How To Make A Family Feud Game On Powerpoint 2007
This Family Feud PowerPoint Template can be used to review with your class before big tests and exams! I’ve included the instructions directly from the PowerPoint file below so that you can get an idea of how it works.
This template is recommended for PCs only because it uses PowerPoint macros for the scoring. Your version of PowerPoint probably already has macros enabled, but, if it doesn’t, watch this video to learn how to enable them. It’s super easy!
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- Aug 22, 2016 - A list of the best free Family Feud PowerPoint templates for teachers. Create a fun game of Family Feud for your students. Includes PowerPoint 2019.
- Another free game that's popular with teachers and students is Family Feud. These are played just like traditional Family Feud and kids of all ages really get into the game. 3 Free Family Feud PowerPoint Templates.
- PowerPoint Jeopardy! Has been done for years - probably decades at this point. How about a Family Feud game instead? I recently ran a Family Feud-style game at a teacher workshop and it was a blast! It's not too hard to set up, and once it is set up, it's something you can use again and again to engage students and/or educators.
- Use these free Family Feud PowerPoint templates to create your own custom Family Feud. Use your game in the classroom as a fun way to review for a test or to introduce a new unit. Some of the templates are ready to enter questions and then show them to students.
Family Feud premiered in 1978 with host Richard Dawson and has been one of the longest-running game shows on television 2.The television game show is hosted by comedian Steve Harvey, as of the date of publication, and pits two families against each other to provide the most popular answers faster than the other team.
Click here to check out this game template on Teachers Pay Teachers. 11 slides, includes sounds and basic animation.
***How to set up this game template***
1. Come up with seven topics or questions that you want your students to answer. Have them write the questions and their answers on a loose leaf of paper and then turn the paper in to you. Remind your students that one-word or short answers work best.
2. Compile your students’ answers for each question and rank each answer from highest to lowest based on frequency. Keep track of the top eight answers for each question or topic and how many times each answer was given.
For example:
The question is, “What’s your favorite animal?”
-14 people answered with “dog.”
-11 people answered with “cat.”
-9 people answered with “turtle.”
-4 people answered with “horse.”
-4 people answered with “llama.”
-3 people answered with “elephant.”
-2 people answered with “monkey.”
-2 people answered with “snake.”
3. Add the game title or topic to Slide 1.
How To Make A Family Feud Game In Powerpoint
4. Add the questions/topics and the answers you compiled to slides 3-9.
5. Come up with five short questions for the “Fast Money” round and enter these questions into Slide 10.
6. You’re ready to play the game!
***How to play Classroom Feud***
1. Divide your class into two even teams. It’s fun to do boys vs. girls if the numbers are roughly equal!
2. Have them sit in a groups (with their teams) and have each team select a captain. The captain is the only person who can provide answers. It gets too confusing, otherwise.
3. Start with the first question by proceeding to Slide 2. The first captain to buzz in (or raise their hand) is the first team to answer. The answering captain will collaborate with his or her teammates and provide you with an answer (within 10-15 seconds).
- If their answer IS one of the top 8 responses, then click on the corresponding button and add the number of points to the team score at the bottom of the screen. Then, for providing a correct answer, they get to provide another answer until they come up with one that is not on the list.
- If their answer is NOT one of the top 8 responses, click the first of the three “Incorrect Buttons” (blue boxes) above the “Return to Main” button (moving left to right) and then allow the other team to provide an answer. The other team will answer until they provide a term that is NOT on the list. Then, you click the next “Incorrect Button”, and allow the other team to provide an answer again.
The round is over when all of the answers have been provided –OR- all of the three “Incorrect Buttons” have been pushed. When the round is over, proceed back to the main Question/Topic screen (Slide 2) by hitting the “Return to Main” button. Then, add each team’s score from the previous round to the Team Score boxes at the bottom of the screen.
4. Select the next question and repeat gameplay from Step 3. Continue playing the game until the first seven rounds have been completed.
5. Proceed to the “Fast Money” round by clicking on the “Fast Money” button on Slide 2.
6. Have your students get together with their team and give them 30 seconds to come up with one (1) answer for each question. Have them write their answers down so they don’t forget. After the 30 seconds have passed, click the “Proceed” button.
7. Ask each team for their answer for Question 1 (from Slide 10). Type in each team’s score (depending on the answer they provided) into the correct box. I tend to give scores of 1-10 for each answer, where better answers receive more points. Repeat for Questions 2-5, then total each team’s points and enter them into the “Total” boxes. Then, click the “Return to Main” button and add the “Fast Money” points to each team’s overall score.
8. Congratulate the winning team! No homework, perhaps?
If you’re ready to play this game with your class, get it here!
Microsoft Teams does many things – including serving as a platform for group-based games
How To Make A Family Feud Game On Powerpoint 2007 Free
(Note: This is the first in a series of posts we’ll be producing that focus on the fun and games possible with Teams.)
Most long-running games shows have signature catch phrases that instantly identify them. The Price is Right has “Come on down!”; Jeopardy! has “Let’s make it a true daily double”; Wheel of Fortune has “I’d like to buy a vowel”; even Press Your Luck had “No Whammies!”. One game show, though, is most famous for its sound effects. In particular, the sound of a red X indicating the survey did NOT say what the contestant thought it did. Of course, we are referring to Family Feud.
Family Feud is a very long-lived, slightly off-color duel between families vying to match their answers to the oft-cited survey. It’s also a fantastic game to play with your team on Teams. More organizations are doing regular Teams happy hours at week’s end. Adding a game show to the mix can be just right for reducing employee stress, boosting morale and fostering fellowship while we’re separated.
How to Play Family Feud on Microsoft Teams
Playing a Microsoft Teams version of Family Feud can be a simple affair or, if you’re willing to invest a bit more time in preparation, a pretty good facsimile of the real deal. This website offers three free PowerPoint templates you can download. These can be customized with questions of your choosing. One of the templates ever comes complete with the classic theme song and sound effects from the game.
In fact, we decided to make available for download a version already loaded with 11 rounds of questions and survey “answers” so you can get started right away. Click HERE to download now. It’s a .PPT file and instructions are built right into the deck.
Here’s how we played Family Feud during a recent Kiefer Consulting Teams happy hour. First, solicit a volunteer to serve as host. If you have someone who is particularly gregarious and/or is a trivia buff like Cliff Clavin, they’ll make ideal hosts. Give your host a bit of time to create the “survey” questions and load them into a PowerPoint. The host can run the game by sharing the PowerPoint screen in Teams.
Next, divide your team into two “families”. Each family will have one person designated as team captain. Just like on the show, each round begins with a member of each family going head-to-head to be the first to guess the most common answer to that round’s question. In Teams, since there’s no buzzer app (yet), just go with the first person to shout out an answer. If the person guesses the number one answer on the board, he or she can decide to play or pass to the other family. If the first person to guess does not get the number one answer, the other player has a chance to guess.
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Once you have a winner of the head-to-head segment, the host asks the same question to each member of the winning “family”. If the family manages to guess all the correct answers before getting three wrong answers, they win the round. If not, the question is passed to the other family. The other family all suggest answers to the captain, who must make the final determination as to what their families’ answer will be. If they guess a correct answer, that family wins the round.
How To Make A Family Feud Game On Powerpoint
You can carry on like this for as many rounds as you’d like. At Kiefer we did three rounds but weren’t so ambitious as to attempt to conduct the show’s bonus round. But feel free to give it a try.
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This may seem like a silly use of your Teams, your teams and your time. But give it some thought. It’s fun, promotes fellowship, and during a time when most days seem to blend together, it will give your employees something to look forward to. Survey says…try it!