Showing posts with label board game. Show all posts
Showing posts with label board game. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 2, 2024

Mini-Unit on Statistics and Probability

My oldest student this week is doing little mini-unit on Statistics and Probability, with a few EGG-related activities tossed in there for Easter. We began by reviewing Mean, Median, Mode, and Range and then moved on to Probability. Here are the activities from TpT I'm using. They are all FREE!


Monday
- Easter Egg Averages (TpT)

Mean, median, mode, and range for 5 eggs drawn from a basket. Students can make it easier or harder by creating the numbers to go inside the eggs.


Tuesday
- Describing Probability Outcomes Task Cards (TpT)

- Probability Activities 1, 2, and 3 from this past blog post

Instead of socks, we used a basket of glass gems (2 blue, 4 red, 6 white).


Wednesday
- Probability Review Game (TpT)

We will just do this as a regular PPT. I plan to play slides 6 through 21.


Thursday
- Egg Russian Roulette on our bare feet!

8 hard cooked eggs. 4 raw eggs.

This was a huge hit.

It's also a good use for an old shower curtain that you plan on throwing away anyway! We stopped and calculated the probability of choosing a raw egg each time. Thank you to my friend Megan for the donation of the eggs!


Zac's bedtime read aloud story for April is Charlie and the Chocolate Factory by Roald Dahl. We are just up to the part where Charlie is hoping to find a golden ticket. Veruca Salt's father made sure she'd get a ticket by buying and opening up hundreds of thousands of chocolate bars. Charlie gets only one for his birthday each year. Talk about a perfect tie-in with probability!

Some good board game choices if you're interested in more with probability are Yahtzee, Backgammon (see Fun with Board Games), and Monopoly! Illinois Avenue is the most common spot to land on (and here's why).


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Monday, March 11, 2024

Fun with Board Games

Today is the first day of my Spring Break and I'm using it to sort through all the board games we haven't played yet this year. I'm making three piles: give away for sure, keep for sure, and test.

Overall, I'm looking to see which ones go in the Board Game closet, which are antique or sentimental or I want to just be for me and Zac, which ones I want to give away, and which games I should take apart but keep the pieces. I have a big stash of extra board games pieces for when we do "Invent Your Own Board Game," which we usually do once a year.

I will also often keep the pieces but change the rules of a board game to make it work better for a classroom setting. Some games are just duds and they don't make them anymore. That's the case with FitzIt by Gamewright (it's also the case sometimes that GREAT games go out of print, and we have some good ones here which can no longer be found).

I really like the pieces to FitzIt. I just didn't like the game play. So here's how we changed it to be The Noun Game. I would use this when we are learning about concrete vs. abstract nouns.

Decide in advance how many rounds you would like to play. Children will take turns being the person who chooses the noun. One noun per round.

To start the round every player is dealt three facedown mystery cards from the deck. It's important that you don't know what they say.

Then the person states a concrete noun. In this example, I said "T. rex."

Each child in the circle (including the person who chooses the noun for that round) turns over and reads aloud the three mystery cards in front of them. If the card describes a T. rex, it is a keeper. If not, set that card aside. The reading aloud is often very funny, as the descriptive cards may be a perfect fit or may have nothing at all to do with the noun in question.

T. rex

In this example, my cards said

    Usually unwanted - yes

    Existed over 100 years ago - yes

    Made with wood - no


So I have two "keepers" that match the noun. Zac then turned over and read his cards. One of his cards said "has wings" which gave us a good laugh. Another said "would explode in a microwave." That was hilarious!

All the cards that match the noun for that round go in the center of the circle. Whoever had the most "keepers" that round wins them all!

(As with other games of this type, if there's a tie those cards would remain in the center of the circle and the person who wins the next round would get the whole kitty.)

The cards you win at the end of the round stay by you, because you'll get a point for each, and the cards that weren't a fit can go back in the box. Pass out three facedown cards to each person and the next noun is announced. At the end of all the rounds, the person with the most cards wins!

This is a just-for-fun game, with the emphasis being on learning what a concrete noun is and practicing reading aloud. There's no strategy involved whatsoever. It's silly and we loved it!


UPDATE:
I played this game with the Bongos when we came back from the break. And it was a hit. Here are some of the things I noticed:

- It works better for the person who chose the noun to not draw cards that round and instead act as the Judge if there are any disputes. For example, is a tree "fluid?" Do you count the sap?

- We did five facedown cards per person so that we didn't have tied rounds as often.

- Have each person flip their stack only when it's their turn to read them aloud. Otherwise children will be reading their own cards and not listening to others and they'll miss the jokes.

- Put your cards that are keepers face up, and the cards that aren't a fit face down, as you sort through them. This makes it easy to keep track.

- This game actually teaches a lot about adverbs too! "Often," "usually," "mostly," "not," etc. These words change the meaning of the phrase and require children to think carefully.

- Lots of giggles! They were in fits for "is considered romantic" for Broccoli! This would be a good icebreaker game for a group that doesn't know each other well yet.



Sometimes we have board games without the original rules. Here are some rules I've been looking up lately:

Nim (PDF)

Towers of Hanoi (PDF)

"Lucky Catch" by Gamewright

"Fairy Queen" by eeBoo

Twixt by 3M

Quartett: Tree, Flower, Fruit, Seed by Senta Stein

Monopoly (PDF)
note that you can buy a Speed Die separately at Amazon or eBay

how to play Backgammon (video)

how to play Backgammon (PDF)
includes a very interesting probability table

Tuesday, January 2, 2024

Educational Game: Gnoming A Round

If your child comes home and tells you that they're learning about negative numbers, that means that they are now playing Gnoming A Round!

