The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes sample categories, clues, questions, and answers. Players are directed to provide responses to clues by entering answers and questions in the appropriate spaces and tracking scores on the game board as they play through rounds and categories.
This tutorial teaches students how to use the Destiny online card catalog system to search for and find materials in the school library. It provides step-by-step instructions for performing searches, explains what information is displayed for each item, and defines important terminology like call numbers and the Dewey Decimal System used to organize materials. Students are guided through sample searches and questions to become familiar with the system.
A bibliography is an alphabetical list of all sources used in an essay or research paper. It gives credit to ideas and materials borrowed from other sources to avoid plagiarism. A bibliography shows sources were not stolen but borrowed, and proves the work is not plagiarized. It also provides additional information for readers who want to learn more. Teachers require bibliographies and will deduct points from grades without one. The document provides examples of bibliographic citations for different source types like books, websites, encyclopedia articles, and magazines. It demonstrates the basic bibliographic format of indenting lines after the first and using italics for titles.
The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes categories, clues, and questions in various dollar amounts. Players are instructed to provide answers to the clues and questions as they work through the rounds and categories. Scoring is tracked through the game.
The document is a Jeopardy-style game covering topics related to English language arts including the writing process, parts of speech, types of writing, and general English terms. It poses questions on these topics and provides answers in a multiple choice format. The questions cover defining key terms and concepts within each category.
The document provides the instructions and categories for a Jeopardy-style game about the Civil War, weapons, Abraham Lincoln, and friendship. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, questions that are actually answers, and answers that are actually questions for players to provide. The game includes 6 categories with 5 questions each ranging from $100 to $1000 and a final Jeopardy round.
1. The document provides the instructions and setup for a Civil War-themed Jeopardy game, including categories, dollar amounts for questions, and scoreboards for multiple players.
2. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions into the scoreboard and click on dollar amounts to reveal the corresponding questions.
3. The game includes categories about the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln, and includes sample questions about troops numbers and dates.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using an electronic presentation. It includes categories, clues, and spaces to enter question answers. Players take turns selecting dollar amounts and responding with questions to reveal the clues and answers. Scores are tracked throughout the rounds and a final jeopardy question is included at the end.
The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy on topics related to drugs, alcohol, bullying, and friendship. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, questions, and spaces to enter scores. Players are instructed to click on dollar amounts to reveal the question, then click anywhere to see the correct question. Scores are entered on the game board and podium. The file is not to be saved to avoid overwriting the original.
This document provides the directions and questions for a Civil War-themed Jeopardy game. The game includes categories on Confederate weapons, lives of African Americans, Confederate strategies, punishments, and more. Players are instructed to enter answers to questions in the appropriate boxes and keep track of scores throughout the rounds.
The document contains a series of math word problems organized into categories with increasing dollar values from $100 to $500. Each problem provides the relevant context and then asks the reader to determine the number of possible outcomes. The final category problem asks how many different ice cream combinations can be obtained from a shop offering various flavors, containers, toppings and sauces. The document concludes by stating the number of combinations is 36.
This document provides an overview of the game Jeopardy and tests the player's knowledge of citing and formatting sources in APA style. It contains questions in different dollar amounts about topics like formatting papers, creating in-text citations, formatting reference list entries, and miscellaneous APA style rules. The final question asks how to distinguish between works published in the same year by the same author.
This document outlines the rules and structure for a Jeopardy-style game about The Catcher in the Rye novel. It includes 6 categories with 5 questions each about characters, symbols, quotes, and other elements of the novel. Players will select a question, provide the answer, and earn points corresponding to the question value. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using the presentation. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The game includes rounds and a final jeopardy round. Players track their scores on the provided game board.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions, as well as spaces to enter answers, questions, and scores. Players are instructed to provide answers for the questions and questions for the answers. The game includes rounds and a final jeopardy round.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using the presentation. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The document also includes sample questions and answers for several categories like clothing, friendship, bullying, and problem solving.
The document provides instructions for playing a game that involves filling in questions and answers on different topic boards. Players take turns selecting a dollar amount which reveals either a question or answer depending on their turn. The game involves tracking scores on a game board as topics are completed until all clues are used.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers but does not include any actual Jeopardy clues or questions. The instructions explain how to navigate through the presentation, enter scores, and select the correct questions when answers are given by contestants.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers but does not include any actual Jeopardy clues or questions. The instructions direct the user to navigate through the presentation, enter responses, keep track of picked questions, and input scores without saving any changes to the original file.
