*Apologies that the PDF link was not working properly earlier* Howdy Need another activity for a Teen Halloween Party or a Teen Movie Night featuring a scary film? Similar to my Movie Monster Quiz Printable from last year, this Horror Movie Poster Quiz is designed for minimal output on your part. Simply print the 20 pages featuring 20 horror movie posters with their titles conveniently blocked out. Save a copy of the answer key for yourself. Print enough pages of the last quiz page for each teen or group of teens to have their own. (Or if you want to save some paper but you have access to a projector and computer, try showing the files as a slide show.) Attach the pictures to a wall, tabletop display pieces or lay them on tables around a room. To make things easier I have given the teens an list of movie titles. You can make the quiz harder by providing the titles later in the game, say after 5 - 10 minutes or you can just watch them sweat. Read over the answers and provide prizes to the winning teen, teens or group.
Opening The More We Get Together (And Read Together): Storytime Welcome Song by Jbrary
The more we get together, together, together
The more we get together The happier we'll be
For your friends are my friends
and my friends are your friends
The more we get together
The happier we'll be
The more we read together, together, together
the more we read together
the happier we'll be.
Read big books and small books
Read short books and tall books
The more we read together
the happier we'll be. Books Don't Wake Up the Tiger by Britta Teckentrup
Howdy You would think I might have my teen Halloween program nailed down by now, but I am still tinkering with it. I felt I needed another warm up activity before I had them wrap each other like mummies and dance to the Time Warp. I decided to make this Autograph Bingo card to encourage my teens to mingle instead of clumping around the food table. There is a PDF you can quickly print in a pinch. I also have a Publisher version in case you'd like to make the game harder. (or easier?) You might have played this before at a conference. I am pretty sure I played something like this at a Girl Scout Badge Day a million years ago. Of course, you can change the rules to suit your teens. Basically, you want the teens to interact with each other and ask simple questions to discover what they all might have in common or what makes everyone unique. I think I might use the bingo cards to help divide the teens into teams for later events. Good luck!