Directions to create Jeopardy Game Open template Save As (whatever title you choose) File open Type in categories by clicking on the text box Use the scroll bar to scroll to the Question & Answer slides Create a question to fit in each valued box for each category Directions to play Jeopardy Slide show--view show Click mouse until Jeopardy music plays Slowly click categories onto the screen Wait until the music stops playing Cave students select questions in a specific category and for a specific dollar amount Click on the selected question Click mouse again to view the answer Click on the icon head in the bottom left hand corner to return to the main menu board
Jeopardy Plot Line Conflict poetry Student questions Potpourri Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Q $100 Q $200 Q $300 Q $400 Q $500 Final Jeopardy
$100 Question from C1 This is discovered in the exposition
$100 Answer from C1 Who and Where
$200 Question from C1 The point where it seems as if the protagonist will never solve their conflict.
$200 Answer from C1 The climax
$300 Question from C1 The resolution is here in the story
$300 Answer from C1 The end
$400 Question from C1 The underlying message the Author wants you to learn From the story.
$400 Answer from C1 Theme
$500 Question from C1 The narrator’s participation in the story
$500 Answer from C1 Point of View
$100 Question from C2 Type of conflict where a character fights against himself or herself
$100 Answer from C2 Man Vs. Self
$200 Question from C2 Type of conflict where an antagonist faces a protagonist
$200 Answer from C2 Man vs. Man
$300 Question from C2 An example of this type of conflict would be: protagonist vs. thunderstorm
$300 Answer from C2 Man vs. Nature
$400 Question from C2 Example of this type of conflict: protagonist vs. his community
$400 Answer from C2 Man vs. Society
$500 Question from C2 The person causing the protagonist’s Problem is the ________
$500 Answer from C2 Antagonist
$100 Question from C3 Number of times you need to read a poem to understand its meaning
$100 Answer from C3 At least two… Probably more
$200 Question from C3 Comparing two or more things using like or as.
$200 Answer from C3 Simile
$300 Question from C3 Giving non-human things Human characteristics.
$300 Answer from C3 Personification
$400 Question from C3 The author paints a mental picture for the reader.
$400 Answer from C3 Imagery
$500 Question from C3 “A rose by any other name would still smell as sweet” is an example of
$500 Answer from C3 Metaphor
$100 Question from C4 1 st person point of view
$100 Answer from C4 When the Narrator Uses I
$200 Question from C4 Three things which can be identified in the setting.
$200 Answer from C4 Date/time period, time of day, season, location, etc
$300 Question from C4 A static character.
$300 Answer from C4 A character who doesn’t change from the beginning to the end of a story
$400 Question from C4 Intro, rising action, climax, falling action, resolution
$400 Answer from C4 The 5 parts of a plot
$500 Question from C4 The story’s conflict.
$500 Answer from C4 The protagonist’s problem.
$100 Question from C5 POV Where the narrator uses “he” or “she”
$100 Answer from C5 3 rd person
$200 Question from C5 This type of character has a lot of personality.
$200 Answer from C5 round
$300 Question from C5 It’s what you read a poem for the first time
$300 Answer from C5 Literal meaning
$400 Question from C5 A character
$400 Answer from C5 What is a participant in a story
$500 Question from C5 You need five descriptors when identifying this
$500 Answer from C5 The setting
Final Jeopardy The 6-traits What is scored on Organization Word Choice And Conventions, and how do you improve the scores?
Final Jeopardy Answer Organization: the way your paper is organized Having a clear intro, body and conclusion Conventions: spelling, grammar and punctuation Use a dictionary Word choice: the types of words you use Use 3 rd level words/watch the word frequency