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Instructions
for Activity II
The
Identity Game!
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Hello.
It's me again, Aren. Before we start, let me remind you of my
address so we can talk. Here it is:
I will
be running a game that I want you to play with students from all
over the world. It's a real game, with winners and losers, scores,
penalties and prizes... and hopefully a lot of fun. |
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Here's
the idea: Can you help someone find out which city you
live in without mentioning its name? Can you figure out where
people live if they just describe how they get to school in the
morning, or if they send you a recording of the sounds of their
street, or a picture of where their parents go shopping? If you
can, then you might earn a lot of points, and become a winner in
the Identity Game. |
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This
is how it's played: The game is played in a group made up
of ten teams, each team representing a school in some city,
somewhere in the world. The identities of the cities are kept secret
and each team is represented by an animal during the course of the
game. Each group of ten teams is given a color. If your team is the
Snake in the Blue group, for example, then you will be competing for
points against the Blue Ram, the Blue Camel, the Blue Fox , etc.,
while teams in the group of color Red compete among themselves, and
so on. In the end, the final score you get will be compared with the
scores of all the teams in all the groups.
You
will receive an email telling you your group color and the animal
that represents your team.
The
important part: I will give your team a list of question
about daily life in the city where you live. You can answer those
questions in any way you want, but without using words, names, or
other kinds of information that make it too easy to guess the
identity of your city.
When
all five teams in your group of cities answer the questions, the
answers will be posted on the Web. Now you can look at what
information each of the participants has submitted, and try to guess
the secret identities of their cities. In the mean time, each of the
other four participants will try to guess where you live based on
the answers you gave.
The
Questions: There are seven of them, but each team only
has to answer four.
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You can
choose any two of the odd numbered
questions (1, 3,
5 or 7)
and any two of the even numbered
ones (2, 4
or 6).
One
last thing: I want to tell you why I think you should play
this game.
First of all, I'm pretty sure you will enjoy playing a global
game, competing with others like you, maybe even winning a prize
But I also know the Identity Game can be exciting in other ways. All of
us have some idea about what it must be like to live in foreign cities.
We see pictures, hear stories and some of us may even have spent a
little time in cities far from our own. But do you think the rest of us
realize what life is really like in your city? If you lived in Paris,
this would be your chance to show us that your daily life is not about
seeing the Eifel Tower, but has more to do with what people around you
are interested in, how you spend the first hours of your morning or what
sounds, sights, smells and tastes can only be found in your city.
By playing the Identity Game you can tell us about the small
excitements, boredoms, things you really like and others that bother you
in your surroundings. In the process, you can also find out about the
small secrets of the cities of other teams. And of course, you can enjoy
the game, and maybe even win.
Talk to me if you need anything. Good luck.
-
Aren
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