Lecture 5% Reading 10% Audio-Visual 20% Demonstration 30% Discussion 50% Immediate Use / Application 90%

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TEACHING WITH GAMES Lori Verstegen Games can be an extremely effective way to teach and review concepts in all subject areas. But why is this so? What makes a game such a powerful tool in the classroom? 1. GAMES ARE FUN = MOTIVATION Students (and teachers) are more likely to be motivated to spend time doing the things they enjoy. In any type of school, motivation is a prime concern. How many kids, after reading a chapter in a textbook or finishing a worksheet, beg to do it again? Not many. However, because games are fun, kids will often want to play them over and over again. And the more time they spend with the information you want them to learn, the more likely they will be to learn it well. 2. GAMES INCREASE LEARNING RETENTION While playing games, students must not only recall the information taught them, but they must be able to discuss and use the information as well. This means that they must understand it more fully, and they will retain it for a longer period of time. A learning retention chart published by The National Training Laboratories in Bethel, Maine, shows that the average person retains very little of what he learns by lecture or by reading, but that retention is greatly enhanced when the information must be discussed or used immediately after learning it. Games require students to do both. LEARNING MODE AVERAGE RETENTION Lecture 5% Reading 10% Audio-Visual 20% Demonstration 30% Discussion 50% Immediate Use / Application 90% 3. GAMES HELP DEVELOP CRITICAL THINKING SKILLS In addition to requiring students to discuss and use the information you have taught them, many games also require a bit of strategy to win. All together, these help develop a child s critical thinking skills a higher level of thought than rote memorization and an important goal in the education of a young mind.

GAMES FOR CLASSROOMS OR HOMESCHOOLS The games we will be playing come from Teaching with Games. They work well in an educational setting because they are simple to make, quick to play, and easily adaptable to any subject material, grade level, and number of players. We will play at least one game from each of five categories: I. No-Prep Games II. Matching Card Games III. Question Games IV. Math Facts Games V. Make As You Teach Games Note: Samples of games are provided, but you can adapt each to any subject matter. Do not simply rely on the sample games venture out and make your own. While there is one sample game from each section provided, many more are listed. This is because we can play any of them that interest you. We do not have to stick to the ones I chose for samples. IMPORTANT When using any game, the best learning will occur if you, the teacher, use the game time as a teaching opportunity. Use game questions as springboards to engage students in further discussion of the information. Don t let students be in so much of a hurry to win the game that they do not pay attention to what you are trying to teach or review.

I. NO-PREP GAMES The games in this group are very versatile and can be played at the spur of the moment. They are great time fillers when a lesson is finished a little early as well as a fun way to introduce a new concept or review an old one at the beginning of class. These are the games in this section: No-Noose Hangman Wheel of Fortune Pictionary Academic 20 Questions NO-NOOSE HANGMAN Need: *a whiteboard and marker (paper and pencil work for a small group) This game is played much like the traditional Hangman, but uses phrases instead of words. To play, think of anything you would like your students to remember from previous lessons or that you would like to introduce in a new lesson. Put the information in a short phrase. Try to also think of a follow-up bonus question that would elaborate on the information in the phrase. For example, if you wanted your students to remember that the topic sentence and the clincher of a paragraph should repeat or reflect 2-3 key words, your phrase might simply be TOPIC CLINCHER RULE. Once the puzzle is solved, the follow up question could then be, What is the Topic-Clincher Rule? On the whiteboard, draw a blank for each letter in the phrase you have selected. For the above phrase, the whiteboard would look like this: Students take turns guessing letters, one letter per turn. If the letter is in the phrase, fill it in on the correct blank. If not, write the letter below the blanks so no one else guesses it. Any time a student knows the entire puzzle, he may shout it out. It does not have to be his turn to guess. If he is correct, he gets five points and can earn an extra three if he can answer the bonus question. Repeat with a new puzzle.

