1. Arrange students into groups. Each group needs at least ONE person who has a mobile device.
2. If their phone camera doesn't automatically detect and decode QR codes, ask students to
4. Cut them out and place them around your class / school.
1. Give each group a clipboard and a piece of paper so they can write down the decoded questions and their answers to them.
2. Explain to the students that the codes are hidden around the school. Each team will get ONE point for each question they correctly decode and copy down onto their sheet, and a further TWO points if they can then provide the correct answer and write this down underneath the question.
3. Away they go! The winner is the first team to return with the most correct answers in the time available. This could be within a lesson, or during a lunchbreak, or even over several days!
4. A detailed case study in how to set up a successful QR Scavenger Hunt using this tool can be found here.
Question | Answer |
1. What change if any should be made in sentence 5? | Conventions(4.20A) | 2. What is the correct way to write sentences 19 & 20? | CompleteSubject/Predicate(4.20B) | 3. What change, if any, should be ,made in sentence 12? | Editing(4.15D) | 4. What change should be made in sentence 32? | Revision Expository(4.18A) | 5. Samantha wants to add a conclusion to her paper. Which of the following could best follow sentence26 and close his paper? | Revise(4.15C) | 6. Samantha needs to add a transition word or phrase to help her readers move form sentence 8 to sentence 9. Which transition could best be added to the beginning of sentence 9? | Revise(4.15C) |
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