http://ianlafo.com/candyland-board/
Candyland Board
Board Game need ideas for a project on the Great Depression?
for the story I have to make a board game about the Great Depression and i need ideas, I use the song candyland board
Here's an idea. Make a game like Monopoly with a subject of great depression. Make sure that all locations on the board are relevant for depression and that every opportunity and community card in the chest kind have some fun.
Organize a gift exchange at school
Many public schools do not allow the exchange of gifts during the holiday season, but some do and, indeed, private schools do a lot. Many fun games can be created to facilitate the exchange of gifts and festive fun for children.
There are several activities you can impose to buy a present interest. For example, you can declare that one of the rules of gift exchange is that gifts should be handmade or put together in some way and not purchased. You can take a step further by declaring that the gifts feature the school colors in abundance. Maybe they could also somehow incorporate the school mascot.
Definitely in a gift exchange with children, must have a minimum dollar limit for gifts (Eg at $ 5).
But once the gifts are ready, there are many fun exchange activities and games that can be used to make this fun and memorable, even for children.
You can use a "white elephant" gift exchange method, here the children draw a number and choose your gift from the pile of gifts in order by the number you drew. They can change their gift to a different one if they wish. A gift can only be "stolen" three times and the person who called the first gift can "steal" a gift at the end of the exchange of gifts if they like. Children always have fun in the "Stealing" aspects of the white elephant gift exchange.
Children enjoy buying gifts for other people, so having to remove the names is an excellent activity for an exchange of gifts. To add a twist, make gift activity interesting by telling children they can not tell your recipients that they are buying for themselves. Then, create a fun activity during the exchange itself to play up the "mystery" element the exchange of gifts.
In the scenario of mystery, you can have each child open their gifts, then try to figure out who he is. If children were asked to make a gift, it can be especially fun, since some children have drawing skills, or woodworking skills, which could make easier or harder for other children to decide who has a gift.
As the children open the gifts, guess who the gift is. If they are wrong, they have to do a little dance or silly physical act before making another attempt. This is repeated until you guess the gift that entitles them been given.
Another fun activity for gifts among children in a classroom is that every child make a game piece of a game board unknown. Everyone brings a game piece by hand (there can be no rules in terms of its size, for example, no more than 2 inches high) to play the common game board.
The "Board game" may be nothing more than a large rug that has formed a kind of game, ideally a Christmas-themed game. Always popular is "Santa get back to the North Pole "played much like Chutes and Ladders or Candyland. Like most children know how to play these games, the learning curve is small and the Christmas party, they can get to play immediately. To keep up with the idea of gift exchange, each child may be asked your game piece hand wrapped and parts can be exchanged as gifts before everyone plays on the big board.
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