Global Trading Game: Grade Level
Global Trading Game: Grade Level
Global Trading Game: Grade Level
GRADE LEVEL
412
Students become geologists, miners, economic advisors, and international traders as they analyze their countrys resources and needs and trade with other countries to enhance their countrys economic position and environmental quality.
SUBJECT AREAS
Science Social Studies Math Language Arts
Permission to Reproduce
NEED materials may be reproduced for non-commercial educational purposes.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Correlations to National Science Standards .................... 4 Overview of Game .......................................................... 5 Teacher Guide ................................................................ 6 Game Construction ........................................................ 9 Jobs & Descriptions Transparency Master ...................... 11 Country Profiles ........................................................ 12-17 Country Comparison Chart ............................................. 18 Teacher Key ................................................................... 19 Energy Bucks Master ...................................................... 20 Country Cards and Impacts ....................................... 21-56 Student Worksheet ......................................................... 57 Geologist Map ............................................................... 58 Impact Data Sheet ......................................................... 59 International Trade Center Sign....................................... 60 Game Boards ............................................................ 61-62 Evaluation Form ............................................................. 63
The information in this publication is from the Energy Information Administration (2004), U.S. Census Bureau, Rand McNally World Facts & Maps, and Dorling Kindersley Cartopedia.
The Global Trading Game was developed by the Ohio Energy Project.
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3. Natural Hazards
b. Human activities can induce hazards through resource acquisition, urban growth, land-use decisions, and waste disposal. c. Hazards can present personal and societal challenges because misidentifying the change or incorrectly estimating the rate and scale of change may result in either too little attention and significant human costs or too much cost for unneeded preventive measures.
4. Environmental Quality
a. Natural ecosystems provide an array of basic processes that affect humans. Those processes include maintenance of the quality of the atmosphere, generation of soils, control of the hydrologic cycle, disposal of wastes, and recycling of nutrients. Humans are changing many of these basic processes, and the changes may be detrimental to humans.
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OVERVIEW OF ACTIVITY
Students work cooperatively in six groups, each of which is assigned an unnamed country. Each country has varying types and amounts of the following commodities: money, energy resources, technology, industry, and workforce. The students become citizens of their country and are provided with background information with which the students identify their countrys strengths and weaknesses, discuss the standard of living, and what they would like to change. The teams are then given game boards and game pieces for their countries. The game pieces represent various assets. Each group member chooses one of four occupations that play significant roles in the countrys ability to advance in the game. The occupations are geologist, miner, economic advisor, and international trader. Each team also receives a plastic bin that contains a plot of land that represents their country and its assets. Students begin to role-play their occupations. The geologists draw a map of the plot, then use straws to probe the earth and locate buried energy resources. The miners simulate a surface mine by removing each layer of sediment, then remove the energy resources from the soil. The geologists and miners work together to reclaim the land by replacing the layers as they found them. Meanwhile, the advisors and traders organize the number of each commodity with which their country begins the game. The goal of the game is then revealedto finish with no more or less than five of each of the commodities: energy resources, technology, workforce and industry. Students buy, sell and trade on the global market to attain the goal. The economic advisors analyze the countrys resources and decide what needs to be bought, what is available to sell, and what would be best to trade. Economic advisors also decide what they are willing to pay for each commodity, and for what price they are willing to sell their commodities. The game continues with two trading rounds. After each trading round, the economic advisors organize the acquired commodities and plan for the next round. When the second trading round is completed, the teams are asked to compare their countys current status to its status at the beginning of the game. Each team then learns that each commodity has impacts on the country. The students assess possible positive and negative impacts of each of the commodities and resources. The third trading round has the added goal of controlling the number of impacts made upon the country. Some countries must negotiate to reduce impacts while still maintaining the goal of five of each commodity. Usually the game results with more than one team meeting their goals. It is then revealed to the teams that each of the countries represents a real country in the world. Brief descriptions of the real world countries are included in this packet.
Option: As the real countries are revealed, the teams must locate the countries on a world map.
