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What’s in the bag? | Prewriting game

The What's in the Bag game is a fun prewriting guessing game that introduces or reinforces the concept of concrete or descriptive writing. Fun for all ages!

When I was teaching junior high and high school writing classes, we made sure to spend part of each class in play. No one is too old for games! Besides, pre-writing activities help prime the writing pump and get those creative juices bubbling! So we played word games, sentence-building games, and games that built vocabulary or taught writing skills, including this “What’s in the Bag?” game.

Not all writing games require pencil and paper. “What’s in the Bag?” It’s a guessing game that fits many levels of sophistication. So it’s adaptable to all ages and great for reinforcing the concept of concrete or descriptive writing. Here’s how to play:

Advance Prep

Gather together several paper lunch bags, each containing a common object. Vary the textures and shapes of the objects.

Directions

  1. Give your student one of the paper bags and have him put his hand inside.
  2. Instruct him to describe the object by its properties, not its function. Tell him: “Feel the object and describe it using adjectives or other phrases to describe its features. Don’t say what it looks like, where to find it, or how to use it.”  (If the object is a fork, the student might say, “It’s hard, cold, made of metal, sharp, one end has four prongs, it’s long and thin,” etc. He may not say, “You eat with it, you stab food with it, it’s in the silverware drawer,” etc.)
  3. Siblings or classmates can take turns trying to guess the object.
  4. Since students of all ages can play the What’s in the Bag game, involve your whole family or class. They’ll enjoy taking turns guessing and describing.

Hints and Tips 

The “What’s in the Bag Game” is one of many pre-writing activities and writing games tucked into the pages of all our WriteShop curriculum: WriteShop Primary for grades K-3, WriteShop Junior for grades 3-6, and WriteShop I & II for middle and high school students.

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