Rory's story cubes I can never praise enough.
Bananagrams
Not so much for creative writing,but a great game that makes spelling exercises fun. We just build one giant crossword puzzle. It is also a great motivator to look new words up in the dictionary. Sometimes we pick a certain theme and create a crossword using words on this topic (for example farm animals or seasons etc.)
The no-cost option can be created out of card-board tiles, wooden squares or craft foam squares stamped with letters and protected with contact paper.
And last is the newest addition to our game chest -Dixit.
How to play: One player describes a card (beautiful illustrations), other players find a card that can be described with the same sentence and secretly pass it to the active player. Cards are shuffled and everybody has to guess which card was original.
This game really makes you think. First time we played it was quite hard, but after we got a hang of it everyone started to come up with most interesting descriptions.
How we use it for our writing lessons: D. pick a card an composes a story about the illustration. Again the more exciting his story is, the higher the praise from grateful readers (aka his little sister, grandma):)
This game is quite pricey, but it can make a great birthday or Christmas gift.
Before we got it we used art postcards such as those I got from my postcrossing exchange and those that were brought by grandma from abroad. Any (not well known) illustration found online will do too. (I saved some in my folder on Pinterest). For us I noticed that the less context the image has- the more interesting D.'s story is.
As I said before these games make fantastic holiday gifts that can be enjoyed by whole family for years to come :)
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