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TEACHER GUIDE
DAY ONE
Materials Needed
Country Packets in Envelopes (see page 9) Transparencies (pages 11 & 18) Class Set of the Student Worksheet (page 57)
Preparation
Divide the class into six groups.
Procedure
1. Give an overview of the Global Trading Game, as follows: Each of the six teams represents a different country. Each country, just as in the real world, has different amounts of money, industry, people and other resources. These commodities and resources have positive and negative impacts. Everyone will have a job that is important to the countrys ability to advance in the game.
2.
Distribute a Country Packet to each group and a Student Worksheet to each player. Explain that prior to playing the game, each team must understand its countrys unique strengths and weaknesses, assets and needs. Instruct the teams to remove the country profiles and comparison charts from their envelopes. As they read about their country, use these questions to help guide their reading: What are three strengths of your country? What are three weaknesses of your country? Using the Country Comparison Chart, how does your country compare to the other countries in the game?
3.
4. 5.
Have each student complete the Student Worksheet. Using the transparency of the Country Comparison Chart, review and define the country profile categories. For example: Population: Abundant population can be an advantage by contributing to a strong labor force or be a disadvantage by increasing pollution and/or energy consumption. Climate: Weather can be a factor in obtaining and consuming energy resources.
6. 7.
Display the Job Descriptions transparency as you describe the occupations. After you have reviewed the occupations, have each student choose an occupation. Explain the procedure that will be followed for playing the game on Day Two and have the students return the packets to you.
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DAY TWO
Materials Needed
Country Bins Old Newspaper Country Packets Geologist Maps International Trade Center sign (optional) Game boards (optional)
Preparation
Place students into their groups again and review what took place yesterday.
Procedure
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Redistribute the country envelopes to the student groups. Have the students discuss in their groups what they learned about their country on Day One. Place the country bins at the International Trade Center for distribution later in the game. Using Transparency 2Jobs and Actions, have the students recall the job they chose and review and discuss the different roles. Have the students sort the industry, technology and workforce cards and organize them on the game boards. (If you are not using the game boards, have the students place the cards into three rows.) Call the geologists and miners to the International Trade Center to collect their countrys bin and old newspaper. Provide each group with a Geologist Map. Give them the following instructions: GEOLOGISTS: Observe the plot of land and make a sketch of the landscape on the map, labeling any hills or changes in the landscape. The large rocks represent hills and the sticks represent valleys. Use the straws to probe the soil for energy resources buried there, then mark on the map the location of any energy resources you find. MINERS: Carefully remove the earth layer by layer, and set each layer aside on the newspaper. Use the geologist map to locate the energy resources. When you find the energy resources, bring them to the facilitator and exchange them for game pieces. Return the energy resources to the bin and give the cards to your economic advisor. As the traders and advisors do their jobs, you must work with the geologists to restore the plot of land. 6. Advise the economic advisors and international traders to prepare for the trading rounds. Give them the following instructions: ECONOMIC ADVISORS: Develop a strategy to allow your team to end up with five of each of the commodity cards. Decide what needs to be bought and how much the team is willing to pay for it, and what needs to be sold and at what price. INTERNATIONAL TRADERS: Use the economic advisors strategy and your ability to negotiate to obtain the commodities your country needs and trade the commodities you dont need during the trading rounds. 7. Explain the rules for trading: Trading may occur only at the International Trade Center. Only international traders may buy, sell, and trade commodities.
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If trading is done by anyone other than a trader, or in any place other than the trade center, the teams must forfeit the next round of trading. If any trading is done before or after the trading signal, the teams must forfeit the next round of trading. 8. 9. Give a warning, then signal the start of Round 1 trading. Allow 90 seconds for trading, then signal the end of the round. Have the students regroup for two to three minutes to allow the economic advisors to create a strategy for the next round of trading.
