker designs. Let a local
printer or artist select an entry. Unveil and distribute
the bumper stickers during 4-H week.
25. Initiate a 4-H'er of the Week
newspaper photo feature during 4-H Week. Let a panel of
volunteers select the featured 4-H'er using fair criteria
and including all ages and interests. Better yet, have a
4-H'er of the Day everyday of 4-H Week.
26. Cover your county with 4-H posters! Encourage EVERY
4-H'er to bring a 4-H poster to the club meeting. Let a
committee of 4-H'ers and volunteers be responsible for distributing
signs in every business and public places.
27. Place 4-H promotional placemats in local restaurants.
28. Use a local cable station to convey 4-H messages and
announcements.
29. Fly a 4-H flag on the town square.
30. Radio contest: Use questions based on 4-H history and
4-H today. Callers who give correct answers, win a prize.
Use 4-H camp T-Shirts, 4-H pens and pencils, and other promotional
trinkets.
31. Use the 4-H camp video and Pat Head Summit's videos
in businesses with television that continually play.
32. Use 4-H promotional/educational exhibits at businesses,
fairs, schools, banks and supermarkets.
33. Distribute 4-H appreciation items or 4-H survival kits
to 4-H teacher leaders, school principals (green life savers,
4-H pencil, 4-H calendar, etc.).
34. Ask local businesses to put 4-H is Great!
Get Into It! on their signs during the week.
35. Solicit billboard designs. Select one to unveil during
4-H Week.
36. Have a two-way teen membership marathon. Include a
fun-run race and a teen recruitment race.
Plan a really special short trip or event for the top 10
recruiters and their new teen members. Let other teen members
host the event. And invite every teen who participated in
the fun-run.
Events
and Activities:
37. Have a First Annual National 4-H Week Pet Show!
38. Have a 4-H Cookie-baking Marathon and deliver cookies
to police departments, teachers, school board members, fire
departments, and other community services.
39. Have contests for T-Shirts, posters, bumper-stickers,
4-H displays, PSA's, essays and feature stories. Use them!
40. Have a milk shake marathon or a taste-of-our-county
event.
41. Have a 4-H Family Fun Night.
42. Have a 4-H Carnival.
43. Have a 4-H Family Hayride.
44. Have a 4-H Family Scavenger Hunt.
45. Have a 4-H Family Chili Cook-off.
46. Have a 4-H Family Open House where people visit one
of several homes in which 4-H pictures and project memorabilia
are displayed.
47. Organize a 4-H Week committee for next year's events!
Club
Meetings:
48. Have an enrollment party at each meeting.
49. Have a reception for the principal and teachers.
50. Give a clover sticker to everyone you find smiling.
51. Distribute something 4-H'y for every bulletin board.
52. Distribute a list of celebrity 4-H alumni. Scramble
the names or have them fill-in-the-blanks.
53. Invite teen 4-H'ers and 4-H alumni to explain 4-H.
54. Give door prizes (4-H pencils, T-Shirts, Blue Tick
Tickets, etc.) by drawing completed enrollment cards.
55. Take a jar of green jelly beans to each meeting. Let
members guess how many jelly beans are in the jar. Let the
number equal the number of 4-H'ers in your county or in
the state last year. Explain that it would take a certain
number of jars to hold that many jelly beans.
Recognition
for Donors & Other 4-H Supporters:
56. 4-H'ers deliver green and white mints.
57. 4-H'ers write thank you notes.
58. 4-H'ers distribute thank you posters for windows.
59. 4-H'ers distribute 4-H T-Shirts.
60. 4-H'ers distribute cookies.
61. Invite them to a donor-appreciation campfire!
62. 4-H'ers deliver original thank you poems or singing
thank-you-grams.
63. Mail or deliver an audio or video cassette of 4-H'ers
saying thank you.
64. Mail them a video tape of the past year's 4-H highlights.
65. 4-H'ers could grow or transplant shamrocks to deliver
to donors and other supporters during 4-H Week.
66. Distribute 4-H pencils.
67. Have special ribbons made (rosettes are great!) that
read 4-H VIP.
68. 4-H'ers make and deliver jars of green and white jelly
beans.
69. Mail them a video (or even audio tape) of a massive
standing ovation!!
70. 4-H'ers deliver 4-H calendars to them.
As
A Club:
71. Make a quilt.
72. Make a flag or a banner.
73. Make clover-shaped cookies to deliver to shut-ins.
74. Present a skit.
75. Sing a song.
76. Have a reception for parents.
77. Do a service-learning activity.
78. Prepare a meal. Invite the parents as guests.
79. Have a talent show. Invite friends, parents and donors.
80. Do a service project.
81. Honor an adult volunteer, teen leader or donor.
82. Make cookies for the school custodians, secretaries,
cafeteria staff and bus drivers.
83. Prepare refreshments for the teachers' lounge.
84. Decorate a bulleting board.
85. Present a thought-for-the-day over the intercom each
morning.
86. Display the 4-H flag for the week.
87. Advertise a wear-green day. Distribute green and white
mints to everyone who wears green that day; or distribute
tickets to a fun 4-H event.
Last
Minute Ideas:
88. Take a potted plant to key supporters. Stick a paper
4-H clover on a florist stem in the pot.
89. Have a phone-a-thon. 4-H'ers phone all the donors and
sponsors to say thanks.
90. Distribute books or packs of lifesavers with a note
You've been one for us this year! Thank you.
91. Distribute One Million Dollar candy bars with a note
You're worth more than this. Thanks for being
a friend to 4-H.
92. Add a 4-H Week message to every e-mail and written
correspondence during the week.
93. Have everyone is the office answer the phone with Happy
4-H Week!
94. Have 4-H'ers deliver small toy bulldozers with a note
We'd move the earth for you. Thanks for putting
wheels on 4-H this year.
95. Take a donor to lunch each day during 4-H Week. Recruit
volunteers and co-workers to do the same. If possible, let
4-H'ers take a donor or volunteer to lunch, even if it's
in the school cafeteria.
96. Send sticks or packs of gum with notes attached Thanks
for sticking with 4-H!
97. Ask an office building to turn lights on at night to
spell 4-H if you have a building that's large enough.
98. Ask volunteers to stop by the high schools where your
teen 4-H'ers are. Deliver them a little care bag or a good
luck with all your tests this week note and
surprise. Sometimes schools will have office helpers put
surprises in the lockers for you.
99. Have a 4-H pizza party for 4-H'ers caught wearing green
during 4-H Week.
100. Let teen council members create and display banners
celebrating the 4-H Centennial, like "not getting older...
getting better," new and now - 4-H," or "4-H
for teens for 100 years!"
101. Check
out the service learning projects conducted by Tennessee
4-H'ers last year in celebration of National 4-H Week. |