In this guide
Celebrated every year on 23 June, Olympic Day is about far more than sport. It’s a global celebration built on three pillars: move, learn and discover. For teachers, those pillars line up perfectly with what you’re already doing in the classroom every day.
As the Official Education Platform of the Australian Olympic Team, ClickView is proud to partner with the Australian Olympic Committee to bring the Olympic Games into classrooms across Australia.
Olympic Day honours the values at the heart of the Olympic movement: excellence, friendship, and respect. Whether your students are graphing race times in maths, researching ancient Greece in HASS, or learning about teamwork during PE, the Olympics offer a rich, ready-made context for meaningful learning across the curriculum.
The best part is you don’t need to overhaul your existing lesson plans. The activities below are designed to slide into the subjects you’re already teaching, giving students a fresh angle on familiar skills. So how do you turn Olympic Day into a full day (or week) of cross-curricular learning? Let’s get into it.
The Olympics have a story that stretches back thousands of years, and it’s one your students will find genuinely fascinating. Starting with the ancient games is a great way to connect Olympic Day to your HASS curriculum.
For primary students, the video The Ancient Origins of the Olympics explains how a small religious festival in rural Greece became the greatest sporting event on earth. Pair it with The History of the Olympic Games from Behind the News for a quick, engaging overview. For a deeper dive, What Are the Olympic Games? traces the full story of the Games and how they continue to grow and change over time.
To bring history to life, try having your students create an Olympic timeline. Give them the task of researching key moments from the ancient games through to the modern era. Don’t forget the quirky details that hook students in, like the original Greek “uniforms” (or lack of them) and the origins of the Olympic rings.
You’ll also want to spotlight significant Olympic figures. Jesse Owens tells the story of the star athlete who overcame discrimination to win gold at the 1936 Olympics. Cathy Freeman from the Fierce Girls series introduces students to one of Australia’s most celebrated Olympians, a powerful figure in Australian history whose 2000 Sydney victory united a nation. For older students, Remembering the Sydney 2000 Olympic Games adds a layer of cultural depth and a wonderful discussion starter about the power of sport to bring people together.
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What better way to celebrate Olympic Day than getting your students moving? Hosting a mini Olympics is one of the most popular Olympic Day activities, and for good reason. It gets students active, encourages teamwork and brings the competitive spirit of the games right into your school.
Start by watching Physically Active You to talk about why physical activity matters. For younger students, Learn about Playing Together with Ant Active and Learn about Sports and Exercise with Ant Active set the tone for what it means to play together and stay healthy.
Need inspiration for activities? The BBC Bitesize: Let’s Do This! series is packed with games that require little space or equipment. Try Throw Clap for a coordination warm-up, Slalom Weave for an obstacle course challenge or Scatter for a team activity that students of all abilities can enjoy.
For upper primary students, use the Essential Skills for Sports: Basketball, Essential Skills for Sports: Tennis or Essential Skills for Sports: Running series to teach proper technique before your games begin.
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The Olympics are a goldmine for connecting maths to events in the real world. Race times, medal counts, scoring systems, and world records give students real-world data to work with, and the context makes even tricky concepts more engaging and meaningful.
For primary students learning about time, Calculating Time Duration and Calculating the Finishing Time connect directly to how race results are measured and recorded. Older primary students can explore Graphing Distance and Time: A Runner’s Story to see how distance-time graphs work in a sporting context.
Data handling is another natural fit. Use ClickView’s Miniclips: Handling Data series to walk students through the full process of gathering and displaying information.
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Olympic Day gives you a perfect hook for reading, writing and speaking activities. The stories, debates and vocabulary that surround the Olympics make literacy lessons feel relevant and exciting; and students often produce their best writing when they care about the topic.
For a persuasive writing activity, show younger students Sports Day and ask them whether Spot’s alternative approach to racing is fairer. This short, lighthearted clip sparks genuine debate and gives students a clear position to argue for or against.
For upper primary and secondary students, connect to Debating and Public Speaking resources to build formal argument skills around Olympic and sports-themed topics.
Introduce students to inspiring Olympic athletes through the Olympics Unleashed series. Videos like Unleash Your Passion and The Power of Being You feature Australian Olympians sharing the stories, values and mindset behind their achievements — brilliant starting points for personal narrative or reflective writing.
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Art and design activities let students flex their creative muscles while connecting to the cultural side of the Olympics. Every Olympic Games features its own mascot, logo, medals and uniforms and designing these items involves real-world skills in visual communication, problem-solving and teamwork.
For inspiration, use the Olympics Unleashed series to get students thinking about what makes their community special and how to represent that visually. The Brisbane Olympics BTN Newsbreak is a fantastic starting point for discussing what the 2032 Games might look like and what symbols could represent Australia on the world stage.
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How do forces affect a swimmer’s speed? Why do cyclists wear tight clothing? What role does wind resistance play in a sprint? The Olympics are full of real-world science questions that connect neatly to your curriculum.
Start with Materials and Their Properties and Materials Matter to explore how different materials behave. Then challenge students to apply what they’ve learned to an Olympic context.
You can also connect to geography by exploring the Olympic torch relay. Use Mapping Skills to teach students how to read maps, then have them plan a route for the Olympic flame through their own community.
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The Olympic ideals of excellence, respect and friendship offer some of the richest discussion material Olympic Day has to offer. These values connect directly to social-emotional learning and character education, making them relevant in every classroom.
For younger students, Living Values introduces core values through song, while Respect explains what it means to treat others the way you’d like to be treated. Extend the conversation with Respect Diversity and Cultural Diversity: Respecting Each Other’s Differences, which help students understand that the Olympics bring together people from every background and belief system. Friendship Basics rounds out the theme by exploring how to make, keep, and navigate friendships.
Resilience is another essential Olympic trait. Use Ronnie and His Grit and Resilience for primary students. Older students respond well to Developing Grit and A Growth Mindset from the What You Need to Succeed series. The Olympics Unleashed videos Set Goals Like a Champion and Pursuing Excellence: Attitude vs Effort are particularly powerful — featuring Australian Olympians talking about what it really takes to reach the top. You can also explore Self-Awareness and How to Set Goals with older students to discuss what it takes to train like an Olympian.
For a mindfulness connection, try Letting Things Go: The Whiteboard and The Okay Fingers, which teach students the focus and calm that top athletes rely on to perform under pressure.
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Olympic Day is a wonderful springboard, but the themes it introduces don’t have to end on 23 June. Here are a few ways to keep the momentum going:
Revisit the values of respect, friendship and excellence when classroom conflicts arise or when you’re celebrating student achievements. The language of the Olympics gives students a shared framework for talking about these ideals.
Use major sporting events throughout the year as touchpoints. The Winter Olympics, the Paralympics and even local school sports days all offer opportunities to circle back to the activities and discussions you started on Olympic Day.
Build a classroom culture of resilience by returning to the grit and growth mindset videos when students face setbacks. Reminding them that even Olympians fail, and that bouncing back is what matters, is a message worth repeating.
Finally, keep the cross-curricular connections alive. Olympic statistics update every two years, geography shifts with each host city, and new athletes and stories emerge with every Games. With Brisbane 2032 on the horizon, there’s never been a better time to get Australian students excited about the Olympic movement, and there’s always something fresh to bring into the classroom.

briefcase iconCuration Lead
A qualified primary school teacher with over a decade of teaching experience in Australian schools. Penelope is Curation Lead at ClickView for Australia and New Zealand, supporting teachers in meeting curriculum needs by integrating video into the classroom.
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