Select the correct time. RoboClock Work out the elapsed time to move the robot. MathMan Calculate the elapsed time and move around to eat the correct ghost. How Much Time Has Passed?
Work out how much time has passed between the two given times. Clockworks The easy setting includes times that end in , , , or The medium setting includes the above as well as five-minute intervals.
The advanced setting includes times to one-minute intervals, and the challenge setting includes difficult elapsed time problems. Elapsed Time Calculate an ending time when the beginning time and elapsed time are given. Elapsed Time Calculate the elapsed time when given the beginning and ending time. Elapsed Time 3rd Grade Calculate an ending time when the beginning time and elapsed time are given.
Discovering Elapsed Time Determining the amount of time that has elapsed between two time periods. Train Times Help Marty catch the right train. Time Slice Solve word problems involving time.
Clockworks Tell the time given the elapsed time problem. Time Conversion weeks, days, hours, minutes, seconds. Adding and Subtracting Time.
Multiplying and Dividing Time. Time Word Problems Elapsed Time. This is a memory game so students make matches to win. Telling Time in Words — Four options to add time using word problems, find the starting time , telling the time and telling the time in words.
Stop the Clock 4 — Drag the digital clock times to the correct analog clock with time in 1 min. She enjoys featuring creative classroom fun when she's not designing teacher shirts, making kindergarten lesson plans or planning her family's next trip to Disney World. Teach Junkie. Here are 21 free to use icebreakers for online teaching that you can use. Icebreakers are an important part of any training program, as they encourage people to participate from the start of a session, to get to know each other and to feel comfortable working with others.
How do you run icebreakers for online sessions though? There are many icebreakers you can do in face-to-face training sessions and some of them are classics that corporate trainers all over the world have been using for quite a while.
In this guide, we have put together some icebreakers specifically designed to be done online and others that are normally done in traditional classrooms and we explain how to adapt them for the online environment.
Table topics are a set of cards, which you can find for sale online, on sites such as Amazon. Each card has a question on it to start a conversation and every pack of cards contains just over one hundred questions. They are a great way to start a conversation for participants to get to know each other or to start a discussion on a specific topic.
You can choose questions pertinent to the topic of your workshop. You can type some of the questions from the card on a chat board and ask participants to write down their thoughts. Alternatively, you could separate the participants into breakout rooms and assign each group one or two questions so that each person in the group can answer. The aim is to learn information about other people. Hence, this activity can be either a great icebreaker or a way for people within an established team to know each other better and communicate.
This game is good as a warm-up, for participants to familiarize with each other and also to think creatively. Participants can discuss together or be separated into breakout rooms, depending on the number of participants. Because of the creative and cooperative nature of this game, it is a good activity to use either as an icebreaker or as a team-building activity. It can also be useful for a training session on creativity. This is a good activity to get participants to get to know each other, so that they find themselves in a familiar environment.
Participants can do this activity either before the session, in their own time, or during the session. This is a fun activity, which is good to get people to know each other using visuals and creativity. Remember to ask questions that are light-hearted though, as you want to start on a positive note. This is a good activity if your participants are located in many different geographical locations. This is a good activity to get to know participants in a way other than just asking the usual questions.
This is another activity suitable for participants to share information about themselves creatively. This icebreaker is a fun game, aimed at making participants feel relaxed and creating a sense of community.
You could also use it as an energizer, if needed, when you sense that your participants are losing focus. This is a good activity to focus on positive things i. It is also a networking tool, as participants could be interested in achieving the same goal that another person in the group has achieved and whom they might ask for advice from.
This activity is different from the traditional introduce yourself type activities, in that it has an additional challenge. That is, participants have to manage to communicate as effectively as they can, using a very limited number of characters. There is a limitation to this activity though, as participants will need to have a Twitter account and not worry about their tweet being seen by everyone as tweets are public direct messages used to be limited to characters but, in , the limit was extended to 10, characters.
In a traditional face-to-face session, you would prepare a table with a series of interesting facts and then give each participant a copy of the sheet so they can move around the room trying to find somebody to whom that fact applies. This activity is suitable for those who like history and as a trainer, it can help you to introduce a bit of imagination to your icebreaker. There are some great ideas here that I will definitely be incorporating this into my classroom this August! Hi Jess. Great to hear that you will use the classroom training activities.
All the best :. Let us know how it goes. Very interesting activities. They are innovative too. I expect that many activities will be in demand repeatedly. Thanks a lot for sharing these wonderful ideas.
Participants know each other already. What would be another activity that can be done to get them tuned to the session. If the participants already know each other then there are several options for ice breakers.
I have got lots more on the ice breakers main page. Wonderful ideas. Keep it up. Looking forward for more online teaching ideas. I would love to know, for example, how to keep students engaged throughout the minute session and they remain active throughout and not disappear halfway through the session.
Hi Shalini, I am glad to know that you find these ideas useful. I know, it is harder to keep students engaged online! A way to keep their attention is to keep asking them questions and to engage them throughout the training session with activities and discussions, even more so than you would do for a face-to-face training session.
Thank you so much! Wonderful ideas and I will surely incorporate these in my virtual new session. Hi Gagan. Children's Books - Telling Time. Telling Time Vocabulary Word Jumbles. Toys That Teach - Telling Time. Nursery Rhymes - Telling Time. Interactive Analog and Digital Clock Game - Telling Time Students match a digital clock face to an analog clock to learn how to tell time. For every correct answer, an animation will play. World Clock - times around the world What time is it around the world?
Game will display your local time and all time zones around the world.
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