Search results
People also ask
How to play Kaboom game?
Is Kaboom a good center game?
What is a KaBoom Game?
What is Kaboom?
How long can you play Kaboom?
How do I start a KaBoom Game?
Step 1: Identify the Content or Targeted Skill You Want to Focus On. When I say that I find a way to use Kaboom! to teach/review EVERY content area, or any targeted skill, I’m totally serious! I have used it to teach all of the following concepts (plus about a million quite a few more!)
- A Letter To My Students About Standardized Testing
Tests have a way of making you forget about all of the...
- Math Games
Measurement Tag: A Fun Game To Teach Measuring. Shut The...
- Our Marble Jar
Get 3 FULL DAYS of sub plans so you can take your sick days...
- A Letter To My Students About Standardized Testing
Jul 6, 2022 · If you're looking for a small group or centers game for elementary music class, then you'll want to play Kaboom! Kaboom is my kids' favorite centers game for melody, rhythm, instruments of...
- 6 min
- 3K
- Becca's Music Room
Learn how to play the Kaboom game in your classroom to make practicing math facts, sight words, and more a blast for your students!
- How to Play Kaboom!
- Elementary Music Concepts to Use
- When Do We Play It?
- Kaboom as An Assessment
- Where Do I Get It?
Kaboom is a very simple music centers game. To set up, all you need is Kaboom! Cards in a bucket or box. The cards can be any small card with rhythms, melodies, questions, instruments… pretty much anything on it. For simplicity, let’s talk about it as a rhythm music centers game. 1. Students sit in a circle. 2. One at a time, students pull a card o...
This general music centers game can be used with any musical concept, including: 1. Reading rhythms 2. Reading melodies 3. Identifying treble clef notes 4. Playing patterns on instruments (recorders, xylophones, pianos) 5. Identifying or playing piano keys 6. Identifying or playing ukulele chords 7. Bass clef 8. Vocabulary 9. Answering music histor...
Kaboom can be played any time, but here’s a few of my favorite instances to make it happen: 1. Centers (my very favorite time to play) 2. Review days 3. End of class 4. When you travel to the students’ classrooms 5. With a sub 6. After students finish a worksheet or test
One of my favorite things to do when the students play is to walk around and listen to them. I only have to hear students read one or two cards to see if they are understanding the concepts we are working on. As I walk, I make notes on my seating chart to show who has mastered a concept. And viola! A grade that is way more fun than a test.
You can make your own sets, or you can purchase ready made sets on my Teachers Pay Teachers store. This makes Kaboom so easy– all you need to do is print, laminate, and play. I have sets for multiple concepts including: 1. Rhythm (everything from quarter and eighth notes all the way to triplets or syncopa) 2. Solfege (again, tiered!) 3. Treble clef...
Dec 2, 2020 · Here are the steps I use for Kaboom! with prefixes, roots, and suffixes. The student pulls a stick and reads the prefix, root, or suffix. They give the meaning and part of speech (suffixes only). They can pull as many as they would like, but if they pull Kaboom! they have to put all of the sticks back.
Jan 30, 2017 · KABOOM is a great game to play to help develop quick recall of the multiplication tables. It can be played with 2 or more and can be used as a group activity. Write multiplication sums on lolly sticks.
Mar 1, 2023 · First off, you know I had to start with Kaboom. Kaboom is my all time favorite game, which means it is also my favorite rhythm centers game! Here’s how to play: Students sit in a circle. One at a time, students pull a card out of the bucket or box. Students read the rhythm on the card.