Monday: TURISTA
This game on the game show was answering questions about different countries around the world. Since I teach Spanish, I focused on Hispanic countries. It was a team attempt and the I handed out an individual 12x12 marker board to each team. One person wrote as they collaborated on their answers. The first correct group with an answer won a point for their team.
Tuesday: MAPA
This was a fun game to watch as it is a life-size game board and the participants are the game pieces! I made a game in which the students are being sacrificed to the Aztec sun and moon gods. It included aspects of the actual game, such as a "de regreso" point in which they had to return to the beginning. There were also points on the board that they had to do physical activity, such as sit ups, jumping jacks, or push ups. There was also a giant, knee-high fabric die that was rolled. I solicited my PE department and they had one that was, well, a bit smaller, but it totally worked for what I was doing. The "game piece" rolled the die, moved that many spots on the board, and answered a question. They could go and conference with their team. If they got it correct, they got the number of points they rolled on the die. Here's the movie walk through of the game board in my classroom.
Above are the game pieces that I taped to the floor of the room and below are the questions that I asked in the notes section. Some were specific to what we have been studying in class and were able to be answered across Spanish II, III, IV, and V.
Wednesday: PALABRAS
This is was a very easy one to reproduce; one that I'm sure many of you have played in your classrooms in the past. Participants are given a list of vowels and consonants and they find as many words as possible. There was a point for each correct word. I also wanted to reward "wow" words so I doubled it to two points for any word they created that was 5-7 letters or tripled for any words using 8+ letters. I was so amazed what they were creating and the creativity they had to get more words. Even though I am a TPRS/CI teacher who doesn't directly teach conjugation, they had tons of conjugated words on their lists.
Thursday: GEMAS


FRIDAY: CIERTO/FALSO
On the actual gameshow two opposing participants were sitting back to back and given a question. If it was correct, they would rotate one direction and if it was false, they would rotate the opposite direction. Again, another easy game to reproduce. I used the questions from the previous day, Gemas, and rewrote them as true/false questions.