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Make a Harry Potter Game
Objectives
- Students will improve their reading comprehension through
creating and playing a board game.
- Students will learn how to write inference and recall
questions.
Materials
- Paper
- Pencils
- Index cards
- Art Supplies
Procedures
- Before students begin writing questions for the trivia game,
encourage them to use two different types of questions (inference
questions and recall questions) in order to make the game
more challenging.
- Explain to students that recall questions ask factual
questions that have only one answer.
(Q: What shape is the scar on Harry Potter's forehead? A: A
lightning bolt)
Inference questions, however, ask questions that require
an opinion as an answer.
(Q: Does Dumbledore make fair decisions when it comes to Hagrid?)
Since this type of question can have more than one correct
answer, explain to students that a correct answer to an
inference question is one in which the answer is supported by
facts from the book.
(A: Dumbledore does make fair decisions when it comes to
Hagrid. One example is that he let Hagrid remain as
groundskeeper at Hogwarts after he was expelled as a student.)
- Break students into small groups and ask them to create a
stack of inference and recall question cards with the question
on one side of an index card and the answer on the other.
- Once those have been completed, have each group create a game
board and write up a set of simple rules.
- Once the games are finished, allow the groups to switch and
play each others' games.
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This resource was adapted from The Learning Network Inc.
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For questions about this Website, please e-mail Robert
Ferguson.
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