PAT Bank
Leftovers (All Grades)
Author:
Vickie Moriarity
Bath County Middle School
Kentucky
Subject:
Any
Objective:
Review concepts learned
Materials and Preparation:
Break down a lesson or concept into parts and attach
a number to each part. The number signifies how many students
will group together when that part is given as a clue.
Example:
- English - Assign a number to each part of a paragraph
such as: groups of 2 for a complete sentence, groups
of 3 for a fragment, groups of 4 for a run-on sentence
This could work for any class where you could assign
a number to a concept.
Clear a large space in the middle of your room. If working
with concepts that are not numbered, write a guide on
the board so students know when to group in two's, three's,
etc.
Student Grouping:
One large group - The students will later group themselves
according to clues given.
The Play:
I explain first that leftovers in the refrigerator go
bad, so it is important to take them out and eat them
soon or they will go bad. I then tell students they are
all going to pretend to be food. The food in my class
is magical. It can walk, but it cannot talk.
The students (foods) walk around the classroom until
I say "freeze." The students freeze no matter
what they are doing. Then I give a clue. The students
SILENTLY get into small groups, with the number of students
in each group equivalent to the number associated with
the clue.
For example, if the game is for parts of speech (i.e.
2- noun, 3-verb, 4-adjective, 5-adverb, etc.), I would
say a sentence such as "The red school was very pretty."
Then I would ask students to get into groups that show
what part of speech "red" is. "Red"
is an adjective, so students would SILENTLY get into groups
of 4.
Once they have the correct answer, the group kneels.
Any "leftover" students would go to the refrigerator
(a space I designate in the classroom) and wait there
for one turn. They MUST be taken out of the refrigerator
on the next turn, however. This promotes cooperation and
inclusion.
Scoring:
No scoring involved. Students like to move around and
like to pretend they are different kinds of foods. They
also like to pretend to be different types of food and
love to freeze. It is very easy to see who understands
the concepts and who does not.
Further Play:
I use this occasionally to review sentences vs. fragments
vs. run-ons, parts of speech, literary terms, and writing
process stages. I am sure the game can be converted to
any discipline.
Examples:
In Math students could figure out story problems and
group according to the answer.
In social studies, students could group according to country
(i.e. 2-United States, 3-Australia, 4-France) and teacher
could name off cities and students could group according
to correct country.
Science - Assign each layer of the atmosphere a number
(i.e. 2 - atmosphere, 3- mesosphere, 4- troposphere, etc).
Describe each layer and have students group according
the correct layer of the atmosphere.
Comments or Variations:
I learned this game from an excellent teacher and a great
friend, Sarah Zembruski. The activity works very, very
well with middle school students.
|