THE
GAME
Before you begin creating your game, you must share your journal enteries with your fellow Corps members. This will allow you to become familiar with what they have discovered. You may want to take notes so that you will be better prepared to play the game and re-live the adventure.
Wait, this just in! First, the United States government is issuing a test to make sure you are fully ready to re-create the trail. Together, you and your fellow group members should take a virtual test of the journey by clicking on this link. At the end of the tour be sure to click on the map of your journey to help you with the game!!
Now, using the map you just found, you are ready to make the game.
Materials:
1. Create 12-15 question cards for the game. Place the answer in small print on the bottom of the card. A fellow member will read the question to the player who will try to answer it. Here are two examples:
(Example for the Indian Affairs
Expert)
What was the name of the
Indian woman who helped Lewis and Clark?
Answer: Sacagawea
* * * * * * *
(Example for the Topographer)
What was the problem when
the Corps reached a large fork in the Misourri River?
A) They hit a rock and sank.
B) Lewis and Clark would only go
down the right side of the river for fear of grizzly bears.
C) They did not know which fork
to follow in order to reach the West the most quickly.
D) They turned around and started
their trek home.
Answer: C
2. Represent your area of expertise on the gameboard with at least 3 pictures or images of items you discovered or saw while on the trail. They can be decorations (placed anywhere on the gameboard) or illustrations (placed in the actual spot where they were found or seen):
You and your fellow Corps members will:
1. Design the game board in the form of a map of the trail. The general trail should go from St. Louis to Oregon and back to St. Louis.
You may choose either to have the players reach Oregon and then turn around and follow the same squares back....or you may make the squares separate, but close to each other, knowing that the Corps followed basically the same trail to and from St. Louis. Remember that around the Marias and Missouri River that Lewis and Clark split up on the way back to St. Louis.
Tips:
Students may take artistic
liberty when developing a theme or creating the squares for the game.
These rules are basic ones.
Students are encouraged to develop a more innovative set of rules for the
game. This map below illustrates a basic outline of where the
trail should go!
Courtesy public broadcasting systems