PAT Bank
Any Subject Jeopardy (all grades)
Author:
Patti Anderson
Westerly Hills Elementary
North Carolina
Subject:
Any
Objective:
Recalling Facts about any subject
Materials and Preparation:
I use a (sentence strip) pocket chart and 3x5 note cards.
For the older students, use the answer format (they have
to phrase the "answer" as a question), but this
is too hard for younger students
I make however many question cards as I need with anwers
on the back. Along with the answer on the back, I determine
how hard the question is. An easy answer is a 100 card.
The harder they are, the higher the number. You need 3
- 100 cards, 3 - 200 cards, etc. A good number of cards
to make is 12 - 15. There are three colums of cards. Place
all the cards on the pocket chart, in three columns. Place
the 100 cards in the first row, the 200 cards in the second
row, etc. You can place 4 - 5 cards in each column. I
place 3 cards at the top of each column (I label them
A B C but you can get creative). I make another set of
cards labeled 100, 200, 300 etc. These are placed on top
of the question cards. The first row has 100 placed over
them, the second row has 200, etc.
Student Grouping:
Two Teams
The Play:
- The class is divided into 2 teams. I put team 1 and
team 2 on the board, so we can keep score. The students
rotate turns so that everyone gets to play.
- The "play" goes from one team then over
to the other team - alternating questions. Team 1 player
chooses a column (ie:column B) and a number (200). Remind
the students that the higher the number, the harder
the question will be.
- The teacher asks the question.
- If the students gives the right answer in a set
amount of time, they get points for their team.
- If the students gets the wrong answer, the same
question goes over to the player on the other team.
- If both players get it wrong, no points are awarded.
- You can choose to place it back on the board, or not.
The question only gets asked to both teams once. The
next student chooses a card, etc.
Scoring:
If a student gets a 100 card correct, I give 1 point
to that team. If they get a 400 card correct, they get
4 points for their team. I play until all the cards are
used up and the team with the highest score wins.
Examples:
I'm a music teacher, so I've used this for composer
questions, music history, instruments, etc. As a music
teacher, you can even do it with sight reading - the student
has to sight read the card to get points. For other subjects,
make up questions for anything you're studying - science
units, history units, math problems, grammar, reading
comprehension.
Comments or Variations:
My kids absolutely love this game and they never get
tired of it. You will need at least 20 minutes, depending
on the difficulty of the questions and the amount of cards
you use. For storing the cards, I place the question cards
in an envelope and label it (ie: Beethoven). I also keep
a second envelop to put the columns (A, B, C) and points
(100, 200, 300) cards in. Also, whenever playing team
games, I tell them I will sometimes give a point to teams
that rotate players quietly, or don't talk during the
game. And anyone who shouts out (or whispers) an answer
when it's not their turn, will lose a point for their
team. Once you enforce these rules, the game is played
very nicely from then on.
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