10. Conduct Round 2 trading for 90 seconds. 11. At the conclusion of the second round, have the students return to their groups and complete the Impacts Worksheets in their Country Packets. An impact is an effect on the environment as a result of energy production/consumption, industry, technology, or the workforce. Briefly discuss the definition and examples of impacts. 12. Have the students turn over all of the game cards to discover the impacts. 13. Explain that in the last trading round, teams must still attempt to obtain five of each kind of card, but must also try to end up with 21 or fewer impacts. Optional: It is a challenge for everyone to end up with 21 or fewer impacts, but possible. You might choose to make it easier, if you want everyone to win, by changing the number of impacts to 23, or make it impossible for everyone to win by lowering the impacts to 19. 14. Allow two to five minutes for the teams to form a new strategy for the final round of trading based on the number of impacts they have. 15. Signal the start of the final trading round. Allow three minutes for trading, then signal the end of the round. 16. Review the activity with the students using the Summary Questions listed below. 17. Evaluate the activity with the students using the Evaluation Form on page 63 and return the evaluation to the NEED Project.
SUMMARY QUESTIONS
How many countries met the goal of five of each card with 21 or fewer impacts? What are some reasons a country might have trouble meeting that goal? Do you think the reasons we have come up with could occur in real countries? In reality, what resources and impacts would countries want to increase and decrease?
EXTENSION ACTIVITY
Refer to the following country profiles. State key information from each country profile and ask the students to guess which real country their profile represents. As an extension, have students locate that country on a world map.
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GAME CONSTRUCTION
(Construction takes approximately four hours)
MATERIALS
12 30 6 1 1 12 6 30 1 6 6 1 1 1 Plastic spoons Plastic drinking straws, cut in half Plastic storage containers, approximately 12x 16x 8 50 pound bag of sand 25 pound bag of small aquarium gravel Rocks, approximately 2 3 in diameter Craft sticks Marbles or 1 pieces of wood Bell or whistle Sturdy envelopes 9x 12 Sets of 20 sheets of paper each set a different color 8 x 11 Paper Cutter Laminator Photocopier
OPTIONAL: To construct game boards and signs, you will need the following: 13 8 x 14 sheets of colored paper (all the same color)
PREPARATION
1. Choose one color paper for each country. You will use this color for the game pieces and energy bucks. For example, the energy bucks and game pieces for Country #1 will be on blue paper, Country #2 on yellow, etc. The originals for the game pieces are found on pages 21-56. A page of impacts follows each of the commodity pages. 2. 3. Copy the game pages with the impact symbols on the back so that each game piece is two-sided. Copy and cut energy bucks for each country using the color for that country; the master is found on page 20. Each country requires a different number of copies:
COUNTRY 1 2 3 4 5 6
# OF COPIES 4 1 3 3 2 3
# OF BUCKS 25 5 23 17 10 20
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4.
Using the same color paper as the game pieces and energy bucks, make six copies of the Country Profiles for each country, found on pages 12-17, one copy of the Geologist Map on page 58 and one copy of the Impacts Worksheet on page 59. Using the colored paper, make six copies of the Country Comparison Chart for each country, found on page 18. Make a transparency of the Country Comparison Chart, also. Make a transparency of the Job Descriptions and Actions found on page 11. Cut and laminate the energy bucks and playing cards. Laminate the Country Profiles and Country Comparison Chart, if desired.
5. 6. 7.
PROCEDURE
1. Create a teacher packet, including: The energy resource cards for all the countries in separate envelopes The two transparencies (pages 11 & 18) A copy of the Teacher Key (page 19) 2. Organize the country materials above into the 9x 12 envelopes for each country. Label each envelope 16 to correspond with the country number. Place the following into each countrys envelope: Energy bucks Industry, technology, and workforce cards (excluding energy resource cards) Country Profile sheets Country Comparison Charts Impact Worksheet 2 spoons 10 pieces of drinking straws 3. 4. Create plastic bins representing plots of land for each country. Number the bins 16. Each plot of land contains a certain number of energy resources that can be mined. The marbles or wood pieces represent energy resources. Use the following list as a guide to place the correct number of energy resources in each country bin: Country Country Country Country Country Country 5. 6. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 4 1 10 5 3
Bury the energy resources by filling each plastic bin with three inches of sand, then two inches of aquarium rocks or small pebbles. Place two large rocks and one craft stick on the surface of each plot of land. The rocks represent hills and the craft stick represents a valley.