This fun card game is great as a simple introduction to the concept of having less than zero. Jamie York suggests explaining this to children using the example of a bank account balance being overdrawn... as opposed to a number line, which is too abstract. With Gnoming A Round the lowest score wins (it's based on golf), so the subtraction cards are the best ones to get.



To keep scoring easy for the children to understand, we score this using the Mortensen materials. Based on the Montessori method, the Mortensen materials are plastic color-coded rectangular pieces that are hollow inside. When flipped upside down, they represent negative numbers.

To score the game, you tally up all of your positive cards by making a row of pieces that represent your positive points. You then tally up all of your negative cards by making a row of pieces that repesent your negative points. Each piece goes with a card (or set of cards, if you got a row of 3). Put the positive row and the negative row beside one another. Whatever sticks out at the end is your score. Why? Because the positive points and the negative points that match up perfectly have cancelled one another out.

This math manipulative is the perfect concrete way to do the scoring. Having it is extremely helpful. And the children love this game!


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Thursday, May 25, 2023

Missing Board Game Rules

Organizing all the board and card games at Summer Camp... and printing out new instructions for those which are missing them. I'd love to create a master list of PDFs, so if you know of one please share it!

Backgammon (print at 125%)
https://www.pressmantoy.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Backgammon_rules.pdf


Blink
https://service.mattel.com/instruction_sheets/N1388-0920.pdf


Checkers
https://www.pressmantoy.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/01/Checkers_rules.pdf


Marbles
https://www.mercermuseum.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Rules-for-Marbles-Copy.pdf


Pictionary Junior (print at 125%)
http://www.transformertoys.co.uk/images/instruction-scans/hasbro/Pictionary_Jr_1999.pdf


Qwirkle
http://upload.snakesandlattes.com/rules/q/Qwirkle.pdf


Snail's Pace Race (print at 145%)
https://www.ravensburger.us/spielanleitungen/ecm/Spielanleitungen/Snail%27s%20Pace%20Race%20complete.pdf


Uno
https://www.unorules.org/wp-content/uploads/2021/03/Uno-Rules-PDF-Official-Rules-unorules.org_.pdf


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Wednesday, May 3, 2023

Poetry for Neandertals

This is a really fun game, but it doesn't go with Early Humans, as you may expect. It actually is a Language Arts game and goes with counting syllables. We love the concept of this game, but changed the gameplay to make it work more easily in a classroom setting.


The Poetry for Neandertals game has rules that involve a timer, teams, and a complicated scoreboard, but we like to play it in the following way:


Setup
You will need:
the box of cards (draw from the back, put used cards in the front)
the inflatable NO! stick
some glass gems or other counters

All of the children who are playing should sit in a circle on the floor.

The counters are placed where everyone can reach them.

The oldest person is the first Clue Giver. This person will have the box of cards in front of them. The person at their right hand gets the NO! stick. Everyone else is a Word Guesser and tries to figure out the mystery word.

Gameplay
The Clue Giver takes the card from the back of the box, reads it, and then tries to get the Word Guessers to guess the word on the card, giving verbal clues ONLY and using only words of 1 syllable. If they accidentally say a word with more than 1 syllable, they get bopped (gently!) with the NO! stick.

Scoring
If Clue Giver gets bopped, they do not get a gem. The card box and the NO! stick will both pass to the left (the person to the Clue Giver's left is the new Clue Giver, and the old Clue Giver gets the NO! stick).

If the Clue Giver is successful, and one of the Word Guessers is able to guess the word, the Clue Giver gets a gem. Play then passes to the left.

The card box and the NO! stick continue to circulate around the circle. Whoever doesn't have the box or the stick is a Word Guesser. The children can choose how many gems are needed to win; we like to play to 7 points.


We really like this game, and I'm glad that I got the Expansion Pack as well.


Expansion Pack


It is technically named "Poetry for Neanderthals" but I have taught my students that the correct term is now Neandertal, so that's what we call it.

BONUS: We took the timer out of the game and I gave it to Zac for his tooth brushing timer. It works perfectly for that! It's a two minute sand timer AND one end has a frown and one end has a smile. Start with the frown on view, then flip and brush your teeth. When you're done, the smile will be showing!


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!

Tuesday, March 21, 2023

Games for 1 Player

A list I'm working on for my school...

Sometimes children have little bits of time during their school day, and they get the choice of SSR or Handwork. We do have a Board Games closet for when small groups of children are all looking for something at the same time (or, of course, Board Game Tuesdays).

Every once in a while when I'm giving a lesson on a new board game, I notice that on the side it says that it can be played by one player. Now I'd like to create a list of these! If anyone knows of one, please share.


Turn Over by Nienhuis Montessori


Puzzellations: Beetles, Moths & Bumblebees by Tessellations


Frog Wobble by Mindware



Classic Jacks

(how to play jacks video)



Dr. Eureka by Blue Orange Games



ColorKu by Mad Cave Bird Games



Pattern Play by Mindware



Varialand by Selecta



Time Telling Game by eeBoo


For children in Grades 3 and up, who can read independently and know their parts of speech, Mad Libs!


This post contains affiliate links to materials I truly use for homeschooling. Qualifying purchases provide me with revenue. Thank you for your support!