Ten Games For Classroom Fun: Password
Ten Games For Classroom Fun: Password
Ten Games For Classroom Fun: Password
Do you need ideas for occupying students during the last ten minutes
of a busy day? Perhaps you want to reward kids at the end of a
particularly productive day. These ten games are great for end-of-the-
day fun. You can link many of them to classroom curricula too!
It's a rainy day, everyone has to stay indoors, and the kids are driving you
nuts. Maybe you just want to give a well-deserved break to students who
have really been trying hard in class. What do you do? Play a game!
The kids probably like the games you usually play, but a little variety can't
hurt them! Why not try Password or Sparkle or Pass the Chicken? Simple
rules for those games and seven others can be found below!
PASSWORD
Tip: Choose words appropriate for your students' abilities. Words for which
they might know multiple synonyms or meanings are best! You might use a
thesaurus to create a list of possible words before playing the game. Write
those words in large letters on cards so students can use them as the game
is played. Save the cards from year to year.
SPARKLE
This game serves as good practice for the week's (or previous weeks')
spelling words. Arrange students in a line. The game leader calls out the first
word. The first person in line calls out the first letter in that word. The second
person calls out the second letter. The third person calls out the third letter
and so on. The person who says the last letter in the word must turn to the
next person in the sequence and say sparkle. The person who is "sparkled"
must return to his or her seat. If a word is misspelled, the person to say the
first wrong letter must sit down and the spelling of that word continues. After
a student is sparkled, the leader calls out a new word. The game continues
until only one student remains standing.
SILENCE
Options: Students can create their own tags. They might write their birthdays
on tags and arrange themselves in order from January 1 to December 31.
They might write their seven-digit phone numbers as a seven-digit number
and arrange themselves in numerical sequence.
Other categories: The possibilities are endless, but students might include
U.S. presidents (arrange in order of the presidencies), fractions (arrange in
order of size), clocks (arrange printed a.m. and p.m. clock faces in order of
the time shown), or largest U.S. city populations (arrange tags with the
largest cities and their populations from largest to smallest).
This game requires a little preparation -- but it's worth it! To prepare, laminate
five pictures. Calendar pictures are great for this activity! You might laminate
pictures relating to a teaching theme and then cut each picture into four to six
puzzle pieces. (Note: You want to end up with one puzzle piece for each
student in your class, so you might create a variety of four-piece, five-piece,
and six-piece puzzles.) Hand a puzzle piece to each student. Let students
wander around the classroom to find their "puzzle mates"!
Tip: This activity might be fun for the first teacher meeting of the year too!
Every teacher could contribute a five-piece puzzle to a collection of puzzles
that travels the school!
WHOZIT? WHATZIT?
These quick little puzzles can be great fun. When you have five minutes to
fill, write a couple of the puzzles on the chalkboard and let students try to
figure them out. Each puzzle contains several familiar words. When carefully
read and sounded out, the words reveal the name of a well-known person,
place, thing, or phrase. As students figure out the hidden names, they write
their responses on a sheet of scrap paper. The teacher can wander the room
checking their guesses. Have a prize ready for the first person to guess both
of the day's puzzles.
Follow-up fun: After completing the puzzles below, students might like the
challenge of creating Whozit? Whatzit? puzzles of their own.
Sample Puzzles
FOUR CORNERS
Four Corners is popular with teachers and students. Number the corners of
the classroom from 1 to 4. Select one student to be "It." That person closes
his or her eyes while the rest of the students go to one of the four corners in
the classroom. When all students are settled in a corner, It calls out a
number. All the kids who chose the corner with that number are out of the
game and must sit down. It closes his or her eyes again, calls out a number,
and more students sit down. When the game gets down to four people or
fewer, each must choose a different corner. If It calls out a corner where
nobody is standing, It must choose again. The game continues until only one
student is left. That student becomes It.
DICTIONARY DECEPTION
This game is based on a popular box game. To start the game, the teacher
chooses a word for which no student will know the meaning. The teacher
writes the word on the chalkboard and writes the definition of the word on a
sheet of paper from a small pad. Then the teacher hands a sheet from the
same pad to each student. The student must write on that sheet his or her
name and a definition of the word. The teacher collects all the definitions.
One by one, the teacher reads the definitions. Students consider each
definition. Then, as the teacher rereads them, the students vote for the
definition that they believe is the real meaning of the word. Students earn a
point if they guess the definition correctly; they also earn a point each time
another student selects their (fake) definition as the true meaning of the
word. The person with the most points at the end of the game wins.
CHAIN REACTION
You can easily adapt this game to many areas of the curriculum. The teacher
writes a category on the chalkboard -- foods, for example. Each student
writes the letters A to Z on a sheet of paper. The students have five minutes
to create an alphabetical list of as many foods as they can think of. Then the
game begins. The first student must tell the name of a food. The second
person must give the name of a food that begins with the last letter of the
food given by the first person. The third person must name a food that begins
with the last letter of the second person's food and so on. One at a time,
students are eliminated.
Other possible categories: cities; songs; things in nature (for older students,
animal names or plant names); people's first names (for older students,
famous people's last names or, more specifically, authors' names).
This game is another old favorite! Choose seven students to be It. Those
students go to the front of the room. The other students put their heads on
their desks so they can't see. The seven Its wander the room. Each taps one
of the seated students on the head. As a student is tapped, he or she raises
a hand. When all seven Its return to the front of the room, they say in unison,
"Seven up, stand up!" Each student who was tapped has an opportunity to
guess which student tapped him or her. If a student guesses correctly, he or
she replaces the person who did the tapping. The game begins again when
all have had a chance to guess.
In this game, nobody wants to hold the rubber chicken -- the game's only
prop! To begin the game, all students sit in a circle. Select one person to be
It. That person holds the rubber chicken. The teacher or a "caller" says to the
person holding the chicken, "Name five presidents of the United States. Pass
the chicken!" As soon as the caller says, "Pass the chicken," the person
holding the chicken passes it to the right. Students quickly pass the chicken
around the circle. If it returns to the original holder before he or she can
name five presidents of the United States, the holder is still It. Otherwise, the
person holding the chicken when It finishes listing five presidents is the new
It. You should prepare the topic cards for this game in advance. Topics can
relate to your curriculum or be general information topics. The student who is
It must name five items in the called-out category in order to get rid of the
dreaded chicken!
fast-food restaurants
authors of children's books
countries in South America
sports teams
things that grow in the desert
vegetables
cartoon characters
musical groups
cereals
rivers in the United States
candy bars made with chocolate
large bodies of water
animals found in salt marshes
cities in [your state]
cities in Florida
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