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Showing posts with label bingo. Show all posts
Showing posts with label bingo. Show all posts
Wednesday, 20 March 2013
Writing BINGO
I am always looking for fun ways to incorporate writing games into days I teach as a TTOC (Teacher-Teaching-On-Call, Substitute) as well as fun fillers for when my own class wraps up early on a lesson, activity or project. I saw this on pintrest and wanted to share it with you all.
Wednesday, 20 February 2013
BINGO Trivia
If you have read my blog long, you will know that one thing I really enjoy is creating engaging activities out of otherwise "boring" classes.
As a Teacher-Teaching-On-Call (TTOC aka substitute) you often go into a class and are left with students in a "study block" or where they are doing a "review worksheet" Often this has students bored, restless and leads to more opportunity for classroom behaviour concerns.
Similarly, as a classroom teacher, this is another fun way to review and study.
I found this activity online and thought it would be another fun way to make a class more engaging. You can use spelling words, facts on the subject they are studying and so on.
As a Teacher-Teaching-On-Call (TTOC aka substitute) you often go into a class and are left with students in a "study block" or where they are doing a "review worksheet" Often this has students bored, restless and leads to more opportunity for classroom behaviour concerns.
Similarly, as a classroom teacher, this is another fun way to review and study.
I found this activity online and thought it would be another fun way to make a class more engaging. You can use spelling words, facts on the subject they are studying and so on.
Bingo Facts. This is a fun way to help students
learn and recall weekly spelling words, vocabulary, math facts,
geography, science facts, or any other information.
Before you start, fold a paper so that sixteen squares appear. Cut along
the fold lines and number each square; put your squares into a
container. Have students create a “bingo sheet”
by folding a piece of notebook paper in half repeatedly until sixteen
folded squares appear. Ask the students to write a small number in the
upper right-hand corner of each square—in random order. Be sure to tell
them to leave room within the square for writing an answer.
Pick
a square from your container one at a time, say the number of the
square, and ask a question (e.g., a spelling word). Students must write
the answer (e.g., the spelling word) in the square corresponding to the
number you called. Whoever has completed a horizontal, vertical, or
diagonal row—with correct answers—wins! Be sure to check for accuracy
before declaring a winner. This is an easy game to play with all age
groups (perfect for Grades 2–8).
Other games that can "engage" students when you are left with a "study block"
Tuesday, 22 May 2012
Midsummer Night's Dream - 2 fun games
I have been seeking ways to do more engaging activities during our Midsummer Night's Dream unit. I found these awesome activities and although i was reluctant to try them with my chatty, mostly male, Grade 9 English class (last block of the day also!!!) I gave it a shot and was pleased with how into it they got (ok, they prizes helped motivate them) I was also super excited to discover how much they had retained from the play thus far!
Then on a BINGO sheet have students write out these names in random order:
Francis Flute Lysander Philostrate Theseus
Helena Nick Bottom Puck Titania
My grade 9s did really well with the descriptions. The quotes were a bit harder, but they still did a good job!
[source]
A Midsummer Night’s Dream Scavenger Hunt
Part One:
Discover how your classmates’ opinions and experiences relate to the play! Walk around the room and find a student to which each statement applies and ask him/her to initial the square. Students may initial each paper only once! The first student to complete all 25 squares wins!! Share your findings with the class and discuss the situations to which you can relate and why.
___ has played a trick on somebody
Puck
|
___ has "loved" someone who didn’t return the feeling
|
___ has felt jealousy
|
___ has envied a friend’s good looks
|
___ has had parents disapprove of a relationship
|
___ has tried to run away from a problem
|
___ believes in love at first sight
|
___ has fought with a friend over a boy/girl
|
___ regrets falling in love with someone
|
___ has had funny or bizarre dreams recently
|
___ believes that looks don’t matter when in love
|
___ likes to tease or mock others
|
___ has disobeyed a parent
|
___ has been annoyed by a persistent admirer
|
___ has had a crush on the friend of a boyfriend/
girlfriend
|
___ enjoys magic shows or tricks
|
___ has gotten completely lost
|
___ is sometimes fickle about love
|
___ has told a friend’s secret
|
___ has been spoiled
|
___ enjoys plays and shows
|
___ has rudely insulted a friend
|
___ has refused a loved one’s demands
|
___ likes to play "matchmaker"
|
___ has performed on stage
|
Then on a BINGO sheet have students write out these names in random order:
Demetrius Hermia Oberon Snout
Egeus Hippolyta Peter Quince Snug
Francis Flute Lysander Philostrate Theseus
Helena Nick Bottom Puck Titania
Bingo Directions for Teachers: Use the following descriptions or quotes to test your students’ knowledge of the characters of A Midsummer Night’s Dream!
Descriptions:
1. wants to take the changeling child from the Fairy Queen (Oberon)
2. falls in love with a mortal while under the spell of a love potion (Titania)
3. the Duke of Athens (Theseus)
4. the Queen of the Amazons (Hippolyta)
5. says the "Prologue" of the play Pyramus and Thisby (Peter Quince)
6. plays the lead male role in the play Pyramus and Thisby (Nick Bottom)
7. plays the lead female role in the play Pyramus and Thisby (Francis Flute)
8. is worried about learning his lines for the play Pyramus and Thisby (Snug)
9. plays the Wall in the play Pyramus and Thisby (Snout)
10. asks the Duke to force his daughter to marry Demetrius (Egeus)
11. the man Helena loves (Demetrius)
12. the man Hermia loves (Lysander)
13. reveals her best friend’s secret to the man she loves (Helena)
14. puts a love potion in the wrong man’s eyes (Puck)
15. runs away with her lover against her father’s wishes (Hermia)
16. does not think the Duke will enjoy the play Pyramus and Thisby (Philostrate)
Quotes:
1. "The course of true love never did run smooth." (Lysander)
2. "Love looks not with the eyes, but with the mind, And therefore is winged Cupid painted blind." (Helena)
3. "Bless thee, Bottom! bless thee! thou art translated." (Peter Quince)
4. "I am that merry wanderer of the night." (Puck)
5. "The villain is much lighter-heeled than I. I followed fast, but faster did he fly." (Lysander)
6. "Yet marked I where the bolt of Cupid fell. It fell upon a little western flower, Before milk-white, now purple with love’s wound" (Oberon)
7. "I have had a dream, past the wit of man to say what dream it was. Man is but an ass, if he go about to expound this dream." (Nick Bottom)
8. "The object and the pleasure of mine eye, Is only Helena." (Demetrius)
9. "I pray thee, gentle mortal, sing again: Mine ear is much enamour’d of thy note" (Titania)
10. "Nay, faith, let not me play a woman; I have a beard coming." (Francis Flute)
11. "Lovers and madmen have such seething brains …" (Theseus)
12. "A play there is, my lord, some ten words long … But by ten words, my lord, it is too long." (Philostrate)
13. "… I present a wall: And such a wall, as I would have you think, that had in it a crannied hole or chink, Through which the lovers, Pyramus and Thisby, Did whisper often very secretly." (Snout)
14. "Four days will quickly steep themselves in night; Four nights will quickly dream away the time" (Hippolyta)
15. "Have you the lion’s part written? pray you, if it be, give it me, for I am slow of study." (Snug)
16. "You thief of love! what, have you come by night And stolen my love’s heart from him?" (Hermia)
[source]
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