(Print) Use this randomly generated list as your call list when playing the game. There is no need to say the BINGO column name. Place some kind of mark (like an X, a checkmark, a dot, tally mark, etc) on each cell as you announce it, to keep track. You can also cut out each item, place them in a bag and pull words from the bag.
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Summarizes an ARGUMENT source
Introduces a term or uses a normal word in a new way
Cites a popular (i.e. not a scholarly) source
Writer explain/analyzes the significance of a detail of an EXHIBIT
Notes the number of samples/participants they had.
Ends a paragraph with a sentence stating the significance of the paragraph
Expands the implications of their research past their field
Uses a colon in a sentence
Paraphrases an ARGUMENT source
Cites someone as a METHOD source
Uses a dash in a sentence that is not between numbers or in the reference page
Uses “this” as an adjective (i.e.puts a noun after the word “this”)
Uses a source for BACKGROUND
Ends an evidence paragraph with a sentence stating the SIGNIFICANCE of the paragraph
Uses a source as an ARGUMENT SOURCE (meaning the author engages with the source’s claims either positively or negatively)
Indicates a gap in the research that they will fill
Uses a source as an EXHIBIT (meaning the author analyzes or interprets it)
Uses PASSIVE VOICE (i.e., makes their writing harder to read by avoiding “I”)
Place where the writer engages with a “They Say”(meaning they articulate a different author’s view, before building outward and explaining their own idea)
Uses a semicolon to link two independent clauses (meaning they could be their own sentences)
Introduces a CLAIM of her own
Quotes from an ARGUMENT source
The writer cites themself, or someone they work with