The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a presentation. It includes category titles and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The game includes sample questions about topics like the Civil War, bullying, and decision making. Players keep score and can continue until all clues are answered.
This document provides the instructions and game board for a Jeopardy game about the Civil War. It includes 6 categories with 5 questions each for Round 1, and the same for Round 2. The categories include Battles, Union, Confederates, Generals, Women, and Lincoln's Assassination. It prompts the player to enter the questions and answers and keep track of scores. A final jeopardy question and answer space is provided at the end.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It provides directions on how to navigate through the game, input answers and questions, keep score on the game boards, and contains sample questions in categories like "Winning the Civil War", "Union", and "Slaves". The instructions emphasize to not save over the original game file after playing.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It provides directions on how to navigate through the game, input answers and questions, keep score on the game boards, and contains sample questions in categories like "Winning the Civil War", "Union", and "Slaves". The instructions emphasize to not save over the original game file after playing.
This document contains instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes templates for 6 categories with 5 questions each, valued from $100 to $500. Players would provide answers to the questions, and the game would check if they are correct before revealing the actual questions. The presentation keeps track of scores and allows playing multiple rounds before a final jeopardy round.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using a PowerPoint presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, questions, and answers for the first two rounds. The player is directed to enter scores and navigate through rounds and slides. It does not provide the final Jeopardy question/answer.
This document provides instructions for playing a Civil War-themed Jeopardy game. It explains that players should enter answers for the questions shown and questions for the answers. The game board includes categories like North, South, Lincoln, Food, and Weapons. Players take turns selecting dollar amounts and clicking to reveal the corresponding question or answer. The game tracks scores and includes spaces for a final jeopardy round.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game about the American Civil War. It provides the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers. Players are instructed to scroll through and fill in the questions and answers on various topics related to the Civil War such as battles, generals, slavery, the Union, and Confederates. It also includes a final jeopardy round.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game about the American Civil War. It provides the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers. Players are instructed to scroll through and fill in the questions and answers on various topics related to the Civil War such as battles, generals, slavery, the Union, and Confederates. It also includes a final jeopardy round.
The document appears to be a quiz for a game show called "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" with multiple choice questions and potential prize amounts listed from $1 million to $100. It contains 15 multiple choice questions on various math, word, and logic problems for contestants to answer in order to win larger cash prizes.
The document contains a series of questions and prompts related to researching and writing a paper on endangered species. The best organization would be to first answer the question "What is causing the problem?", then "Which species are endangered?", followed by "What will happen if these animals disappear from the earth?" and concluding with "What are the solutions to the problem?". This structure introduces the issue, provides relevant details, discusses the consequences, and concludes by discussing potential solutions.
The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy on topics related to drugs, alcohol, bullying, and friendship. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, questions, and spaces to enter scores. Players are instructed to click on dollar amounts to reveal the question, then click anywhere to see the correct question. Scores are entered on the game board and podium. The file is not to be saved to avoid overwriting the original.
This document provides the directions and questions for a Civil War-themed Jeopardy game. The game includes categories on Confederate weapons, lives of African Americans, Confederate strategies, punishments, and more. Players are instructed to enter answers to questions in the appropriate boxes and keep track of scores throughout the rounds.
The document contains a series of math word problems organized into categories with increasing dollar values from $100 to $500. Each problem provides the relevant context and then asks the reader to determine the number of possible outcomes. The final category problem asks how many different ice cream combinations can be obtained from a shop offering various flavors, containers, toppings and sauces. The document concludes by stating the number of combinations is 36.
This document provides an overview of the game Jeopardy and tests the player's knowledge of citing and formatting sources in APA style. It contains questions in different dollar amounts about topics like formatting papers, creating in-text citations, formatting reference list entries, and miscellaneous APA style rules. The final question asks how to distinguish between works published in the same year by the same author.
This document outlines the rules and structure for a Jeopardy-style game about The Catcher in the Rye novel. It includes 6 categories with 5 questions each about characters, symbols, quotes, and other elements of the novel. Players will select a question, provide the answer, and earn points corresponding to the question value. The team with the most points at the end of the game wins.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using the presentation. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The game includes rounds and a final jeopardy round. Players track their scores on the provided game board.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions, as well as spaces to enter answers, questions, and scores. Players are instructed to provide answers for the questions and questions for the answers. The game includes rounds and a final jeopardy round.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using the presentation. It includes categories and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The document also includes sample questions and answers for several categories like clothing, friendship, bullying, and problem solving.
