My oldest son (8 1/2 years old) has always had a
fascination with U.S. geography and the history of the states. This game
combines both.
If you're worried the cards will be see-through, spritz
the back of the printed pages with spray glue (in a well-ventilated area) and
adhere a lightweight piece of scrapbook paper to the glued side before cutting
out.
Now grab your kid and get ready to play.
Shuffle the deck and divide it in half with the cards face down. Each player turns
over the top card on their deck, keeping it to themselves. Then, the youngest
player names a category (e.g. population, number of counties, electoral votes,
etc.).
The opponent reads the number from that category on their card and the
youngest player does the same. For all categories but one, the player with the
largest number is the winner and takes the opponent's card, setting both their
card and their opponent's card in a pile in front of them face up.
If a player selects the "statehood" category,
the winner is the player with the card containing the earliest statehood year.
The player that wins the round selects the category for
the next one.
If the category called results in both players announcing
the same number from their cards (e.g. both states have the same number of
electoral votes), two more cards are drawn and compared. The player to win,
takes all four cards.
When the decks are out of cards, players compare the
number of collected cards from their wins. You can count them or straighten and
set the decks side-by-side. The player with the most cards wins.
Very creative. Thanks for sharing!
ReplyDeleteMeg
Third Grade in the First State
Thanks so much for sharing this!!!
ReplyDeleteYOU ARE AWESOME! I can't wait to use this with my daughter this summer.
ReplyDeleteAnother way to make the cards so that can't be seen through: Cover the cards with Contact paper - there are pretty patterned papers to use on the backs of the cards. I often cover both sides of cards (to make them more durable, using clear Contact on the front side.) Some sets of cards I have used for 30 years by doing this.
ReplyDeleteTry covering the cards with Contact paper - clear on the front and pretty print on the back. I do this to the cards I have made and it makes the so durable that I have had decks for over 25 years. :)
ReplyDeleteHelp, when I tried to download the cards it only downloaded the 1st page.
ReplyDeleteEmail me (the address is under the ABOUT tab). I'll reply with a PDF file attached. Sorry for your troubles!
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