Bingo English
Bingo is a great game for practicing questions/answers as well as negatives. Children want to draw the cards themselves, so I make Bingo a guessing game. As an example, for the people set:
One students takes a card and asks the other students 'What's he?' The other students guess 'Is he a mailman?' 'Yes. He's a mailman. / No. He's not a mailman.'
This will work across the board for almost any set varying the question/answer. ex. What's this? Is it ~.
A collection of English ESL worksheets for home learning, online practice, distance learning and English classes to teach about bingo, bingo. How to prepare Word-Bingo in English Lessons. Suitable for students from the age of 10. Time: about 10 minutes per round Topic: The students repeat the numbers from 1-100 and the alphabet. The 3x3 bingo board maker and 4x4 bingo board generators are a bingo game makers that allows you to create bingo boards for vocabulary practice using images. You can select the image you want to use and type in any text you'd like. So, you can choose from 1,000s of images to create the perfect bingo game board.
Ognib:
This is just what it sounds like, Bingo in reverse. Students choose five pictures and circle/place chips on them. If one of the students choices comes up, they can erase their mark or remove their marker. When all have been removed the student wins and shouts, 'OGNIB!' This is a great change of pace and will last longer than bingo. You will see about 80% of the vocabulary appear before you get a winner.
Gimme that:
Have the students look at their cards for 10-15 seconds and memorize them. Then draw cards one at a time and say the vocabulary word. If that word appears on the student's bingo card the student will say something like, 'I want that card.' 'May I have that card.' (or 'Gimme that.' which I don't actually endorse.) Another option is to elect a group leader to read for each round. Award one point for correct choices and minus 2 for incorrect choices. This game is also known as Wordwish and I Want That Card
For One on One or pair work:
Hide your bingo card from the other's sight. 'A' can call out one item and 'B' gets to mark his card. Then the 'B' calls out any item and 'A' gets to mark his card. Continue this until one person gets bingo. The first person to get bingo wins.
This can be done as a class activity and see how many wins each students can get during the allotted game time.
Bingo English
Another one on one game is to have A draw a card and B gets 3 guesses. If B can guess within 3 tries B can place a marker on her bingo board. If not, a can place a marker on her bingo board and then play shifts to B who draws a card. Then A gets 3 guesses. The first to get bingo is the winner.
For Large classes:
Break large classes into small groups of 5-6 students or less. If you play as a whole class you really limit the amount of interaction the students have. It will be difficult to orchestrate at first. I generally have one group play, while all the others huddle around and watch. Once you've played in groups a few times it will be easier. If you are practicing q&a as well, make sure you drill the language very well before letting the groups play. There are 12 bingo cards in each set on this site. If you generally work with large classes you might want to make 4 sets of 12. It is not necessary to have 48 different cards.
Lagu Anak Bingo English
Cut Throat Bingo: For 3-4 People
One person draws a card and the others try to guess. The person who guesses correctly may place a marker on his bingo card as can the person who drew the card. The others may not. The person who guessed correctly draws the next card and play continues as above until someone gets bingo. The game may end in a draw with 4 players.