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RIT 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.
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RIT 201-210 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.
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Excerpt Evaluate Editorial Dialogue Diary Explain Feeling Graphic
Exaggeration Excerpt Evaluate Editorial Dialogue Diary Explain Feeling Graphic Organizer Homonym Graph Figurative Language Field Guide Conversation Context Bibliography Anthology Anecdote Alliteration Acronym Argument Assumption Catalog Conclude Brochure Book Review Auto- biography Literary Device Chrono- logical Scene Satire Review Secondary Source Sequence Summary Speech Literary Element Research Simile Memoirs Map Reference Material Middle Sound Pamphlet Problem/ Solution Personal Essay Map 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. Acronym Alliteration Anecdote Bibliography Anthology Argument Assumption Auto- biography Book Review Brochure Chrono- logical Conclude Context Conversation Dialogue Diary Editorial Evaluate Exaggeration Excerpt Explain Feeling Field Guide Figurative Language Graph Graphic Organizer Homonym Literary Device Literary Element Map Memoirs Middle Sound Pamphlet Personal Essay Problem/ Solution Reference Material Research Review Satire Scene Secondary Source Sequence Simile Speech Summary
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Included are two vocabulary bingo boards!
RIT 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:
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FREE PAPERLESS BINGO CARD BINGO TILES: CLICK AND
SLIDE TO YOUR RECTANGLE! FREE
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FREE
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(Examples: Wild and Woolly, Babbling Brook).
(Examples: FBI-Federal Bureau of Investigation, USA-United States of America). (Examples: Wild and Woolly, Babbling Brook). A short story about an interesting or funny event in your life that you share with others. A list of the books, magazines, articles, etc., that have been used for a report. This page comes at the end of the report. A published collection of writings (such as poems or short stories) by different authors. (Example: Someone feels school uniforms are a good thing, while another disagrees) Something that is believed to be true or probably true based on partial facts. (Examples: Justin Bieber's First Steps 2 Forever: My Story) When someone reads a book and explains if they like the book or not based on the story, they style the book was written, and the ending. A small, thin book or magazine that usually has many pictures and information about a product, a place, etc. A book containing a list of things that you can buy, use, etc., and often pictures. (Examples: Auto ________, Clothing ___________) (Examples: The timeline of technology, important dates in your life) (Example: To finish, these are the reasons why I feel pizza should be served every day at lunch.) (I didn't understand what the author meant by the phrase, so I had to read the sentences in front of it and behind it to figure it out.) (Example: A group of friends are sitting and talking about their weekend plans) The things that are said by the characters in a story, movie, play, etc. A book in which you write down your personal experiences and thoughts each day. (Example: I feel that the taxes raised to fix 23rd avenue has gone to waste...) To judge the value or condition of someone or something in a careful and thoughtful way. (Example: I have a mountain of homework to do tonight.) A small part of a longer written work. A few sentences, or a paragraph out of a novel. To make something clear or easy to understand. An emotional state or reaction. (Example: I looked at the … to try to find out what kind of bird was in my tree.) Special phrases used by authors to make their writing more interesting.
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(Examples: A bat you hit and a bat that flies in the air.)
Drawing that uses a series of dots, lines, etc., to represent numbers and show how much or how quickly something changes. (Example: We used a Venn Diagram to organize our thoughts on compare and contrast.) (Examples: A bat you hit and a bat that flies in the air.) (irony, flashback, foreshadowing, etc.) The important parts of a story that authors include in order to create a great story. (Example: We looked at a ______ of Africa and saw the country South Africa.) (Example: In class today we read a life experience that Ben Franklin wrote when he flew the kite.) Sound that occurs in the middle of a word. A small, thin book with no cover or only a paper cover that has information about a particular subject. (Example: I wrote a story about what I did this summer on the first day of school) (Example: The amount of oil being drilled in the ocean has become a big problem and solutions are...) (I needed more information about Australia so I had to find some different texts, or ...) Careful study that is done to find and report something new you learned about something. An act of carefully looking at or examining the quality of something. A way of using humor to show that someone or something is foolish, weak, bad, etc. (In the play Purple People Eaters, the two people run from the monsters in this second...of Act 3) (Example: I needed more information about the rain forest so I had to use an internet site as this...) The order in which things happen or should happen. (The dog slammed into the house like a sledgehammer.) (Example: It was my turn to stand in front of the class and share about my topic, so I had to give this...) A brief statement that gives the most important information about a topic.
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