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Jeopardy--organization
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I_Am_Wrong



Joined: 14 Sep 2004
Location: whatever

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:07 pm    Post subject: Jeopardy--organization Reply with quote

The students have mid-terms coming up so next week I'm gonna take it pretty easy on them. I'm thinking that, for part of my lesson, we will play a jeopardy style quiz game. I even found a model on the internet with sounds and animation that allows me to input my own questions. I'm having a problem trying to figure out a way to organize the classes so that all the students have a chance. Anyone got any good ideas? This is public school so we're talking between 36-42 students per class.
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:30 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Not that I am against incorporating as many students as possible into most activities and exercises, but isn't that against the nature of Jeopardy? Won't it ruin the fun if you try to give everybody a shot when the game is basically competitive in nature?

I foresee a bunch of frustrated and bored more fluent kids getting pissed that they can't answer and a bunch of weaker kids freezing up on the spot as they are shy with their English anyway and that d1ck Jae-Hwan is threatening them with schoolyard consequences if they can't figure out that Neil Armstrong was the first man on the moon fast.

I play Jeopoardy or variations more than anything else, but use it as a time for the stronger kids to let go and the weaker kids to step back. However, I always make a point to ask for translations of difficult words, model new phrases and vocabulary and get a weaker kid to use them somehow before moving on to the next question.

Happy teaching...
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:31 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Dear Lord, this is the second time today...

Please delete.


Last edited by flotsam on Thu Apr 20, 2006 9:54 pm; edited 2 times in total
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Yu_Bum_suk



Joined: 25 Dec 2004

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:37 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

I prefer to use a very simple version of Jeopardy where I just have six categories of questions worth 100-500 points based on difficulty. Then I divide the class into three teams and they just take turns - this prevents an out-of-control free-for-all. Instead of deducting points for a wrong answer I sometimes let a team choose the next team's question if they get theirs right, and have one category like 'I love grammar'.

To answer I try to get make the team to respond in a sentence. 'What is the tallest animal?' ... 'the giraffe is the tallest animal ... now everyone together, the giraffe _____________________'. If you're doing this in a class that has a co-teacher you may have trouble getting him / her to stfu and let the students try to answer the questions themselves. I don't know how some of these morons think that interupting students giving a wrong answer but speaking English is going to help them improve their English speaking abilities.
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ilovebdt



Joined: 03 Jun 2005
Location: Nr Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:43 pm    Post subject: Re: Jeopardy--organization Reply with quote

I_Am_Wrong wrote:
The students have mid-terms coming up so next week I'm gonna take it pretty easy on them. I'm thinking that, for part of my lesson, we will play a jeopardy style quiz game. I even found a model on the internet with sounds and animation that allows me to input my own questions. I'm having a problem trying to figure out a way to organize the classes so that all the students have a chance. Anyone got any good ideas? This is public school so we're talking between 36-42 students per class.


In my classroom, I have anything between 35 and 41 students. The students all sit in groups of six round a table, so for Jeopardy they stayed in their allocated groups.

The way I played it was that I asked a question. The group which put their hand up the fastest got 1 minute to answer the question. My coteacher helped decide which team put their hand up the fastest.

Then if they answer the question correctly, they get another and then there is a question for everyone again.

Ilovebdt
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crazylemongirl



Joined: 23 Mar 2003
Location: almost there...

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 7:47 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

Here's what I do...

I leave the kids in their rows and the rows are the team. Each student gets a turn to answer on behalf of their team and only they can answer. However anyone on the team can help them.

That way everyone gets a turn. The bright kids have a reason to help out the slower ones. I've had kids feeding the answer to another student, but that's ok as long as they are using english I don't care.

Also if things are getting lopsided I insert my own 'daily doubles' and give a team who is really behind an easy question to answer... or a team that is too far ahead a really hard question to answer.

Also you don't need anything whiz bang. I just laminate some sheets with the categories which I stick up with magnets on the board. I then draw up a grid on the board. I then have my own call sheet.

