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GeoGame Overview

The Global SchoolNet Foundation has supported GeoGame since 1991 with email sessions offered in the Fall, Winter and Spring of each school year. This excellent project was developed by Tom Clauset, Winston-Salem, North Carolina. It was described in an article, "Keys to Successful Networking" in the May, 1990 issue of the Computing Teacher Magazine.

GeoGame has been revised to make it possible to participate from the World Wide Web.

Getting Help: Send email to geogame2011@globalschoolnet.org

Purpose:

  • Learn geography terms
  • Learn how to read and interpret maps
  • Increase awareness of geographical and cultural diversity

Subjects:

  • Geography
  • Social Studies
  • Writing

Grade level:

  • Middle-Upper Elementary; Open to all grade levels

Summary:

  1. You must register to play a game or submit a clue to be included in a future game. This is only required once.
  2. If you want to include your own commmunity in one of our games, you must have your students research information about your community, such as latitude, longitude, typical weather, land formations, time zone, population, points of interest, and for whom/what famous, and then enter that information on our GeoGame Questionnaire.
  3. When we receive your questionnaire containing the clues about your community, we check and archive your responses. When we have enough entries to make a balanced game, we format them all into a new puzzle to be solved. We maintain these new games for approximately one year.
  4. To play a GeoGame, you and your students can select one or more of the current games. Then your students, with help from maps, atlases, and other reference materials, match the description of each location in the game with the name of the corresponding city. After the students have decided the answers to the game, you enter your answers into the form at the top of the game page. If all of your answers are correct a certificate will be presented to print out and post on your bulletin board.

This has been a perennial favorite project, one which will excite your students and lead you into the exciting world of online communications. Says one 3rd grade teacher:

"In all the years, I've taught, this is the best map activity I've seen. The kids loved it."

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Teaching Strategies

After you register, print out the "Information Needed to Submit a Clue" which asks you to supply 15 descriptive items that help identify your city. This procedure is automated, so there cannot be any variation from the description items listed on the questionnaire. You may wish to print out a current game as well. Here are the ABC's of preparing your class to play a game or complete the questionnaire:

A - Start with a whole-class discussion of the game and go over the identifying characteristics of the description items. Discuss latitudes, longitudes, time zones, land forms, points of interest, tourist attractions, and state capitals as needed.

B - Divide your class into groups of two or three and give them each a question. Have them do a little research in the library or with local maps to find the answer to their question. Come back together in a whole-class discussion and elicit the answers to each group's question. Have a student in the class act as a 'secretary' to compile the answers.

C - Type the information on the form on the web.

Other Strategies

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Playing the Game

Gather a few materials for the class so that the students can break up into small groups to begin the process of matching locations up with descriptions.

Suggested Materials:

  • Large United States map showing time zones and latitudes
  • Set of encyclopedias for individual state maps and maps of other countries
  • AAA road maps
  • Rand McNally Road Atlas
  • Almanac

Select one of our current games. Print the GeoGame game file from the web and duplicate enough copies of the city/state locations to give one to each child in your class. Print out the descriptions "clues", divide your class up into 4 or 5 groups and give each group an equal number of the descriptions.

You might want to set aside two or three 20-30 minute "Research Periods" for the groups to try to match up their descriptions with the city/state locations. Or, you may want to set up a reference corner in the library or your classroom where students can go work on the project during their free time.

If you have problems finding a reference for the time zones, contact your long distance phone company. Most have maps showing the world time zones related to GMT. Check out the references on our web site.

When your students have done the best job they can on the match ups, print the number of the clue next to the City on the list. Then, return to that game on the Web and submit your answers in the form at the game page.

Other Strategies:

One teacher set up a bulletin board with a large map. Students located the cities and marked them with map tacks. Then they matched the descriptions with the cities on the map.

Another teacher chose the following strategy. Copy the list of cities so that there is one list for each clue. The clues are separated so there is one clue viewed at at a time. These two items are mounted on construction paper (aesthetic component only) and laminated.

Students use an overheard marker to cross off eliminated possibilities and narrow down the answer.

Ambitious children list strategies on the back of the card:

  • using the time zone to eliminate countries and/or states,
  • next using latitude to eliminate more countries and/or states,
  • then using tourist attractions if commonly known and if not looking up state in encyclopedia to see if the attractions are listed (some encyclopedias have this as a listing in the beginning of information for each state),
  • and finally using a map or atlas which also lists populations for different cities (especially if it is narrowed down to cities relatively close to one another).

Once they have an answer they turn it in. When all the clues for a given game are turned in, they are put in order to see if there are any "repeats". If there are, a committee of three students goes over these to come to agreement about correct responses. Then the cards are wiped with lightly moistened tissue for use by others.

It made a tremendous difference to my students to have things broken down a bit. It is also more fun to use overhead markers and colorful paper than it is to use notebook paper and pencils. (Even these sophisticated, "young adults" enjoy the little things.)

(Teachers, if you have a unique way to work on GeoGame, please let us know . It may be included here for other teachers to use.)

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Winning the Game


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