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nessatay2223's avatar
nessatay2223
Rising Ace
5 years ago

More After School Activities for Children and Teens

I think there should be more after school activities other than just drama club and scouts. I would like to see them add:
- Dance Team
- Band Club
- Book Club
- Cheerleading Team
- Science Club
- Debate Club
- Chorus
- Art Club
- Yearbook Committee
- Football Team
- Soccer Team
- Tennis Team
- Swim Team
- Volleyball Team
- Fashion Club
- Awareness/Volunteer Club
- Chess Club
- Track Team
- Wrestling Team
They don’t have to add all of them but just a few. (It would be nice to have all of them) or they can merge some under one category and have different branches for certain ones (if that makes sense)
Also, these can help build skills up!

What do you guys think?

25 Replies

  • Movotti's avatar
    Movotti
    New Spectator
    5 years ago
    "crocobaura;c-17746117" wrote:
    "Movotti;c-17745950" wrote:
    "crocobaura;c-17745608" wrote:
    "SERVERFRA;c-17745465" wrote:
    I have a question about children. How come they can knit but not being able to make a basic salad?


    Kids don't make salads, as they don't usually cook. Some may make a peanut butter or jam sandwich, or stick to fruits and snacks if hungry. I think it would be nice if kids could cook by joining an adult in the kitchen, they could help with baking cookies or decorating them. Or wash and dice vegetables.
    Speak for yourself!
    I was certainly skilled in the kitchen as a child, to the point were I was able to cook a fancy dinner for extended family by the time I was 12.
    By the time I was 10, a basic recipe could be put in front of me, and I could follow it without assistance.
    At 5 I could mix bikkies under instruction, roll them out, and cut them out, and put them on the tray ready to be baked, I wasn't 'helping' I was doing.

    And then there's the kids who attend forest kindergartens, they use knives to whittle wood, and cut fruit, they cook over campfires, all at age 4.

    Children are far more capable than most adults realise.



    I guess it depends on what you call fancy dinner. I might have roasted some bacon on a campfire once, but I wouldn't really call that cooking. I wasn't allowed to use the stove as a child, in fact until about 14 or 15 I only used the kitchen to eat.


    It was roasted duck, grilled pork ribs, roasted veggies, steamed veggies, gravy, and I think I did something with custard for desert. It was for 20 people. My mum had to go to work, so I was put in charge of getting dinner ready before everyone arrived. Gravy and custard were things I was put in charge of from when I was tall enough to not need a chair to stand on to see in the pot.
    I wasn't allowed to use the stove on my own when I was under 10, because the stove we had then was wood fueled, and tricky to get the heat right, plus the entire thing heated up, making it a bit more dangerous that the usual sort of stove people have.
    When I was 14 or 15 I worked in the kitchen of the local truck-stop. I was the only jr staff member who could run the kitchen on their own within a few weeks of starting work there.
    My mum was working as a shearers cook at that age, she'd be driven to a farm, put in the kitchen, and expected to produce lunch, and morning and afternoon tea for the workers, using whatever was available. She learned to cook from an early age too. It's a life-skill that too few have from an early age.
  • I remember the first time I helped make Speghetti when I was 11 years old. It's possible for a child to begin to learn an easy cooking dish.
  • Skateboarding Club would be awesome to have. I know that's not something you usually see official but alot of teens skateboard
  • I agree! It was nice to get scouts and drama club, I like those a lot, but it seems to have stalled there, which is quite a shame as I feel like after school activities help add a lot towards personalizing different kid's experiences. At least one sports team would be nice (especially if they let kids who have maxed motor skill gain fitness from say, swimming and playing soccer--still don't understand why that's not a thing lol), along with chess club, jr debate team, school band, chorus, science club, art club, school newspaper, and year book (which could focus on photography skill) seem like basic minimums really. I'm not sure why they didn't add jr after school versions of things like the soccer team, esports team, debate guild, art society, robotics club, ect with university, that seems like a prime opportunity for something like that, along with scholarship and distinguished degree opportunities for excelling in them. (For that matter, there's a "super scout" scholaarship you can apply for, but I don't think I've ever seen something like that for drama club, which is a shame.)

    Anyway, yeah, I'm glad we have the 2 we have, as well as the part time job options for teens, but I really wish they'd continue to add after school activities so we had more options for personalizing each sim child's experience.
  • Small jobs for kids after school.

    Paper Rout
    Mowing Lawns
    Walking Dogs
    Pet Sitter
    Lemon Aid Stand

    Let kids save Similions in their piggy banks. Piggy Banks can save up to 1,000 Similions. When full, they can smash it, then a window pops up like when you buy from a vendor, allowing the kid or teen to pick something they have been saving up for; A special box of rare cards, a special brand of shoes that you can only be unlocked through the Piggy Bank, an early release of a video game they can play on computer or console, something for their pets and other rare collectables.

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