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Compatible with: PowerPoint 2007 & 2010 RIT 211-220 Interactive Bingo INSTRUCTIONS This game is not at random and if you play the same slide twice the bingo balls will come up in the same order. One way to make it more random and save you from writing out individual bingo cards, you can print out cards from slide 10 below and have your participants fill out the card themselves, which it will make it random as no two cards will be alike. If the squares are too small to write definitions in, you can download a legal-sized sheet for free on my TPT site here: Legal-sized MAPS Vocabulary Bingo Free Download You can also use the interactive Slide 5 if your participants all individually have access to PowerPoint. Slide 3 is the bingo game you can play in slide show mode. The first spin you will usually only need to click the spin button once, each spin following you need to click the button two times depending on how fast you click it. Slide 2 provided as a reference to your participants when they are filling out their cards. They can see the words to choose, and then they can fill the spots on their card. Go ahead an give it a test run to see how it works! Compatible with: PowerPoint 2007 & 2010 *Note: You will get one undo if you click the wrong button. To undo simply click the button again and it will turn off.

RIT 211-220 Interactive Bingo RULES Pick out twenty-four words that are the most challenging to you and write the definitions of those words anywhere in your grid boxes on your card. Leave the free space as is. After each ball comes up click on the word so your students will know that word has been used

Irony Characterize Cause Appendix Classified Memo Imagery Allusion 0.5 V Irony Characterize Instruction Cause Appendix Parable Chronological Classified Onomatopoeia Memo Imagery Allusion Consonance Aphorism Quotation Contradict Form Literature Homophone Contrast First Person Journalism Second Person Assonance Metaphor Coupon Flashback Quote Foreshadowing Falling Action Resolve Subject Narrate Revision Exposition Hyperbole Headline Idiom Debate Guide Letters Persuasive Diagram Spin Reminder: On first click of the spin button you will only need to click once. Every spin after that you may need to click 2 times to get the animation to play. Allusion Appendix Cause Characterize Chronological Classified Ad Coupon Debate Diagram Exposition Falling Action Flashback Foreshadowing Guide letters Headline Hyperbole Idiom Imagery Instruction Irony Memo Metaphor Narrate Onomatopoeia Parable Personification Persuasive Prediction Primary Source Pun Quote Resolve Revision Subject Suspense Word Play Aphorism Assonance Consonance Contradict Contrast First Person Form Homophone Journalism

Included are two vocabulary bingo boards! RIT 211-220 Interactive Bingo VOCABULARY BINGO BOARDS Included are two vocabulary bingo boards! Slide 11 is a colored version for students who have access to PowerPoint. They can type their definitions in the squares. Slide 12 is a printable version for students to fill. If this is too small, a legal-sized sheet was created in Word and can be downloaded for FREE on here:

FREE PAPERLESS BINGO CARD BINGO TILES: CLICK AND SLIDE TO YOUR RECTANGLE! FREE

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When something makes something else (effect) happen. When you don't specifically say what you are thinking, but instead try to get people to guess what you are thinking using obvious hints and clues. Materials like charts, organizers and graphs at the end of books that people can use as for extra help or information. When something makes something else (effect) happen. To understand how the character acts and feels. The arrangement of things put in order when they happened. A section in a newspaper, magazine, internet that sells things like houses, apartments, used cars and lists jobs. A usually small piece of printed paper that saves you money for something you want to buy. A respectful and professional discussion between two sides with different points of view. Drawing that explains or shows the parts of something. The introduction of a fictional story, where you learn about the characters and the setting. Events that happen after the climax when the story nears the end. Going back to an earlier time in someone's life. (Example: The boy had a _____________ about the first time he had met the monster in his closet.) When a person gives hints to what will happen later in the story. You can predict what will happen because of events that have happened. One or more words printed on the top of the page of a reference book, like a dictionary, to help the reader to locate the word he or she is looking for. The major news stories reported in newspapers, magazines or television news programs. Usually tells the main idea of what you are going to read. An extreme exaggeration, authors use these to get readers to notice a part of text. A phrase that has a literal and figurative meaning. If you do exactly what it says you may look very silly. Language that causes people to see pictures in their mind. Uses words that make you hear, taste, smell, see, and touch what is going on in the writing. A type of text that describes how to do something. A situation that is strange or funny because things happen in a way that seems to be the opposite of what you expected. A short written or typed message from one person or department to another person or department. A comparison of different objects that have some kind of similarity without using "like" or "as". A person not seen in the story that describes what is happening in the story. Words written as sound effects to help the reader hear the sounds that are happening in the story. A short story that teaches a moral or spiritual lesson.

Giving non-human things, human qualities and abilities. When you try to get someone to do or believe something. A statement about what will happen or might happen in the future. A document which was written or created during the time under study. A funny way to use the different definitions and meanings of words to create a cheesy joke. When you repeat or use what someone has said or written. To find an answer or solution to a problem A change or a set of changes that corrects or improves something. The main topic that something is talking about. A feeling of nervousness or excitement caused by wondering what will happen. Playing around with words, especially homonyms, to try to make humor out of them. This is another way of explaining a pun. A wise saying that contains a truth and is often cliché. Think of the messages you get in Chinese cookies, or quotes that speak to you. Repetition of vowel sounds in the middle of words. For example, "Try to light the fire." Another word for alliteration where consonant sounds repeat within words. The act of saying something that is opposite or very different in meaning to something else To compare (two people or things) to show how they are different. When the author writes as though you are one of the characters in the story. I, we, me, us, my/mine, our/ours A document that has blank spaces for you to fill in like a job application. Words that sound the same, but are spelled differently and have different meanings. (be, bee; steel, steal; to, two, too) The activity or job of collecting, writing, and editing news stories for newspapers, magazines, television, or radio.

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