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Physical Education

Simple Rounders

Overview

Children play a simplified version of rounders or baseball, focusing on hitting and running bases.

Learning Objective
Children experience the key actions of a striking and fielding game — hit, run, and field.

Resources needed

  • Bat or flat stick
  • Ball or tied cloth ball
  • 4 base markers (stones)

Lesson stages

0 / 7 done
  1. 1 Mark four bases in a diamond shape, about 8 metres apart.
  2. 2 One team bats, one team fields.
  3. 3 Batter hits the ball and runs as many bases as possible.
  4. 4 Fielders retrieve the ball and throw to the base ahead of the runner.
  5. 5 If the fielder reaches the base with the ball before the runner — out.
  6. 6 Three outs and teams swap.
  7. 7 Score one point for each base reached safely.

Tap a step to mark it as done.

Variations

  • Batter rolls the ball instead of hitting — easier for beginners.
  • No outs — everyone bats once, then teams swap.
  • Add a fourth base rule: must stop at each base.
More information

Teach: hit, run, base, safe, out, field, catch. Walk through one practice round slowly before scoring begins.

Smaller diamond and softer ball for younger children. Allow two hands on the bat.

Are batters watching the ball before hitting? Are fielders moving to get behind the ball rather than waiting for it?

Stones mark the bases. A flat stick or piece of wood is the bat. Tied cloth makes a safe, catchable ball.

Children often run past bases without stopping. Teach that you must stop at each base — running through causes confusion about where to throw.

Rounders and baseball share the same fundamental skills. This simplified version makes the key principles accessible from an early age.