Thursday, December 9, 2010

Holiday Party Games


Holiday Party Games- Merry Christmas

Games are great for challenging the mind and getting a little
friendly competition going between family members. Choose games
that will work for kids and some for the adults. Some games will
work for both. Here is a list of potential games that could liven
up your family celebration this year.

1. Santa Exchanges – This game is full of fun. The object is for
everyone to bring a wrapped gift and put it in a designated area
like under the tree or on a table. Then each person draws a
number from a hat. In turn, each person gets to pick a gift from
under the tree. When it is their turn, each participant has the
option to pick a gift from under the tree or take a gift from
someone who has already chosen. The catch is that once a gift is
chosen, the person has to unwrap it and show the group. All gifts
should be in the same price range but some will be nicer than
others. Also, the first person to go is the last person to get a
chance to exchange their gift. They get to choose from all the
gifts in the group. This game works best for adults. Younger
children may not appreciate the "exchanging" part of the game.

2. Timed Guessing Games – This includes naming the gifts on each
of the 12 days of Christmas, naming as many Christmas carols as
you can, taking a word and making as many words as you can from
it, and a Christmas word scramble. Kids and adults are good for
this one. You can find tons of printables at
Apples4theteacher.com to use for this game.
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http://apples4theteacher-news.com/mail/link.php?id=f1a4ec0cmasfunprint ]

3. Family Trivia – Who knows the most about their relatives? Let
each relative write down something that happened to them and give
them to the person in charge of the game. Everyone else gets a
piece of paper. After each question is read, all players write
down whom in the room each is referring to. The one with the most
correct answers at the end of the list wins.

4. Charades – This is a tried and true party game. All of the
puzzles have to relate to Christmas, Hanukkah, Kwanzaa or other
winter holidays. Some examples include a cartoon, movie, book,
song, or event. The team with the most correct answers wins.

5. Name that Christmas Carol – This is just like “Name that
Tune.” Sing or play a CD with the first line or two of a
Christmas carol. The family contestant has to come up with the
next line correctly. Start off with easy carols and progress to
harder ones as you go up the ladder.

6. Snowman Scramble - Divide the children into two teams, with
one person from each team as the "snowman". Put the snowmen at
one end of the room, with a box of clothes and other things to
dress the snowman in. You could use hats, scarves, jackets, even
a nose on a string, like a clown nose. Have a relay race to see
which team can completely dress their snowman first.

7. Pin the Tail Variations - there are many variations of "Pin
the Tail on the Donkey" that could be played. Use a picture of
reindeer and play "Pin the Nose on Rudolph". Another way to play
is to put Santa's hat on his head. You could have a package that
needs a bow on top. If you want to make it more complicated, for
older kids, have a picture tree with several decorations that
need to be hung on the tree. Whoever gets the most on the tree
wins.

Source:
Apples4theteacher Newsletter Volume III, Issue 14

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