Elite Teacher

This game gets your students a lot of practice. It doesn’t tie the chances of winning to ability. This can be motivating for slower students to play. Watch as your students ask the chance gods for help. Encourage them to have fun as they play.

This game is great for reviewing vocabulary that students learned before. It is fun and requires movement around the class. It also incorporates luck to break the tie when students are just as good/bad.

This game is a lot of guessing and a lot of luck. If students are trying to get rid of a card, they need to try and complete as much practice as they can. It's a great way to encourage them to work hard as they have fun.

This game is familiar to students since it is a more fun version of the basic PSS that we have played all our lives. It gets your students moving, and using their bodies. They practice the English that they learned and have lots of fun doing it.

This game gives your students a lot of repetition and practice. It gets them out of their seat and moving around. It allows them to use their energy before it’s time to start writing.

This is a fast-paced game. Your kids are going to have a lot of fun while writing. You get to check their writing and identify what they are struggling to spell or write.

This game is great to check reading comprehension, and student's understanding. Once your students get the hang of it, the secret code game can take as little as 4 questions. This allows you to play more than one round. 

This game is very different from your regular roll-a-die game. It is a fun chance game, and can sometimes make your smarter students a little disappointed. Students get a lot of practice while trying to be the winners in this fun game.

This game is a great luck game. It allows slower students to play a game that is purely luck based. This motivates them to try harder. Your students will get a lot of practice in a very minimal amount of time.

This game is fun and exciting while being simple enough to use even for your younger students. It is a student-to-student game. Meaning students get the most practice with minimal teacher intervention.