It's been far too long since we played a language arts
game. This one works on suffixes, those endings that are added to a word or a
root and change its meaning (e.g. high becomes highness, with the -ness
suffix).
I made a simple game for my son and I to play. (Download
a free 5-page PDF from Google Drive here.)
There are two sets of cards. The first is a full-sized set of 12 cards
displaying different suffixes and their meaning.
The rest of the cards are smaller and contain words or
roots.
When my 3rd grade son got home from school we reviewed
what suffixes are with a little help from Robin Pulver's book Happy Endings. This fictional tale is
chock full of suffixes. It's a language arts lesson built into a story, which ranks right up there as my favorite genre of children's books.
After we finished Pulver's book, we played Super Suffixes.
After shuffling both sets of cards, we flipped three of
the large suffix cards over. Then each of us drew five cards from the word
deck.
We looked at the words we'd drawn and tried to match them
with any of the three suffixes. Each player earns a point for every suffix
matched with a word. We made matches like happy and -ness, and disgrace and
-ful. I could have named this game silly
suffixes, because some of the words we tried with our suffixes were
downright goofy. "Mom, is weightness a word?"
"I don't think so, son."
"Aww, man." (giggling)
When we had matched all of the cards from our hand that
we could, we kept any cards we were unable to match, drew enough cards from the
word deck so we had 5 each again, and flipped over three new suffixes. We
played four rounds and kept score to determine who won.
This game is a great way to boost a child's vocabulary, help
them deduce the meaning of words with suffixes, and grasp a greater
appreciation for the English language.
Thank you!
ReplyDeletethank you very much!
ReplyDeleteWhat a great idea! And realisation as well))
ReplyDelete