II. MATCHING CARD GAMES Games in this section require cards to be made or purchased. Blank 3x5 note cards work well. In addition, almost any type of flashcard will work if you do not want to make your own (purchase from teacher supply stores). Pictures are not necessary, but they are nice. An easy way to include pictures is to copy them from the textbook upon which you are basing your game or search the internet. These are the games in this section: Elimination Lightning Hot Potato Round Robin Recall Find the Card Avoid the Card Human Body Systems Capture FIND THE CARD This is a variation of the classic Memory game. It may be played with two different types of matching cards identical matches or question-answer matches. The Ancient Egypt game below is a Question-Answer match. You will also need a die or spinner. TO PLAY: 1. Divide the cards into two stacks (one of each identical match in each pile OR questions in one stack, short answers in the other). 2. Mix up the answer cards and spread them out face down on a table or in a pocket chart. Optional: Lay the cards face up and let the students study them for 10 seconds before turning them face down. 3. Keep the question cards in a pile. Roll a die to determine the point value of the first match, then turn up the first question card only. Read the question. 4. Teams (or individuals) now take turns trying to find the matching card. To help reinforce concepts, when an incorrect answer is tuned up, state the corresponding question. 5. The first team that finds the match receives the points. NOTE: Do not remove the card from the table or pocket chart. All answer cards remain out for the entire game. 6. Repeat with the next card on the draw pile. Don t forget to roll the die for the point value. The longer the game goes, the faster matches are found as students have seen several of the cards and will remember where they are. TO ADD SOME FUN: When a six is rolled, mix up the answer cards.

ANCIENT EGYPT FIND THE CARD (Sample Cards) Make more of your own to match your studies. Pictures are not necessary, but they should be easy to copy from a text book or from the internet.

AVOID THE CARD This game is good when you want to remind your students of many facts and also impress upon them that one (or two) things don t belong with those facts. The things that don t belong should have a negative connotation. Here are some ideas: History: Bible: Science: Things in a medieval town and a dragon Revolutionary War heroes with Benedict Arnold World War II events and the atomic bomb All the blessings we have in Christ with Sin & Death Clean sources of energy with a coal burning factory Geography: Pictures of famous beautiful landmarks and Death Valley TO PLAY Spread out the cards face down on a table (or in a pocket chart). The sample cards that follow are for Ancient Rome Avoid the Card. Students (or teams) take turns turning over a card. Tell students they must try to collect as many as possible before Mt. Vesuvius blows up and destroys Pompeii. The student (or team) who picks Mt. Vesuvius looses. Variation: Let each team continue to pick cards until the hit Mt. Vesuvius. Count their cards. Shuffle and let the next team to the same. The team with the most cards wins.

III. QUESTION GAMES Games in this section are games in which you can ask any question; hence, they are very adaptable to any subject. They include the following: Question Bag Game (quick & easy) Planet Tic-Tac-Toe Simplified Revolutionary War Jeopardy SIMPLIFIED JEOPARDY Need: * Set of question cards organized into at least three different categories, each with three different levels of difficulty. Samples on the next pages are for REVOLUTIONARY WAR JEOPARDY, but you can make your own for any subject. Add a few Double Points questions and Lose Your Turn cards. * Three dice TO PLAY: 1. Lay all cards face down on a table or in the pocket chart. Organize them into columns for the categories and rows for the level of difficulty. If you have more than one card for the same level of difficulty under a category, stack them. Label each category at the top of the corresponding column. 2. Students (or teams) take turns choosing a category and level of difficulty. If the easy level is chosen, the team rolls only one die to determine the question s point value. For medium two dice are rolled, and for hard, three. You, the teacher, take the question and read it to the team (answers are on the bottom). Choose a different spokesperson for the team for each question. Others may help him, but he must be the one to give the answer. 3. If a team answers the question correctly, give them the appropriate number of points and remove the card. If they answer incorrectly, do not subtract points. Place it in a separate spot. Other teams now have the option of answering that question as a DOUBLE POINTS QUESTION. These questions, along with those labeled DOUBLE POINTS, are worth twice the number of points rolled. Unlike other questions, if they are answered incorrectly, points are subtracted. 4. Be sure each team has an equal number of turns. The team with the most points at the end wins. VARIATIONS FOR HOME SCHOOLS: If you have only one child, let him play to try to reach a certain number of points. When the goal is reached, he can have a play break. If you have students at different levels or studying different subjects, make separate sets of cards for each. Each child would choose from his own board.

REVOLUTIONARY WAR JEOPARDY Glue the category titles to 3 x 5 note cards. Copy question cards onto cover stock and cut them out. Stack all of the same difficulty level together under each category. PEOPLE Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? Who is infamous for being a traitor to the Americans? Which American general was Commander-in Chief of the American army? Thomas Jefferson Benedict Arnold George Washington Who said, I only regret that I have but one life to lose for my country? Who said, Give me liberty or give me death? Who is supposed to have said, I have not yet begun to fight? Nathan Hale Patrick Henry John Paul Jones Who was the British general who surrendered to Washington to end the war? Who is called The Father of the American Revolution? ***DOUBLE*** Who is known as The Father of the Constitution? ***DOUBLE*** Cornwallis Samuel Adams James Madison