OPTIONAL: Enlarge and copy the INTERNATIONAL TRADE CENTER sign (page 60) onto 8 x 14 colored paper. Laminate for durability. Enlarge and copy the two game boards (pages 61-62) onto 8 x 14 colored paper. Laminate each game board for durability.
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MINERS
Mine your energy resources using the surface mine method and the Geologist map. Remove each layer of earth until you reach the energy resources. Use the tools to mine the energy resources. You may not touch them with your hands until they are on the surface. Bring all mined energy sources to the facilitator to receive energy cards when you hear the signal. Work with the Geologists to reclaim the land.
ECONOMIC ADVISORS
Develop a trading strategy. Decide how many cards your country needs and how much you are willing to pay for them. Decide how many cards you can trade and what other countries should pay or trade for them. Use the Country Comparison Chart to learn about the other countries. Explain your strategy to your International Traders and tell them what your cards are worth.
INTERNATIONAL TRADERS
Persuade other countries to buy, sell and trade what your country needs. At the signal, report to the Trade Center. You will have 90 seconds to conduct your business during each trading session. At the end of each trading session, return to your Economic Advisors, and give them the cards and money for the next strategy sessions.
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COUNTRY PROFILE 1
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 3,618,760 square miles; about half of the size of Russia 304.5 million; average life expectancy is 76 years. There are about 96 people per square mile. The average person in this country earns $43,424 per year. This country currently has one of the strongest economies in the world. The standard of living is considered high, but emphasis on technology has caused people without an education to make less money. This country has many different types of businesses and more factories than any other country. It produces petroleum products, steel, motor vehicles, telephone service, chemicals, electronics, food, consumer goods, lumber, and mining. This country produces 40 percent of the worlds consumer goods. This country consumes 99.2 quads of energy per year and imports 26 percent of the energy it uses. About 78.6 percent of the countrys energy production is fossil fuels, while 11.5 percent comes from nuclear reactors, and 3.3 percent from hydropower. The remaining 6.6 percent is produced by geothermal, wind, biomass, and solar sources. This country is very successful in space exploration, chemistry, electronics, lasers, plastics, and computers. Robots have replaced human assembly lines in many factories. The country has energy resources of coal, petroleum, natural gas, and uranium. Other resources include copper, lead, phosphates, uranium, bauxite, gold, iron, mercury, nickel, silver, tungsten, zinc, and timber. This country produces more carbon dioxide than any other country. It burns fossil fuels which can cause air pollution. Other issues are nuclear waste, water pollution, strip mining, and too much irrigation. The country is working to improve air and water quality and is doing a good job of protecting its native plants and animals. Multiparty democracy The extreme northern part of the country experiences long, cold winters and short cool summers. The extreme south is semi-tropical with no noticeable change in seasons. The eastern part of the country is humid, and the western part is very dry. The majority of the country is temperate with mild winters and warm summers. More than one car per two people 99 percent
INDUSTRY
ENERGY
TECHNOLOGY RESOURCES
ENVIRONMENT
GOVERNMENT CLIMATE
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COUNTRY PROFILE 2
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 1,222,559 square miles; one-third the size of the United States 1,166 million; average life expectancy is 64 years. There are about 924 people per square mile. The average person in this country earns $771 per year, and most of the people are farmers. Because there are so many people, there is a low standard of living. Most of the population doesnt have enough food and medicine, and some do not have indoor bathrooms. The major industries are producing clothing, chemicals, food, transportation equipment, cement, mining, petroleum, and machinery. This country uses 17.7 quads of energy per year. 30 percent of that energy is imported from other countries. About 88 percent of the energy produced is fossil fuels, 2.0 percent nuclear, and 9.0 percent hydropower. This country experiences power shortages often. This countrys scientists work to improve nuclear energy so that the people can have more reliable electricity. They are also working on better telephone and road systems. Robots are seldom used because there is a large labor force that