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Game Templates (in PDF format)
• Categories
• Battleship
• Hangman
• Dots
& Squares
• Sprouts
• Foldovers
• Why?
No fast food on this outing. Tonight you've taken your kids to a restaurant, made your selections from a menu you can actually hold in your hands and now you're waiting for the food to arrive. And waiting. And waiting.
Want to keep your restless, hungry children from becoming completely miserable? Melisande Neal, mom of four, always keeps a stash of pencils and paper in her purse for just these emergencies.
Start simple, advises Neal. When her kids were at the younger range of this age group, she taught them tic-tac-toe. As her children's skills increased, she added other, more challenging games. This list should give you some ideas the next time you're waiting at the dentist's office, in an airport, in the car...
Categories
Draw a grid on a piece of paper - a square filled with smaller squares. The
number of squares can vary, depending on the attention span of your child. Down
the left side, put some letters of the alphabet (for example, you could spell
out a child's name: LISA). Across the top, write categories - for example, girls'
names, boys' names, animals, colours, cars, places. You can make this harder
or easier by changing the categories. Players take turns writing in words that
fit the category and start with the letter in the left-hand column. (Next to
the letter L, in this example, you might have Laura, Liam, lion, lavender, Lexus
and Labrador.) Give extra points for words that nobody else thought of.
Click here for a printable Categories template in a PDF format.
Battleship
For two players. Here's another popular game you can play without the official
version. All you need is graph paper. Each player needs two grids. Label each
grid by writing numbers across the top and letters down the side, so that the
squares are easily identified as A8 or F5. One grid will be for locating your
own ships, the other for recording shots against your opponent's ships. Each
player places three or four "ships" on his grid, then let the guessing begin.
The first person to sink all the other person's ships wins.
Click here for a printable Battleship template in a PDF format.
Hangman
Most people know how to play the traditional version of Hangman. But what about
kids who aren't yet master spellers?
Neal plays a variation suitable for pre-writers. "We play it like 20 Questions - I would think of something, and my son would have to think of yes-or-no questions to guess what it was," she says. "Each time he got a no answer, I'd add another part to the Hangman figure."
Click here for a printable Hangman template in a PDF format.
Dots and Squares
Begin by drawing a grid of dots on the paper. Using lined paper or graph paper
can make this a little easier. The first person draws a line connecting two
dots beside each other. The second player then draws another line to connect
another two dots. The goal is to be the person who draws the last side of a
square. Then you put your initials inside the square (or some other abbreviation
to claim your square). In some versions of this game, if you complete a square
you get another turn. The player with the most squares when all the squares
are drawn is the winner.
Click here for a printable Dots and Squares template in a PDF format.
Sprouts
If you can't quite master drawing a neat grid of dots, you might find this game
easier. Draw dots randomly all over the paper. The first player draws a line
between any two dots, and draws another dot in the middle of that line. The
next player draws a line between any two dots, and puts a dot in the middle
of that line. No lines may cross each other, but they don't have to be straight,
so they can loop around other lines. Only three lines in total can emerge from
any one dot. The dots put in the middle of the lines already have two lines
connecting them to the two other dots, so they can only have one more line.
The game continues until no more lines can be drawn. The person who did the
last line is the winner.
Click here for a printable Sprouts template in a PDF format.
Foldovers
Give everyone a piece of paper. On the top section, draw a head. It can be an
animal head or a person's head, as weird as you like. Now fold that section
back, so that it's hidden, and slide it across the table to the next person.
Without looking at the hidden drawing, the next person draws a chest and arms
(of a person, animal, alien), folds it back as well and passes it on to the
next person. Without looking at the previous pictures, that person draws a body
(stomach and hips) and the final person draws the legs and feet. (You can have
more or fewer sections depending on the number of people you have playing.)
Finally, unfold your papers and laugh at the weird creatures you have created.
Click here for a printable Foldovers template in a PDF format.
Why? Because.
Each person writes down a question beginning with why (for example, Why do dogs
bark?). Adults can help with the writing for children who find this difficult.
Fold the top over to hide the question, and pass to the next person who, without
looking at the question, writes an answer starting with Because (for example,
Because chocolate tastes good). Then read out all the questions and answers.
Click here for a printable Why? template in a PDF format.
Building Words
For players who can read and spell. The first person writes down a letter. The
next person adds a letter, and must have a word in mind. The next player adds
another letter, again working towards spelling out a word. Next player adds
another letter, and so on, until nobody can add another letter. If you think
the other player doesn't have a word in mind, you can challenge him, and if
he can't tell you the word, he's out.
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