I also have a 'random' catergory. Where i put things in like 'sing a song in english' ... 'count backwards from 20.' ... make me a dance... How old is CLG teacher? (answer: it's a secret) they love that one because one team always tries to guess when everyone knows it's a secret... tell me five yellow/orange/pink things... tell me two homophone sets... when is CLG teacher's birhday (always a candy queston). These are heaps of fun.
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 9:53 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

crazylemongirl wrote:
Here's what I do...

Also you don't need anything whiz bang. I just laminate some sheets with the categories which I stick up with magnets on the board. I then draw up a grid on the board. I then have my own call sheet.

I also have a 'random' catergory. Where i put things in like 'sing a song in english' ... 'count backwards from 20.' ... make me a dance... How old is CLG teacher? (answer: it's a secret) they love that one because one team always tries to guess when everyone knows it's a secret... tell me five yellow/orange/pink things... tell me two homophone sets... when is CLG teacher's birhday (always a candy queston). These are heaps of fun.


Yeah, I find the students don't even respond to the pyrotechnics, so I just draw the grid on the board as well. If a student can't sit still they become the eraser/scorekeeper; if another students acts up I split the duties. It's amazing how many tasks one can come up with to keep kids occupied: one kids holds the eraser and hands it to the official eraser while each team can end up with their own scorekeeper...

What CLG said about a random or more accessible category I recommend also. My most successful category which I mentioned in "The Best Game Ever Thread" is Dare, where the kids get points for standing on their heads, hugging a member of the opposite sex, etc. After I use that category a couple of times, they love seeing it pop up on the board and try to anticipate how I will make the dares more daunting and ridiculous than the last time.
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jacl



Joined: 31 Oct 2005

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 10:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

flotsam wrote:
crazylemongirl wrote:
Here's what I do...

Also you don't need anything whiz bang. I just laminate some sheets with the categories which I stick up with magnets on the board. I then draw up a grid on the board. I then have my own call sheet.

I also have a 'random' catergory. Where i put things in like 'sing a song in english' ... 'count backwards from 20.' ... make me a dance... How old is CLG teacher? (answer: it's a secret) they love that one because one team always tries to guess when everyone knows it's a secret... tell me five yellow/orange/pink things... tell me two homophone sets... when is CLG teacher's birhday (always a candy queston). These are heaps of fun.


Yeah, I find the students don't even respond to the pyrotechnics, so I just draw the grid on the board as well. If a student can't sit still they become the eraser/scorekeeper; if another students acts up I split the duties. It's amazing how many tasks one can come up with to keep kids occupied: one kids holds the eraser and hands it to the official eraser while each team can end up with their own scorekeeper...

What CLG said about a random or more accessible category I recommend also. My most successful category which I mentioned in "The Best Game Ever Thread" is Dare, where the kids get points for standing on their heads, hugging a member of the opposite sex, etc. After I use that category a couple of times, they love seeing it pop up on the board and try to anticipate how I will make the dares more daunting and ridiculous than the last time.


What "pyrotechnics" did you try? Do you have a computer in your classroom?
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jacl



Joined: 31 Oct 2005

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 10:17 pm    Post subject: Re: Jeopardy--organization Reply with quote

I_Am_Wrong wrote:
The students have mid-terms coming up so next week I'm gonna take it pretty easy on them. I'm thinking that, for part of my lesson, we will play a jeopardy style quiz game. I even found a model on the internet with sounds and animation that allows me to input my own questions. I'm having a problem trying to figure out a way to organize the classes so that all the students have a chance. Anyone got any good ideas? This is public school so we're talking between 36-42 students per class.


Where did you find this model? I'd like to check that one out.
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 11:35 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote

jacl wrote:
flotsam wrote:
crazylemongirl wrote:
Here's what I do...

Also you don't need anything whiz bang. I just laminate some sheets with the categories which I stick up with magnets on the board. I then draw up a grid on the board. I then have my own call sheet.

I also have a 'random' catergory. Where i put things in like 'sing a song in english' ... 'count backwards from 20.' ... make me a dance... How old is CLG teacher? (answer: it's a secret) they love that one because one team always tries to guess when everyone knows it's a secret... tell me five yellow/orange/pink things... tell me two homophone sets... when is CLG teacher's birhday (always a candy queston). These are heaps of fun.


