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Home > Lesson Planning Channel > Lesson Planning Archives > Language Arts, Math > Lesson Planning Article |
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Subjects
Grade
Brief Description How many words can students create with seven Scrabble® letters? Objectives Students will
Keywords spelling, Scrabble®, game, vocabulary, puzzle, brain
Lesson Plan This activity is the "Monday Puzzle" -- part of a week of "puzzling activities" that comprise the Lesson Planning article A Puzzle A Day Provides Practice That Pays. This fun activity -- easily adapted to any grade -- makes a great "bellringer" activity for settling down students at the start of the school day, immediately after lunch, or as a transition after any other activity. For this puzzling activity, provide students with seven Scrabble® letter tiles and give them a set amount of time to create words using just those letters. You can use the online Scrabble® Word Builder Tool to produce a list of words that contain some or all of those seven letters. Simply type the seven letters into the tool, (Be sure to use the Word Builder window and NOT the Dictionary window), hit Go, and let the tool do the work for you. Then you're ready to see how many of those words your students can create.
A Sample Puzzle A C I L O P VPost the letters on a board or chart for all to see. Type the letters into the Scrabble® Word Builder Tool; the tool returns a list of 59 words that can be spelled using some or all of those letters. Among the words are ail, alp, ciao, clap, coal, coil, cola, lap, lip, oil, opal, oval, pail, viola, vocal, and voila. If this puzzle is too easy or difficult for your students, see instructions below for adapting the "Seven-Letter Scrabble® Spell-Off" activity for your grade level.
Scoring the Puzzle
Adapting "Seven-Letter Scrabble® Spell-Off" for Your Grade Level
Scrabble® Letter Point Values A-1 C-3 I-1 L-1 Those point values are derived from the values of the letters in the actual Scrabble® board game. The value of each letter is as follows:
Assessment Use one of the scoring methods described above or create your own scoring method. If you are tracking student performance on each of the five puzzle-of-the-day activities that comprise this puzzle-a-day plan, students are bound to achieve success on one or more of the different types of puzzles.Lesson Plan Source Education World Submitted By Gary Hopkins National Standards
LANGUAGE ARTS: English
MATHEMATICS: Number and Operations
MATHEMATICS: Connections Find more great puzzle ideas in this week's Lesson Planning article, A Puzzle A Day Provides Practice That Pays. Education World®
Originally published 03/12/2004
Last updated 05/01/2008
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