How to make bingo card with these free printable bingo cards and templates. You can use these bingo cards for baby and bridal shower games, as well as educational activities to learn multiplication, numbers, letters, and ABC’s.
Happy Thursday, readers!
Today I’m excited to bring you a fun math game you can use right away in your classroom. Our Inclusion Lab guest of the week is Nick Jakubowski from Bingomania, who contacted me a while back and offered to share the math bingo cards he created for classroom use. Nick’s going to start us off by introducing the cards and sharing a brief description of math bingo. I’ve also invited Nicole Eredics of The Inclusive Class to add a few ideas on adapting and modifying the game for students with special needs. At the end of the post is a link to the printable cards–print them out on heavy cardstock to start having math bingo fun in your own classroom.
Over to you, Nick!
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Balancing the math needs of an inclusive classroom can be quite challenging. Some children pick up math skills extremely quickly, while others struggle. A child with special needs can have a particularly difficult time seeing their peers rush ahead of them.
The new Common Core standards have presented new challenges, too. The times when certain concepts are introduced have been shuffled around. Some have moved later and others much earlier. Most teachers are required to teach to the Common Core standards–and to overcome the challenges of teaching math the new way, some educators are turning to games that can help teach the concepts.
Children learn best when they are having fun. Simple observation of children during recess can show that. One great way to teach elementary school math skills to students with and without special needs is through the game of Math Bingo. It’s played very similarly to regular bingo:
It’s a simple game, but it can be tweaked to cover quite a number of math topics. Most teachers have math question banks that they draw on for generating quizzes, and these same questions can be used for math bingo. The tricky part is generating cards that cover answer range. One way to do this is to add more of the same number to the cards. For instance, if you are testing addition problems with answers ranging from 0 to 10, you can sprinkle in multiple numbers. Have the students choose one number to cover the available options. This can also keep students who excel in math entertained by focusing on the strategy of the game after they have mastered the problems.
Bingo also has an added advantage: It is a very fair game. So long as the cards are sufficiently random and all possible cards have an equal chance of winning, all of the players can feel like they have an equal chance of winning the game. By combining play and education in this manner, students will be more engaged to learn math skills so they can beat the game.
Here are some additional variations and tips that you can try in your classroom:
Bingo can be used for several other domains as well, such as letter recognition, short word recognition, or even things like the shapes of states if you can print the cards right! Try it out with your students and they may find that math time is over before they know it and that they’re having fun with numbers.
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You can download the math bingo cards at the end of this post–but first, here’s inclusion expert Nicole Eredics with some additional ideas on adapting the game for all learners. She’s broken them down into two groups: accommodationsfor learners who understand the grade-level work but need support accessing it, and modificationsfor learners who are working below grade-level.
Accommodations
Modifications
(Important reminder: any accommodation or modification that is made would be based on the goals specified in the student’s IEP.)
Huge thanks to Nick and Nicole for being here today and sharing a great way to help make math learning fun. Here’s a link to the free printable cards Nick developed; feel free to share with other teachers who might like them.
Print 2 pages of Math Addition Bingo Cards for free. Download a PDF with 2 free pages of bingo cards plus instructions and a randomized call sheet. Customize the events, add your own free space, change the BINGO header, or add a fun checkerboard, etc.
Using a browser, play with 2 pages of Math Addition for free. You host a game and invite a guest via a link. If you enjoy the game, purchase more randomly generated pages below and invite all of your family, friends, coworkers!
Purchased packs are electronically delivered and contain either 10, 25, 50 or 100 randomly generated bingo cards of the 2 page free sample on this page. You may print these packs over and over again forever.
B | I | N | G | O |
3 + 9 | 1 + 2 | 2 + 6 | 12 + 13 | 6 + 9 |
9 + 9 | 1 + 1 | 2 + 4 | 1 + 6 | 1 + 8 |
10 + 11 | 8 + 9 | FREE | 2 + 8 | 9 + 10 |
13 + 13 | 2 + 9 | 5 + 9 | 2 + 2 | 10 + 10 |
11 + 12 | 11 + 11 | 1 + 4 | 4 + 9 | 12 + 12 |
B | I | N | G | O |
6 + 9 | 2 + 6 | 13 + 13 | 9 + 9 | 2 + 8 |
12 + 12 | 1 + 6 | 11 + 12 | 2 + 9 | 10 + 10 |
12 + 13 | 9 + 10 | FREE | 1 + 4 | 11 + 11 |
8 + 9 | 2 + 2 | 1 + 1 | 3 + 9 | 7 + 9 |
2 + 4 | 1 + 8 | 4 + 9 | 1 + 2 | 10 + 11 |