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Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s. If you are unfamiliar with the game show, the purpose of this program is to answer questions correctly to form 3.

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Presentation on theme: "Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s. If you are unfamiliar with the game show, the purpose of this program is to answer questions correctly to form 3."— Presentation transcript:

1 Welcome to... A Game of X’s and O’s

2 If you are unfamiliar with the game show, the purpose of this program is to answer questions correctly to form 3 X's or O's across, up and down, or diagonally. This program is excellent for classroom instruction because you can have 1 or 2 students take up each square and also have 2 contestants. This allows for up to 20 participants at a time. How to Play When you reach the opening screen with the names, you must click your mouse each time you want a new name or caricature to appear. Then, after all caricatures have appeared, click again for the main game screen. Have one to two students in pretend to be in each square. One of the two contestants picks their first square. Let's say Susie goes first and she is X. She chooses square 5. You must click on the person in the square in order to go to the question for slide 5. After clicking on the person, the question for that square appears. Let's say the question is "What year did Columbus come to America?" The person who you have assigned to the middle square then has to answer (or bluff) to that question. Let's say that Johnny is square 5 and says "1998". Susie then has to agree or disagree with Johnny's answer. After she has made her decision, you click the mouse again and the correct answer appears. Click on the menu arrow to return to the main game board. If Susie agreed with Johnny, she was wrong. Therefore, you would put an "O" in the black box in square 5 by clicking in the black box and typing and uppercase "O". If Susie disagreed with Johnny, you would put an "X" in the black box in square 5. Alternate contestants until someone has made 3 in a row. When that has happened, you can type in a "1" in their scoreboard section by clicking in the black box and entering the "1". If you aren't familiar with adding more slides to the presentation, you can now click on the "Click here if X wins" button to go to the winning slide. If you want more than one game, you can either copy additional slides, or just create multiple presentations. *****NOTE: Once you enter the "X" and "O" into the game board, you must go back and delete them from within the presentation. If you do not clear off the game board before exiting, they will be saved as part of the presentation!

3 Another Presentation © 2000 - All rights Reserved markedamon@hotmail.com with a little help from Jordan Blankenship

4 789 456 123

5 789 456 123 Scoreboard X O Click Here if X Wins Click Here if O Wins

6 1 What war was the beginning of problems between the colonists and Britain?

7 1 The French and Indian War Home

8 2 What famous words were used by the colonists to express their anger about unfair taxes?

9 2 No Taxation Without Representation

10 3 Who was the first person killed in the fight for the colonies’ freedom?

11 3 Crispus Attucks

12 4 What did the colonists do in response to the Tea Act?

13 4 The Boston Tea Party

14 5 Where did the Battle of Bunker Hill actually occur?

15 5 Breed’s Hill

16 6 Who wrote the first draft of the Declaration of Independence?

17 6 Thomas Jefferson

18 7 What did Thomas Paine write?

19 7 Common Sense

20 8 What was the first meeting in Philadelphia called where Congress called for Britain to recognize their rights?

21 8 The First Continental Congress

22 9 What occurred in Boston on March 5, 1770 between colonists and a group of British soldiers?

23 9 The Boston Massacre

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