Curriculum Topic: Group Activity, Individual Activity, Student Demonstration
Activity Type: Labor & Birth, Labor Support, Healthy Birth Practice 5
Purpose: Help birthing person change positions to alter the shape of the pelvis, promoting rotation and descent
Time Needed: 5-10 minutes
Supplies: Tornado Tube Connectors (one connector per three families.)
1.25 liter plastic bottles. (2 bottles per three families.)
Food coloring in the color of your choice
Water
Instructions:
Expectant families often are surprised to learn that labor and birth can be a team effort requiring cooperative interplay between baby, birthing parent, and supportive people in attendance. This activity reinforces the benefits of upright & forward leaning positions in labor which help the baby to be in an optimum position, to descend & turn through the pelvis and utilize gravity the invisible force that helps the baby descend through the pelvis. Support people help the birthing person to change positions which alter the shape of the pelvis, promoting rotation and descent.
Divide the class into groups of no more than three families per bottle set. Start off the activity by encouraging the groups to manipulate the unit to move the water from one bottle to the next with this prompt, What is the most efficient way to move the water from one bottle to the other? You can move this unit any way you wish. But, please do not squeeze the bottles or twist the bottles from the connector in the center. Allow the groups to manipulate the unit. They might shake it, turn it sideways, slant it at a 45-degree angle or flip it over 180 degrees to explore the way the water moves through the connector to the other bottle.
Set-Up:
Offer one bottle set per three families ( no more than 3 families)
Talking Points:
Helpful vocabulary to highlight:
- Upright - helps the water to be in an optimum position to spin in a vortex and descend in a quick and efficient manner.
- Movement - the vortex develops by swirling the top portion of the unit in a continuous, brisk, circular motion. When the pelvis moves, with motions of swaying side-to-side, rocking, lunging, walking, changing positions, etc., it alters the diameter of the pelvis, allowing room for the baby to find their way through as they descend and turn/rotate. We can't move the pelvis in the Tornado Tube unit, but movement is demonstrated by moving the whole unit.
- Gravity - the invisible force that helps the water to descend especially when accompanied by upright & forward-leaning positions, movement, and changing positions.
- Upright & forward-leaning birthing positions these types of laboring positions encourage the baby to be in an optimum position as they descend and turn through the pelvis.
- Teamwork - cooperative interplay between the baby, birthing parent, and supportive people * Baby works on their birthing tasks of descending and turning, assisted by the birthing parent using upright and forward-leaning positions, movement, and changing positions throughout labor.
- Birth team assists the birthing parent by helping them change positions and move in ways that bring comfort & progress.
Once the participants make their own vortex, the educator connects the above vocabulary to the birthing team: baby is the water, the whole unit is the birthing parent, the Tornado Tube connector is the birthing parent's pelvis, and supportive helpers are the hands that support and move the unit.
This activity spirals nicely into the curriculum and can be referenced throughout your class when reviewing the above vocabulary. The goal is for the groups to realize that the most efficient way for the water to move from one bottle to the other is by creating a spinning vortex while the unit is in an upright position. It also reinforces the concepts:
- Pelvic station
- Six ways that labor progresses.
- Positive effects of gravity using upright and forward-leaning positions vs. the supine position with the tornado tube unit. First, create a spinning vortex. Second, before the water empties into the lower bottle, quickly shift the unit in a horizontal position (which imitates a birthing parent laying flat on their back). The water virtually stops flowing and/or slows down to a dribble. This action greatly decreases progress of the water descending in the Tornado Tube, similar to the effects a birthing parent might experience if they labor for a long period of time flat on their back during birth.
- Relaxation - Some couples have remarked how soothing it is to watch and listen to the water as it descends in a vortex. This was an unanticipated surprise and a great teaching moment to talk about relaxation techniques to use during labor.
This great activity creates community by enabling cooperative learning, group brainstorming and problem-solving while furthering important concepts that childbirth educators want parents to grasp in preparation for labor and birth. A bonus is that the materials can be procured very inexpensively and are readily available.
Modifications:
none
Return to Home