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Monday, August 26, 2024

Draw-Your-Own-Picture BINGO

This is a listening activity which I recently learned this summer from Donna Tatum-Johns at the Fluency Matters Conference in Denver. She demonstrated this as a post-reading activity after she had facilitated a Clip Chat (formerly known as "Movie Talk"), and I thought, "What a great communicative way to play BINGO!" It involves students drawing visual representations of vocabulary words from a reading in a 3x3 grid and then reading sentences with a missing word in the target language from a reading which you have been reviewing. Students then have to look at their BINGO grid to see if they have the missing word.

Pre-activity directions

  1. Pick 18 words from the reading which students can illustrate. Preferably pick words which you have been targeting and words which are drawable, i.e., do not pick an abstract word like "dignity"
  2. Put those words in pairs so that there are nine pairs of words. Try to pair them in similarities.
  3. Write a script where you will read each pair as "____________ or ___________." If you want, create slides where you present each pair as " ____________ or _________." 
  4. Pick 10-12 sentences from the reading which have one of the 18 words and leave it blank, and write out those sentences. You will be reading them.

Activity directions

  1. On a whiteboard or piece of paper, have students draw a 3x3 grid.
  2. Tell students that you will say aloud two vocabulary words in the target language. They are to choose one of them and to draw that word anywhere on their grid. If you wish to have a visual of the pair choices, project the slide.
  3. Give students one minute at the most to draw. Do not allow too much time, because there are nine words which they will draw.
  4. When students are done, tell them that you will now read a sentence from the story but there is a word missing. If they have the visual representation of the word, then they may cross out the picture (but not cross it out enough that it cannot be identified any longer). Say that sentence many times to get in meaningful exposure of that sentence.
  5. Continue on with the next sentence until a student gets three in a row.
  6. When a student gets three in a row, that student yells BINGO. Have student come up so that you can check their board. Continue to play until you have 5 winners (or how many you want. I allow winners to continue playing and win multiple times). This will allow for continued exposure to sentences from the reading.
Observations
  1. Wow, what a great new way to play vocabulary BINGO!
  2. I love this way of playing BINGO with a reading, because it addresses so many modalities and components of language:
    1. listening comprehension - students having to listen to the sentence to determine what word is missing and to look on their board to find it.
    2. vocabulary - students need to know what target language words each of their drawings represent
    3. personalization of words - students are drawing their own representations of the vocabulary words
    4. communicative nature - the missing words are coming from the original sentences from the reading
    5. higher order thinking - students need to make the connection between knowing what target word is missing and if they have that visual representation on their grid
    6. student choice - students choose which words of the pair that they want to illustrate, in addition to where they want to place those words on their grid
  3. This activity does take quite awhile to facilitate, because students are taking time to illustrate their choice of words and there are 18 possible word choices (in addition to the randomness of where they place 9 of those words) so even though it is a 3x3 grid, it can take some time before someone has BINGO.
Thanks, Donna, for this great activity!

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