PLACES Where did Benjamin Franklin go to get help for America? Where did George Washington and his men camp during the bitter cold winter of 1777? ***DOUBLE*** Where did Americans store their ammunition prior to the war breaking out? ***DOUBLE*** France Valley Forge Concord Where was the Declaration of Independence signed? Where was the first shot of the war fired? Where were lanterns hung to warn the minutemen whether the British would come by land or sea? Independence Hall, Philadelphia Lexington The Old North Church Where did Cornwallis surrender to Washington? LOSE A TURN Where was the last capital of the United States before Washington D.C.? Yorktown Philadelphia

EVENTS What caused the Boston Tea Party? What was the Boston Massacre? What is July 4, 1776, known for? Unfair taxes British soldiers fired into a mob of colonists angry over taxes and killed five of them Signing of Declaration of Independence Did Americans or British fire the first shot of the war that is known as the shot heard round the world? LOSE A TURN What event is Molly Pitcher most famous for? No one knows Taking her husband s place at the cannon Which battle is known as the turning point of the war? What was the first major battle of the Revolutionary War? What did the Continental Congress do after the war to ensure that the new country would have a fair government? Saratoga Bunker Hill Wrote the Constitution

IV. MATH FACTS GAMES The games in this section are designed to give students plenty of practice with basic addition, subtraction, multiplication, and/or division. For a change in your school routine, try using one of them in place of a worksheet or speed drill. These are the games is this section: Sum Fun (Addition & Subtraction) Fun Times (Multiplication) Number Line Tug of War (Adding & Subtracting, including negative numbers) FUN TIMES This game is for 2-4 players. If you have a large class, divide them into 3 teams. Need: Two dice, modified a little. Using a permanent marker, on one of the dice, change the 1 to a 7. On the other, change 1-4 to 7 10. You do not need to make dots, just write the numbers. Use white-out to cover up the original dots. You should be left with two dice one that has numbers 2-7 and the other that has numbers 5-10. Each player (team) will need his own unique playing pieces (small buttons, coins, glass beads, dried beans). In a class, I make a large game board on poster board and I use different colors of small sticky notes for playing pieces. TO PLAY: 1. Players take turns rolling the dice and multiplying the numbers rolled. The player may then cover the product on the game board with one of his playing pieces; however, only one playing piece may occupy the same square at the same time. If the desired square is already occupied, players must follow these rules: *The gray squares are safe squares. This means that the piece that is currently occupying it may not be removed, so the square is off limits to any new pieces. *The white squares are unsafe squares. This means that the piece that is currently occupying it may be removed by another player who rolls the appropriate product. The new player may then take over the square. * If a player rolls a DOUBLE 5, 6, or 7, he first covers the product of those numbers according to the rules above. Then, he may cover any additional square he chooses. If another player s piece is on that square, he may remove it, even on a gray. 2. If a player is unable to cover the product he rolls, he must forfeit that turn. 3. The first player to cover four spaces in a row wins.

FUN TIMES 5 6 7 8 9 10 10 12 14 16 18 20 15 18 21 24 27 30 20 24 28 32 36 40 25 30 35 40 45 50 30 36 42 48 54 60 35 42 49 56 63 70 DOUBLE 5, 6, or 7 is WILD. After covering the product rolled, choose and cover any additional space.

V. MAKE AS YOU TEACH GAMES Rock Lotto Geometry Bingo Board Games (eg: Space Game, Ancient Artifact Dig, and Last Days of Christ) CONTINENT COVER-UP This game is a great way to teach world geography. You can buy continent maps with all the details already on them, or you can have students make their own using blank maps. Have students add any details you want them to know about each continent. These details should be written on cards. Some sample cards for North America are on the following page. The maps become the game boards after students have added the details on the cards. You do not have to finish all of the continents before you play. Play after you finish the first two. Then play again every time you finish a new map. TO PLAY: Give each player (or team) one continent map and at least five of any type of token (chips, buttons, coins, glass stones, beans ). Cut out, shuffle, and stack the game cards. Pick one card at a time and read the clue. The student (or team) with the map that has the landmark noted on the card covers that landmark with a token. Continue with the next card. Play until one team has covered five (or however many you decide) landmarks. That team is the winner.

North America The Great Lakes (H- O- M- E- S) Washington, D.C. (the capital of the United States) Canada Mexico Largest mountain range in North America (the Rockies) The Mississippi River The largest state in the United States (Alaska) Florida The Redwood Forest The Gulf of Mexico