About the Book
This book consists of articles from Wikia or other free sources online. Pages: 45. Chapters: 21, 5Ws and 1H, A wizard's duel, Acronyms, Adjectives, Alphabet race, Animal Telepathy, Apples to Apples, Batman, Bingo, Blindfold walk, Can you read this?, Categories, Criminal, Criss Cross, Crossword, Do you know who this is, Doraemon likes Nobita-kun information gap, Fill in the comic strip, Finger counting warm-up, Friend Test, Fruit Basket, Gambling game, Gambling game question sheet, Global Inequality exercise, Godzilla Vs Hello Kitty, In a pinch warm up, Janken, Karuta, Keshigomu game, King and servant, Listening Pyramid, Lyrics Scramble, Nervous Breakdown Game, Oni Janken, Opposites, Pass the bomb, Passive form sentence making, Phonics Fan, Sentence Building with questions and negatives, Sentence Uno, Sentence building with point of view, Shiritori, Shiritori-catagories, Sleeping game, Snatch, Spoons, Stand-up alphabet, String Game, Super Janken game, Swish Boing, TPR warm-up, Takeshi looks..., Team sentence builder, Team sentence scramble, The "IF" string game, The Legend of Sleepy Hollow, The circle of questions game, Treasure Hunt game, Ultimate Listening Game, Unfolding consequences, Verbs, Vocab. Mallet, Vocabulary, Vocabulary, Vocabulary, Warm Up Questions JHS1, Warm Up Questions JHS2, Warm Up Questions JHS3, Warm up questions, What do you want to be?, Where are you from?. Excerpt: Like all good English teaching activities, the 21 game has its origins in a drinking game. The idea is very simple to explain and is a good activity to review numbers. It's suitable for any level: you can spend 20 minutes playing it in an Elementary class, or just use it as a warm up for Junior or Senior High. Student A: "1, 2, 3."Student B: "4."Student C: "5, 6."Student D: "7, 8, 9."Student A: "10." ...and so on... A simple worksheet that has boxes for the students to break up their sentences into the different parts. Scissors for the students to cut up their worksheets. Break t...