![]() This way also works great if you have a larger group of people and want to call upon 4-6 players (2-3 people on each team) to the front to play and the rest of the group just watches. For this way, you will need a chalkboard or whiteboard to play. Then call up another person from each team to compete against each other and so forth.ģ. Whichever person puts the chain reaction together first, their team gets a point. Give them both an envelope with the same number one the outside (so they have the very same chain reaction they are trying to solve). Have one person from each team compete against each other at a time. ![]() So you’ll have two envelopes with a #1, two envelopes with a #2 and so forth. To keep track of which chain reactions in which envelopes are the same, number the envelopes giving the chain reactions that are the same, the same number. ![]() The only difference is this time you now have 2 copies of each chain reaction instead of just one. Cut them into word strips and put them in envelopes as described above in number one. *This is the quickest way to play the game if you don’t want it to take up much time and want to quickly play the game and give the analogy at the end.Ģ. (So 1 complete chain, a total of 7-word strips, is in each envelope) Give everyone an envelope and when you say GO everyone quickly opens their envelopes and puts their chain reaction together. See how fast each person can complete their chain reaction. Cut up each set of chain reactions into word strips, putting each chain reaction into a separate envelope. Whichever way you decide to play, be sure and explain to all the players that they are basically connecting two-word phrases together and give them the example I gave above.ġ.
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