The document provides instructions for playing a game that involves filling in questions and answers on different topic boards. Players take turns selecting a dollar amount which reveals either a question or answer depending on their turn. The game involves tracking scores on a game board as topics are completed until all clues are used.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers but does not include any actual Jeopardy clues or questions. The instructions explain how to navigate through the presentation, enter scores, and select the correct questions when answers are given by contestants.
This document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers but does not include any actual Jeopardy clues or questions. The instructions direct the user to navigate through the presentation, enter responses, keep track of picked questions, and input scores without saving any changes to the original file.
The document provides instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a presentation. It includes category titles and dollar amounts for questions. Players are instructed to enter answers which are really questions, and questions which are really answers. The game includes sample questions about topics like the Civil War, bullying, and decision making. Players keep score and can continue until all clues are answered.
This document provides the instructions and game board for a Jeopardy game about the Civil War. It includes 6 categories with 5 questions each for Round 1, and the same for Round 2. The categories include Battles, Union, Confederates, Generals, Women, and Lincoln's Assassination. It prompts the player to enter the questions and answers and keep track of scores. A final jeopardy question and answer space is provided at the end.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It provides directions on how to navigate through the game, input answers and questions, keep score on the game boards, and contains sample questions in categories like "Winning the Civil War", "Union", and "Slaves". The instructions emphasize to not save over the original game file after playing.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It provides directions on how to navigate through the game, input answers and questions, keep score on the game boards, and contains sample questions in categories like "Winning the Civil War", "Union", and "Slaves". The instructions emphasize to not save over the original game file after playing.
This document contains instructions for playing a game of Jeopardy using a digital presentation. It includes templates for 6 categories with 5 questions each, valued from $100 to $500. Players would provide answers to the questions, and the game would check if they are correct before revealing the actual questions. The presentation keeps track of scores and allows playing multiple rounds before a final jeopardy round.
The document provides instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game using a PowerPoint presentation. It includes the categories, dollar amounts, questions, and answers for the first two rounds. The player is directed to enter scores and navigate through rounds and slides. It does not provide the final Jeopardy question/answer.
This document provides instructions for playing a Civil War-themed Jeopardy game. It explains that players should enter answers for the questions shown and questions for the answers. The game board includes categories like North, South, Lincoln, Food, and Weapons. Players take turns selecting dollar amounts and clicking to reveal the corresponding question or answer. The game tracks scores and includes spaces for a final jeopardy round.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game about the American Civil War. It provides the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers. Players are instructed to scroll through and fill in the questions and answers on various topics related to the Civil War such as battles, generals, slavery, the Union, and Confederates. It also includes a final jeopardy round.
This document appears to be instructions for playing a Jeopardy-style game about the American Civil War. It provides the categories, dollar amounts, and templates for entering questions and answers. Players are instructed to scroll through and fill in the questions and answers on various topics related to the Civil War such as battles, generals, slavery, the Union, and Confederates. It also includes a final jeopardy round.
The document appears to be a quiz for a game show called "Who Wants to Be a Millionaire" with multiple choice questions and potential prize amounts listed from $1 million to $100. It contains 15 multiple choice questions on various math, word, and logic problems for contestants to answer in order to win larger cash prizes.
The document contains a series of questions and prompts related to researching and writing a paper on endangered species. The best organization would be to first answer the question "What is causing the problem?", then "Which species are endangered?", followed by "What will happen if these animals disappear from the earth?" and concluding with "What are the solutions to the problem?". This structure introduces the issue, provides relevant details, discusses the consequences, and concludes by discussing potential solutions.
A bibliography is a list of sources used in an essay or research paper. It provides credit to sources and shows that ideas were borrowed, not stolen, to avoid plagiarism. A bibliography also offers additional information for readers and is often required for a grade. The basic format requires sources be listed alphabetically with consistent indentation and formatting for titles, authors, publishers and dates. Examples show proper citation formats for books, websites, encyclopedia articles and magazines.
An encyclopedia is a reference source that provides general information about many topics through entries arranged alphabetically. It can help find information for school reports or answer questions. Print encyclopedias contain multiple volumes that are organized alphabetically, with guide words to locate subjects. Online encyclopedias also provide information but do not have physical volumes. Both types of encyclopedias present overviews of people, places, events and things in a concise manner through entries indexed by keywords.
