![]() Teacher chooses a text or list of words/phrases in the target language.If you want to avoid scrutiny…call it RIP BINGO instead □ PREPARATION: I learned this activity from Kristin Duncan, who re-posted it on her blog after reading a post by Andrea (surname?) on the MoreTPRS listserv in March 2013. Turn a reading into a competitive game with this twist on traditional BINGO. Or you can keep them two to a card and play two rounds without having to hand out multiple sheets.ĭon’t have time to create your own? I’ve got you covered! Click HERE to check out my Bingo! product on Teachers Pay Teachers.Get your students’ attention with the name of this quick version of BINGO! ![]() You can keep two to a card and have students play two cards each round which is similar to how Bingo is normally played and can be more engaging for the kiddos. You can cut them to have smaller individual cards. With two cards per page, you have options. For younger students, this may work out well, but my older students didn’t need anything that large, and it seemed like a bit of a waste of paper. What makes mine better than what I’ve found online? Everything I saw had one large card on each piece of paper. You can usually find them online, though I have some for sale as well. Print out a bunch of Bingo cards in advance. Even if you have only a moment’s notice you’ll need to use it. But this is something you can prep way in advance so you have it ready in a pinch. Nothing is completely prep-free and Bingo is no exception. I implore you to spare yourself the misery and use cards only once. If you use something students can place on their cards to mark them (slips of paper, pennies, whatever) they will throw them, sneeze them off their card, or dump a giant box of them on the floor by accident when you’re not even playing the game. Just have students use markers, highlighters, or pencils to mark their cards. For example, if the term is “simile,” the index card will say “comparison using like or as.” When the card is picked students must know that’s a simile and then they mark their cards.ĭo not try to reuse cards.
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