Check out The Edublogger for inspiring examples of class blogs and tips on how to get your students writing today [28].
You don't need 50 different games. You need and 10 ways to twist them. The best classroom 50x games are not about flashy graphics or expensive gear. They are about predictable rules (so you save instruction time) and unpredictable outcomes (so students stay hooked). classroom 50x games
Why not have your students share their gaming experiences with the world? Creating a class blog provides a forum for student voice and allows them to practice digital literacy in a "real-world" setting [5, 30]. They can write "How-To" guides for their favorite games or engage in joint serial writing where each post continues a group story [11, 13]. Check out The Edublogger for inspiring examples of
The class erupted. Half called him insane. The other half pulled out phones to record his inevitable implosion. The best classroom 50x games are not about
Curveball at 15: “You have a wire loop and a magnet. List three ways to induce current.” “Move the magnet, move the loop, change the magnetic field strength.” Kade nodded, but question 17 was a trap: “A resistor obeys Ohm’s law except when…” Leo smirked. “Temperature changes or non-ohmic materials like semiconductors.” Twenty down. Zero wrong.