5th grade example
I love this game. I LOVE THIS
GAME. Last week my school hosted about 20 admin from around the district. They
were there to take a look at the school and check on how instruction was going.
I had about 10 extra adults in my room during this activity. They tried to ask
my kids questions about what they were doing, but the kids completely ignored
them- that’s how focused they were on their task and this game. Have I
mentioned that I love this game?
My 5th and 2nd
graders have a big summative assessment in December. The test covers everything a wide variety of concepts, and with about an hour of instruction a week my kids need
a lot of review to be ready. We do all kids of review activities the second
half of November and December, but this is my favorite one by far.
2nd Grade Example
The game itself is pretty simple.
There is a piece of butcher paper with 16 bugs drawn on it, and inside the bugs
are musical terms. (You could really put whatever you want in the bug, though.
Notes, instruments, you name it!) Students sit one on each side of the paper and have some kind of swatter- fly
swatters if you have them; soft mallets work too if you don’t feel like blowing
$30 at the dollar store for fly swatters. I have a bunch of soft mallets that
came with drums, so I use those. You ask a question, students have three
seconds of think time to find the answer, and when you say, “SPLAT!” they splat
the answer on the board.
I always take a bit of time to
just play the game first, with questions I create and project on the board.
Once kids have a hang of it, we up the rigor by giving students the opportunity
to create the questions. Kids love this, by the way. The prospect of tricking
their classmates with a wicked hard question is very appealing to them. I don’t
just let them loose, though. I give them 3 questions stems to choose from. They
all require knowing the definition of the word, and range from simple plugging
in the definition to creating a word problem that includes the definition in
some form. Kids self-differentiate which question stem to use, and create 2-4
questions depending on the grade level. I did myself a big favor when I made these by making four words very clear to each person. Kids will naturally choose from those words when they create their questions. It cuts down on the arguments over who gets what word.
Here are the question templates I used with my kids.
The only con to this game is the time it takes to make it. I have four kids to each poster, so creating enough for classes of 28 can be a pain, but it is SO WORTH IT! Plus, it's a good excuse to bring work home and work while I watch Doctor Who or Gilmore Girls. The cats love this game, too!
The best part of working from home: DVR!
I hope your kids love this game as much as Noodle Cat does!