needs jobs. This country ranks fourth in the world in coal reserves. It also has iron ore, mica, bauxite, titanium, chromite, natural gas, diamonds, petroleum, and limestone. The biggest challenge is soil erosion, which affects 1/5 of the land. To feed the large population, forests have been cut down for farming and animal grazing. This lack of trees causes flooding. Other concerns are groundwater pollution, air pollution, and illegal hunting of wild animals. An effort is being made to preserve the diversity of plants and wildlife found in the country. Democracy The mountains in the north are permanently frozen due to their altitude. The west coast is a tropical rain forest and is always hot and wet. The center of the country is semi-desert which is hot with very little rain. The majority of the country is hot, but has seasonal rainfall, creating dry and wet seasons. One car per 333 people 60 percent
INDUSTRY ENERGY
TECHNOLOGY
RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT
GOVERNMENT CLIMATE
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COUNTRY PROFILE 3
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 145,898 square miles; about the size of California 127.7 million; average life expectancy is 82 years. There are about 876 people per square mile. The average person in this country earns $21,681 per year. This country has the second largest economy in the world. The people are hard working and there is a large computer industry. The people dont eat a lot of beef or chicken because there isnt land to raise farm animals. Most people eat seafood, so the fishing industry is very strong. Most of the people are well fed, receive good health care, and have access to computers. This is one of the worlds largest producers of steel and other metals, heavy electrical equipment, construction and mining equipment, machine tools, factory tools, trains, ships, chemicals, clothes, and food. This country is known for being very productive and efficient. This country uses 22.8 quads of energy each year, and imports 81 percent of it from other countries. Transportation fuels are typically bought from other countries. Of the 4.3 quads of energy it produces, 70 percent is nuclear power, 5 percent is from fossil fuels, 19 percent is from hydropower, and 6 percent is from other energy sources. This country has made many improvements in fuel-efficient automobiles, robotics, communications, cancer research, biotechnology, high-speed trains, and computers. Some work has been done with communications satellites. This country has very few mineral resources. The main natural resources are fish and seafood. The number one challenge is air pollution from power plants. Other problems include acid rain and water pollution, both of which are hurting fish and sea animals. This countrys appetite for fish and tropical timber is contributing to the depletion of these resources. Constitutional Monarchy The weather is temperate with hot, humid weather in the summer and cool temperatures in winter. Seventy-five percent of the land in this country is very mountainous; most of the 127 million people live in a space slightly smaller than Indiana. Almost one car per three people 99 percent
INDUSTRY
ENERGY
TECHNOLOGY
RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT
GOVERNMENT CLIMATE
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COUNTRY PROFILE 4
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 830,000 square miles; about one-fifth the size of the United States 24.2 million; average life expectancy is 75 years. There are about 29 people per square mile. The average person earns $15,131 per year. Eighty percent of this countrys money comes from selling oil to other countries. People who own the oil companies are very rich, but the rest of the people are very poor. They have good health care and access to standard technology. The main industries are oil production, petroleum refining, plastics, cement, some steel mills, construction, and fertilizer. Almost everything is oil related. Most other materials, such as aluminum, most food, wood, cars, and glass must be bought from other counties. This country consumes 6.9 quads of energy per year, but produces 24.7 quads per year. It exports 72 percent of the energy it produces to other countries. All of their energy (100 percent) is produced by fossil fuels. Science and technology are very limited. Almost all technology is imported, especially the tools for refining oil. This country has the worlds largest known reserves of oil, as well as reserves of natural gas, iron ore, gold, and copper. The biggest environmental challenge for this country is that it is running out of water and more and more land is becoming desert. The people are working hard to build machines and factories that can remove salt from seawater. There have also been many oil spills near the coast, causing pollution. Monarchy The weather of the country is harsh, dry desert with great extremes of temperature. One car per seven people 80 percent