The document discusses the key pieces of information found on a book's title page and copyright page. The title page typically contains the book title and 5 key pieces of identifying information. The copyright page, located after the title page, includes the year the book was made, the publisher, where it was published, and uses the copyright symbol (a small circle with a c in the center) next to the date. It also explains that the dedication page identifies who the book was written for.
This document discusses different types of reference sources that can be used to gather information for a report. It lists various reference sources like almanacs, atlases, dictionaries, encyclopedias, periodicals, and the internet. It also provides examples of what type of reference source would be best to use for different types of information needs, such as using a dictionary to look up word definitions or an atlas to identify states that border another state. The overall message is that reference sources are tools that can help find information on a topic and each has its own strengths for certain information goals.
A reference source is a tool used to find information on a topic. Common reference sources include almanacs, atlases, encyclopedias, dictionaries, thesauruses, periodicals, and the internet. Each reference source has its own strengths - for example, an atlas is best for finding geographic information, while an encyclopedia provides broad overviews of topics. Knowing which reference source to use for different types of questions can help efficiently find needed information.
A reference source is a tool that people use to find information about a topic. Some common reference sources include encyclopedias, dictionaries, atlases, almanacs, and the internet. The best reference source to use depends on the type of information needed, such as using a dictionary to look up word definitions or pronunciations and using an atlas to find information about locations and maps.
A dictionary is a book that contains an alphabetical list of words and their meanings. Entries include the spelling, definition, pronunciation, origin, and sometimes an illustration of the word. Guide words at the top of each page indicate the first and last word on that page to help the user locate words more efficiently. A dictionary is an important reference tool used to find word meanings, spellings, pronunciations, parts of speech, and plural forms.
This document tests knowledge of reference tools like dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases and more. It contains multiple choice questions about using these tools to find information, with topics like presidents, locations, definitions and more. Correct answers demonstrate an understanding of how to locate essential data using specialized reference sources.
The document provides step-by-step instructions for writing a research report, beginning with focusing on a topic, asking and answering questions, constructing the report by organizing information into paragraphs, tying up loose ends through editing, and finally presenting the final report.
An atlas is a reference book containing maps and information about countries, continents, and places around the world. It includes tables of contents, indexes, maps with keys and legends to understand symbols, and grid coordinates to locate places. An atlas provides essential geographic information to learn about the world.
This document contains multiple choice questions about reference tools and how to find information in books and online resources. Some key reference tools mentioned are dictionaries, encyclopedias, atlases, almanacs, indexes, tables of contents, and online library catalogs. The questions cover topics like using guide words in a dictionary, looking up synonyms in a thesaurus, and searching indexes, tables of contents, or bibliographies to find information within books or about authors.
The document discusses different types of indexes used in almanacs to locate information. It explains that a quick thumb index uses broad subjects alphabetically, while a quick reference index lists more specific subjects on one page. A general index is multipage and lists very specific subjects and subheadings. The document then provides directions for an activity where students work with partners to use an almanac to answer questions, bringing their answers to the teacher to check. It emphasizes carefully reading the questions to identify key words to look up answers.
A thesaurus is a book that lists synonyms and sometimes antonyms for words. Synonyms are words that have similar meanings, while antonyms are words with opposite meanings. Using a thesaurus can help improve writing by finding the right word to convey precise meaning and introducing new vocabulary. The thesaurus entry words are alphabetized, and under each entry are listed alternative words to substitute.
The document discusses how using synonyms can make writing more interesting by avoiding repetition. It explains that a thesaurus lists synonyms that have similar meanings to help writers find new words. The thesaurus entries are in alphabetical order and provide alternative words to substitute in sentences while keeping the same meaning. An example shows looking up the synonym for "mad" and substituting the synonym "boiling" in a sentence to vary word choice.
The document discusses the key parts of a book, including the title page, copyright page, table of contents, glossary, and index. The title page contains the book title, author, illustrator, publisher and place of publication. The copyright page includes the publisher, publication location, and copyright date. The table of contents lists chapters and page numbers. The glossary defines new words from the book alphabetically. The index lists names, places and topics from the book alphabetically with their associated page numbers. Knowing these parts helps readers locate information more easily.
The document discusses what maps are and how they can be used. It explains that maps come in different scales, with some showing small areas like a room and others depicting the entire world. Maps represent places from an aerial perspective and use symbols to indicate features and help people find their way or understand spatial relationships between locations. The document also introduces map grids and using cardinal directions like north, south, east, and west to provide directions.
