Special Projects Highline. HuffPost Personal Video Horoscopes. Follow Us. Suggest a correction. What's Hot. More In Media. After everyone has placed their post-it, students try to guess whose note is whose. Have each person write five facts about himself or herself on a post-it note, and then put the notes on the board. Make sure you write one, too.
Then, choose one post-it and read it aloud. Try to guess which student wrote it. When you get the right student, that person takes a turn with the remaining notes. Continue until all the notes are gone.
Have your students write five fun facts about themselves and turn the paper in to you. Then, write each fact on a post-it along with a matching one with that students name. When your students are not in the room, put the post-its all around your classroom. Students must then race to match the names with the correct facts they cannot match their own name. The person with the most matches at the end of the game wins. What are Super Sticky Notes?
It is simple to play and simple to organize! Take self-sticking name tags and write the names of celebrities or iconic people on them, then simply place them on the backs of each guest to arrive. Your name says a lot about you , and could influence what people think about you. New research shows that certain names are associated with lower or higher estimates of expected academic success, up to a 20 percent difference in some cases.
Ask one student to pick a name card from your hand. Don't let them see the names though. Whoever is sitting on or by the name card Matt is out. Have students fold a piece of cardstock or paper in half and write their names or preferred nicknames on one side. Scavenger Hunt.
Student Interviews. Self and Neighbor Introductions. The Name Game. People Bingo. Pick one name for each person playing, and write it on a post-it note Don't let any of the players see the names until the game starts. Now stick one Post-it note on each person's back.
Tell everybody how to play. You can vary the game by using the names of things instead of people and characters. For this game, you'll get team members to write on a name tag the name of a person. Then the team members will go around the room asking questions and answering others questions related to their names until they find out who they are. Who's in the Hat? One member of the first team has one minute to pull out slips from the hat, describe the people they name, and have the answers guessed correctly by the rest of the team.
They may use as many words as they like to describe each person, but can't say anything that's part of their name. Scooby Doo. John Wayne. Anne Hathaway. Duke Ellington. Part 2 Playing the Game Tap on the icon on your home screen to open the game.
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