INDUSTRY
ENERGY
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COUNTRY PROFILE 5
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 470,693 square miles; about twice the size of Texas 47.9 million; average life expectancy is 51 years. There are about 102 people per square mile. The average person earns $5,005 per year. This country is a middle-income, developing country, with well-established telephone, electric, and transportation systems. The stock exchange is one of the 10 largest in the world. Most of the countrys money is from mining. Most people are well fed, receive decent health care, and have access to standard technologies, but some of the people are very, very poor. The principal industries are mining, car assembly, metalworking, machinery, clothing, iron and steel, chemicals, fertilizer, and food. This country consumes 5.2 quads of energy per year, but produces 6.0 quads. It exports 13 percent of its energy to other countries. About 98 percent of its energy production is fossil fuels, 1.8 percent is nuclear energy, and 0.2 percent is hydropower. This country is working to advance its nuclear energy abilities to produce more electricity. This country has a lot of gold, chromium, coal, iron ore, manganese, nickel, phosphates, tin, uranium, gem diamonds, platinum, copper, vanadium, salt, and natural gas. The main challenge in this country is lack of water. Many rivers are polluted, so the government often asks and, sometimes, forces people to use less water. Also, it is having challenges with air pollution, acid rain and soil erosion, all of which are causing more land to become desert. Democracy The western half of the country is desert or semi-desert. The rest of the country is subtropical and has sunny days and cool nights. One car per eleven people 87 percent
INDUSTRY ENERGY
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COUNTRY PROFILE 6
SIZE POPULATION ECONOMY 93,628 square miles; slightly smaller than Oregon 60.9 million; average life expectancy is 78 years. There are about 650 people per square mile. The average person earns about $40,086 per year. This country is one of the worlds great trading powers. This country is ranked seventh in the world economically. The people are well fed, get good health care, and have access to advanced technology. The main industries are machinery, equipment for power companies, factories and railroads, shipbuilding, aircraft, cars and car parts, electronics and telephones, metals, chemicals, coal, petroleum, paper and paper products, food, clothing, and other consumer goods. This country consumes 9.8 quads of energy per year, but it only produces 7.9 quads. It must import 20 percent of its energy from other countries. About 87.0 percent of the energy it produces comes from fossil fuels, 10.4 percent from nuclear energy, and 0.6 percent from hydropower. This country does a lot of research through the military and defense. People from this country developed steam-powered engines and discovered DNA. Other research includes astronomy, superconductivity, and lasers. This country has large reserves of coal, petroleum, natural gas, tin, limestone, iron ore, salt, clay, chalk, gypsum, lead, and silica. Power plants are causing air pollution, some rivers are polluted, and coastal waters are polluted because of the dumping of waste into the ocean. This country has many oil and natural gas wells in the nearby ocean, causing some people concern. Democratic Monarchy Temperate conditions with mild winters and warm summers are the standard; there is rain year round. One car per three people 99 percent
INDUSTRY
ENERGY
TECHNOLOGY
RESOURCES ENVIRONMENT
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Country 1 Resources
Country 1 Industry
Country 1 Technology
Country 1 Workforce
Country 2 Resouces
Country 2 Industry/Technology
Country 2 Workforce
Country 3 Resources
Country 3 Industry
Country 3 Technology
Country 3 Workforce
Country 4 Resources
Country 5 Resources
Country 6 Resources
Country 6 Technology
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1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.
Did you conduct the entire activity? Were the instructions clear and easy to follow? Did the activity meet your academic objectives? Was the activity age appropriate? Were the allotted times sufficient to conduct the activity? Was the activity easy to use? Was the preparation required acceptable for the activity? Were the students interested and motivated? Was the energy knowledge content age appropriate? Would you use the activity again?
Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes
No No No No No No No No No No
How would you rate the activity overall (excellent, good, fair, poor)?
How would your students rate the activity overall (excellent, good, fair, poor)?
Other Comments:
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