There are many genres or categories of literature including fiction and non-fiction. Some common fiction genres are realistic fiction, historical fiction, folklore, fairy tales, fantasy, mystery, and science fiction. Realistic fiction tells stories that could really happen, historical fiction takes place in the past, and fairy tales involve magic and good triumphing over evil. Common non-fiction genres include informational books which provide facts, and biographies which tell the true stories of people's lives.
2. Mark E. Damon Another Presentation 息 2001 - All rights Reserved [email_address]
3. Directions: Scroll through the presentation and enter the answers (which are really the questions) and the questions (which are really the answers). Enter in the categories on the main game boards. As you play the game, click on the TEXT DOLLAR AMOUNT that the contestant calls, not the surrounding box. When they have given a question, click again anywhere on the screen to see the correct question. Keep track of which questions have already been picked by printing out the game board screen and checking off as you go. Click on the Game box to return to the main scoreboard. Enter the score into the black box on each players podium. Continue until all clues are given. When finished, DO NOT save the game. This will overwrite the program with the scores and data you enter. You MAY save it as a different name, but keep this file untouched!
4. Round 1 Round 2 Final Jeopardy Team Name Team Name Team Name
5. Parts of a Book Reference Sources Research Dictionary $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $100 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $200 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $300 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $400 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 $500 Round 2 Final Jeopardy Scores In the Library Take Your Chances!
6. $100 Steven wants to know what pages in his book will tell him about the Solar System. Where should he look? index glossary title page copyright page
8. $200 What do we call the part of a book that lists the chapters and their page numbers? A. glossary B. title page C. copyright page D. table of contents
12. $400 Ben found a book titled Our Solar System . Where should he look to see if the book has information on black holes? title page index glossary copyright page
20. $300 Mrs. Frost is new in town and needs to find a dentist to clean her teeth. Where can she look to find a list of dentists in town? newspaper telephone book magazine atlas
23. $400 Beth needs to illustrate a map of the continent of Africa. She needs to show the countries of Africa and their capitals. What reference book would she use? almanac atlas thesaurus encyclopedia
27. $100 The main purpose of a research paper is to tell your personal opinion entertain the reader explain the information you found make a copy of someone elses work
28. $100 C. explain the information you found Scores
29. $200 Which would be the BEST to use as a source for a report about frogs? Frogs in Swamps All about Frogs Poisonous Frogs Froggy Plays Soccer
31. $300 You are writing a report about horses. You should put information about different types of horses in the cover title page bibliography body of the report
33. $400 Marvin is doing a report on whales. What information would he find in an encyclopedia? how to pronounce the word whale basic information about whales recent news stories about whales different opinions about how whales communicate
41. $300 Jeff is using the Internet to learn about the Civil War. He wants to return to the opening page. Where should he click? favorites button home button forward button search button
43. $400 One of the books Tracys teacher recommended was a novel called The Red Pony by John Steinbeck. If Tracy wanted to find out more about it, what would be the BEST way for him to do so? look in the library catalog under horses type in the key word pony in an Internet search look under famous American plays in the subject index and then look for The Red Pony type in John Steinbeck in an Internet search and then look for a subcategory of novels
44. $400 type in John Steinbeck in an Internet search and then look for a subcategory of novels Scores
45. $500 Name three (of the four) ways to search for a book using our online catalog?
49. $200 tree (tre) n. 1. A large woody plant with a long trunk having many branches in the upper part. 2. A wooden beam, bar, post, etc. 3. Anything like a tree, as in having many branches. Which part of speech is the word tree? a pronoun an adjective a noun an adverb
55. $500 Watch (woch) 1. (v.) to observe, regard, look at. 2. (v.) look after, care for, protect. Supervise. 3. (n.) clock, timepiece, pocket watch. 4. (n.) sentry, security guard, lookout caretaker. Which meaning of the word is used in the sentence below? Im going to watch my neighbors puppy while theyre at work. A. definition 1 definition 2 definition 3 definition 4
59. $200 Joel wants to find out what books our library has about football. How should he search using the library on-line catalog? author subject call number title
61. $300 Index Crocodiles - See Reptiles Natural environment, 10-12 Feeding habits, 18-24 Reproduction, 30-50 Other related species, 52-60 Heath found a book on crocodiles. Using the books index above, where would he most likely look to find information about alligators? pgs. 10-12 pgs. 18-24 pgs. 30-50 pgs. 52-60
65. $500 Alex has chosen hurricanes as the topic for his research report. What is the next thing he should do? take notes write a first draft write an outline gather information