This is a game I invented many years ago to get my students exited about seeing. It works well with all ages (4th Grade and up) and prizes add to the frenzy. Watch out for cheating, though. Even amongst adults!
Aims: To practice deep looking
To listen to words and put them into visual form
To be about to recall and describe in words what you saw
Motivation: The game itself is all the motivation you will need, although silly prizes
add to the fun.
Vocabulary: parallel, perpendicular, cylinder, sphere, etc.
Procedure: Collect all sorts of odd objects: I use broken kitchen utensils, old parts of hardware, packaging, weirdly-shaped things I find in my travels, perfume bottle caps, old kiln parts, etc.
Divide the class up into teams of four or so. I try to mix students up so there's one star artist per team, but what's interesting is that the star artist may not be good at this game initially. Sometimes the quieter kids are better observers.
Each team sends a member out into the hall. Have them go far enough away so they can't see into the room at all. Bring out an object and have the rest of the students look at it carefully. Make sure no one draws a little sketch of it on the sly. I've had adults use an eraser to draw the outline on the desk!!!
Put the object away, bring the drawers back into the room and give them a set amount of time (5 minutes or so) to work. The drawer will listen to the describers and draw the best he/she can. Describers must use appropriate art words--"not draw a fork," but "draw two parallel lines close to each other, connect the bottom, draw another line at the top, extend it on both sides a bit, now draw four lines perpendicular to the extended line, now make them thicker." Be sure your students don't use had gestures or point on the paper. Some students just have to sit on their hands to resist. Keep the tone light--don't be too mean, but don't allow cheating just the same.
Each turn you decide the winner(s) and then a new person goes out in the hal. Everyone gets a turn. Mention that the objects get harder, so the less-successful kids get to go first.
Follow-up: Your students will beg you to play this game again. They never tire of it and they really do learn a lot about seeing, memory and observation by playing it.
Have the objects get harder as you go. Increase points to keep all teams in the running.
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