Jeopardy
Jeopardy is a great activity to play with groups of students of pretty much all sizes. Technically it is reverse jeopardy, with the teacher asking questions and the students answering, and not the other way around as in actually Jeopardy. If your kids are really advanced, it may be worth it to try making the students ask the questions, however for all intents and purposes this guide will deal with the reverse variety.
Six question categories, each with four questions (for a total of 24 questions) will easily fill up most or all of a 50 minute class no matter the level of the students.
Question Categories
You have to really take care to pick categories and questions that students are likely to know the answers to and be interested in. For example, something like "what is the longest river in Japan?" is something the kids are likely to know the answer to but you the ALT may very well not. Luckily we have the internet and can get answers to basic questions pretty easily.
One great thing about the Jeopardy game is that it will motivate students who may not like English but enjoy trivia questions about this topic or that topic -- it's a great way to get kids who don't normally raise their hands to participate.
Below are some tried-and-tested categories that have worked well in numerous games.
Kanji
This is one of my favorites. Some kids who love Japanese and kanji but hate English will really try at these, getting out their pen and paper and really listening in earnest to what you are saying.
Basically take a kanji and break it up into its parts. "Parts" can either be its actual radicals, or just some other (often more simple) kanji that makes up part of the kanji you are asking. Then you say the parts in English, and they must construct the kanji in their heads and give the answer. Unlike most questions, where kids just say the answer, it is probably best to have them draw the character on the board that way other kids who don't get it can see in a more visual manner why a particular kanji is the correct answer.
Jeopardy Kanji Examples | |||
---|---|---|---|
Kanji | Parts | Common Containing Words | Notes |
明 | sun and moon | 明日 (ashita) - tomorrow 明るい (akarui) - bright |
Probably the easiest one there is |
持 | hand and temple | 持つ (motsu) - to take, bring | Temple will trip kids up |
語 | to say, five, and mouth | 英語 (eigo) - English 語る (kataru) - to talk about something |
Easy |
具 | eye, one, and eight | 道具 (dōgu) - tool 文房具 (bunbōgu) - stationary supplies |
Easy, though some may hear "eye" and think "I" |
解 | corner, sword, and cow | 理解 (rikai) - understanding 解く (toku) - to solve (a problem) |
Sword will trip a few kids up |
総 | thread, public, and heart | 総合 (sōgō) - general, cumulative, overall, all-in-one (hard to define, check ex. sentences in jisho) | Thread is pretty tough. Talk about clothes or your shirt or something. Say public is the opposite of "private". |
Mie Guidebook |
---|
Top Page • Cities & Towns • Life in Mie • FAQ • Travel Guides • Learning • Teaching • JET Program • Wiki Help |