Yeah, I find the students don't even respond to the pyrotechnics, so I just draw the grid on the board as well. If a student can't sit still they become the eraser/scorekeeper; if another students acts up I split the duties. It's amazing how many tasks one can come up with to keep kids occupied: one kids holds the eraser and hands it to the official eraser while each team can end up with their own scorekeeper...

What CLG said about a random or more accessible category I recommend also. My most successful category which I mentioned in "The Best Game Ever Thread" is Dare, where the kids get points for standing on their heads, hugging a member of the opposite sex, etc. After I use that category a couple of times, they love seeing it pop up on the board and try to anticipate how I will make the dares more daunting and ridiculous than the last time.


What "pyrotechnics" did you try? Do you have a computer in your classroom?


Sorry, hyperbole.

It was just a powerpoint thingy. But how their teenager eyes glowed...

At my school you can hook a laptop up to the TVs in the classrooms and dispay anything you want on them. But that's as far as the wonders of our technical department go.
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ilovebdt



Joined: 03 Jun 2005
Location: Nr Seoul

PostPosted: Thu Apr 20, 2006 11:49 pm    Post subject: Re: Jeopardy--organization Reply with quote

jacl wrote:
I_Am_Wrong wrote:
The students have mid-terms coming up so next week I'm gonna take it pretty easy on them. I'm thinking that, for part of my lesson, we will play a jeopardy style quiz game. I even found a model on the internet with sounds and animation that allows me to input my own questions. I'm having a problem trying to figure out a way to organize the classes so that all the students have a chance. Anyone got any good ideas? This is public school so we're talking between 36-42 students per class.


Where did you find this model? I'd like to check that one out.


http://www.eslcafe.com/forums/korea/viewtopic.php?t=46940&highlight=Jeopardy

Here's the post, but the file is no longer there. Maybe the OP would e-mail it to you if you asked them nicely Smile

Ilovebdt
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the_beaver



Joined: 15 Jan 2003

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 1:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

I laid-out an oversized jeopardy board (about 1.5 X 1.5 meters with pockets to hold the questions) that I put up at the front of the class. I also have circuits with 4 buttons (which I can join with another to make 8, although I haven't done that yet) and I give each team a button -- no arguments because the light only comes on for the first response.

In a large class I have mini-jeopardy boards and I break the class into groups and give each group a circuit, a board, and question sheet and I assign one person to be the host.

Probably my favorite class activity.
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 1:42 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

the_beaver wrote:
I laid-out an oversized jeopardy board (about 1.5 X 1.5 meters with pockets to hold the questions) that I put up at the front of the class. I also have circuits with 4 buttons (which I can join with another to make 8, although I haven't done that yet) and I give each team a button -- no arguments because the light only comes on for the first response.


*beep* off.

You do not. Do you?

Damn.

"And teacher of the century goes to..."
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the_beaver



Joined: 15 Jan 2003

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 1:58 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

flotsam wrote:
*beep* off.

You do not. Do you?


I do. Laid it out the board in Photoshop and had it printed on cloth (about 35,000 won) and had the local dry shop woman sew on a backing for the pockets.

Originally I made my own circuit, but then I bought some kits from ebay, soldered them together, bought some big buttons, and viola. Next I'm looking into making the buttons wireless.
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flotsam



Joined: 28 Mar 2006

PostPosted: Fri Apr 21, 2006 2:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote

the_beaver wrote:
flotsam wrote:
*beep* off.

You do not. Do you?


I do. Laid it out the board in Photoshop and had it printed on cloth (about 35,000 won) and had the local dry shop woman sew on a backing for the pockets.

Originally I made my own circuit, but then I bought some kits from ebay, soldered them together, bought some big buttons, and viola. Next I'm looking into making the buttons wireless.


Just relish screwing up the curve, don't you?

Wow, that's awesome. Must look into that--real pyrotechnics.
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