Grammar review games


















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Ancient History. Asian Studies. British History. European History. Other Social Studies - History. Next, teams take turns choosing a square you can add letters across and numbers down to make it easier to call out the squares. Students must then either provide an example or ask a question that another team member must answer correctly to get their X or O on that square. Of course, the first team that gets three Xs or Os across, down or diagonally wins. The rules are simple, and the game is so much fun!

Let us dive in:. Next, divide your students into two teams. Then, students must answer questions correctly to approach the posts and score a goal.

For example, Team A answers correctly and moves right one step closer to their goal. Team B answers correctly and moves the ball left back to the center. Team B answers correctly and moves left one step closer to their goal. If Team A were to keep answering incorrectly and Team B correctly, then Team B will continue moving left to eventually score a goal. When a team scores, the ball moves back to the center, and the team that did not score last starts.

As the mailman approached, the dog barked ferociously. As you can see, this process can continue for a while. Play this game as a class or in small groups. After each group has submitted a sentence to a shared class doc, study them together. Give awards for the strongest sentence. Add a brain-based aspect by color-coding grammar elements.

Find a simplified version of this build-a-sentence grammar activity that you can use to get started here. Help students identify grammar skills in writing by asking them to go on a scavenger hunt for specific concepts. They can look through a common text or choice reading books. For example, you might ask students to find a sentence that uses an attribution tag with correct punctuation.

Teachers can guide this activity to keep the class well paced. Set a timer and give each group who finds an example a point in the game, not the grade book. If you prefer, students can play at their own pace. Just create a page of directions with space for students to write the examples they find in their reading. This approach frees you up to provide small group support.

Students will enjoy a light-hearted game of silent telephone, reminiscent of the telephone ice breaker game where players whisper ideas to their neighbors until the reaches the last player in line. In telephone grammar, the first person writes a grammar concept on a slip of paper and passes it to the next student. No talking allowed! The second student reads the paper, puts it on the bottom of the pile, and writes an example on the next clean paper. That student passes the stack to the next person, who puts the example on the bottom of the pile and writes the grammar term he or she thinks best applies to the example written by the previous student.

See below — the example also includes a connection sketch. The goal is to finish the game and have the original grammar concept emerge. If the end concept is different than the beginning, ask students to talk about why. Easily Confused Words. Panda Parts of Speech. We are working to convert all our games!

Please keep checking back! SAT vocab the fun way. SAT vocab in context. Clueless CrossWord. Crossword Puzzle.



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