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How to make a jeopardy sytle game

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How to create a Jeopardy-like game using PowerPoint, or a similar software. Intended for Librarians creating teen programs.
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HOW TO MAKE A JEOPARDY-SYTLE GAME Use PowerPoint to create a FREE themed game! By Shelly Longoria, Teen Services Librarian Palm Springs Public Library, January 2013
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Page 1: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

HOW TO MAKE A JEOPARDY-SYTLE GAME

Use PowerPoint to create a FREE themed game!By Shelly Longoria, Teen Services LibrarianPalm Springs Public Library, January 2013

Page 2: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

CREATE YOUR OWN SPECIALLY THEMED GAME!

Creating a Jeopardy-like game using PowerPoint, or an equivalent, is actually easier than it seems. There are many instructions, templates, and examples online which I have boiled down to this easy method.

The trick to creating a technically successful game is all in the proper hyperlinking of the slides. Here is an easy step-by-step tutorial.

Page 3: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

WHAT YOU WILL NEED

PowerPoint, or similar program, that allows linking between slides.

At least 25 questions and answers, in five categories. There will be five questions in each category. Make

them increase in difficulty, i.e., the 10 dollar/point question should be easier than the 50 dollar/point question.

Use whatever terminology (dollar/point) you are comfortable with. For these instructions, I will use the term point.

Page 4: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

WHAT YOU WILL NEED

This will fill one Jeopardy board. If you need a longer game, repeat this

entire process, adding a second game board (raising the point amounts) & more difficult questions for “Double Jeopardy.”

Page 5: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

WHAT YOU WILL NEED

Grahics A background image, or choose a preset Design

from PowerPoint. A small image (thumbnail) to place in the corner

of each slide. This will be your hyperlink spot to navigate through your slides and run the game.

Any graphics you wish to add to question/answer slides.

Prize(s) for correct answers and/or a grand prize for the overall winner.

Now, the details!

Page 6: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

TITLE CARD

Your first slide will be a title card. The Summer Reading manuals usually have PowerPoint backgrounds to coordinate with the Program theme. I try to utilize any themed graphics available (such as logos for Teen Tech Week, Teen Read Week, etc.) where ever possible in the game.

Page 7: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

GAME BOARD

Your next slide will be the game board. This is just a large table; make it large enough to cover the

entire slide. Give it FIVE columns, and SIX rows, and you will end up with a grid containing 30 squares.

Page 8: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

GAME BOARD

After setting up and sizing the table, experiment with PowerPoint’s “Table Tools” and “Design” for color selection, shading, cell borders and effects.

In the “Table Tools” / “Layout” / “Alignment” for formatting cells, choose Center Alignment and Center Vertically so the numbers are in the center of each cell, as you see in the example on the previous slide.

The first row will be your category names The remaining rows will be point amounts.

You will enter the number 10 in each box across the first row, 20 in each box across the second row, etc. These are the point values for the questions.

Page 9: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

QUESTION & ANSWER SLIDES Now make the question and answer slides. It does not

matter what particular order they are in when you create them, it only matters that you link them correctly. (Linking instructions coming up.)

Let’s say you were going to make all the question and answer slides for the first category. In this example, the first category is “There’s an app for that!” The next slide will be your 10 point question in the

category, “There’s an app for that!” Create your slide with the question and a graphic if

you’d like. Place your thumbnail image at the bottom corner of

the slide. This will be where you (later) set your link point. I.e., the thumbnail image will be linked to another slide. You will click on these thumbnails to navigate through your slides and run the game. (Linking instructions coming up.)

Page 10: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

QUESTION

OPTIONALGRAPHIC

THUMBNAIL IMAGE(NOT OPTIONAL)

Page 11: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

QUESTION & ANSWER SLIDES The following slide will be the answer

to the above 10 point question. Create your slide with the answer and a

graphic if you’d like. Place your thumbnail image at the bottom

corner of the slide.

ANSWER

OPTIONALGRAPHIC

THUMBNAIL IMAGE

(NOT OPTIONAL)

Page 12: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

CREATE ALL YOUR SLIDES

Continue making question and answer slides in this manner for all point values in all categories.

Make the questions in each category increasingly difficult as the points go up.

The slides do not have to be separated into categories within the slideshow.

You will end up with 25 question slides and 25 answer slides.

ALL of them should have your thumbnail image in the bottom corner.

Page 13: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

JUST FOR MORE FUN… OPTIONAL

You may place a single slide anywhere in the game for the “Daily Double.” If a player selects this square, you may ask them a unique question for a special prize, or just give them a special prize for finding the “Daily Double.”

Page 14: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

NOW LET’S MAKE IT A GAME! You will be using the Insert menu, and

the Hyperlink button. Linking is what makes the game work, so be

careful to link the slides properly. If you used the “Daily Double” slide, it will

link back to the game board slide. You will be attaching each hyperlink to the

thumbnail image at the bottom of each of your slides.

Are you ready for the big secret to making this a game?! … HYPERLINKS!

Page 15: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

1) LINK FROM BOARD TO QUESTION Each POINT amount on the game board

slide will link to the question in that category for that point value. On the game board, highlight 10 in the first

column. Click Insert on the File Menu Click Hyperlink on the Insert

Menu Choose Link to: Place in This

Document Select the QUESTION slide for

your first category, 10-point value

Page 16: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

2) LINK FROM QUESTION TO ANSWER

Select your thumbnail, and navigate to the Insert Hyperlink menu.

Link your thumbnail to the ANSWER slide for this question.

Page 17: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

3) LINK ANSWER BACK TO GAME BOARD

Select your thumbnail, and navigate to the Insert Hyperlink menu.

Link your thumbnail for EACH ANSWER slide back to the GAME

BOARD & the game continues!

Page 18: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

LINKING SUMMARY

Link each point value to the slide with the QUESTION for that point value.

Link each QUESTION slide to its ANSWER slide.

Link each ANSWER slide back to the game board.

If you included a Daily Double slide, link it back to the game board.

Page 19: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

HOW TO PLAY Choose order of players however you’d like. When a player chooses a category & point

amount, click on the point amount to go to that QUESTION slide.

Click on the thumbnail on the QUESTION slide to reveal the ANSWER slide for that question.

Click on the thumbnail on the ANSWER slide to go back to the game board.

The next player chooses a category/point value, and the game continues until you run out of questions.

Page 20: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

PRIZES

There are different ways you can award prizes, depending on your budget, and the theme.

If you have incentive items, you could give out items of increasing size for each point amount answered correctly.

For example, for the “Teens Own the Night” SRP theme, I awarded a button for a correct 10-point answer, a slap bracelet for a correct 20-point question, a book for 30-point, a water bottle for 40-point, and a string backpack for 50. For the grand prize, I filled a string backpack with books, etc., I’d collected from our Friends’ donations.

Page 21: How to make a jeopardy sytle game

PRIZES You should also keep track of players’

points for an overall grand prize. This may be the only prize awarded,

depending on your budget. For FREE prizes, watch the donations

coming in to your Friends group, or ask for donations from local retailers, etc.


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