CAHSPR Bingo Cards - Print Free or Customize
Print free CAHSPR bingo cards or alter them, no signup needed, limitless cards! Select from 12,900+ designs or use the bingo card generator. Add numbers, phrases, images, or any combination. Play using printable PDF, digital bingo cards, and the digital bingo caller, or mix physical and digital.
About: This bingo card captures the quirky, relatable moments that happen at academic conferences, especially in health sciences or research communities. Perfect for attendees looking to break the ice or inject some fun into networking, it highlights everything from classic conference mishaps to lighthearted interactions with colleagues, making it a great conversation starter for students and seasoned professionals alike.
How To: To save a PDF to print, click the Print button. You can change the card quantity and other printing preferences on the Print tab. Grid items and free space text can be added on the Basic tab. Appearance can be entirely personalized on the relevant tabs, or you can quickly search any option on the 🔍 tab.
How to play CAHSPR Bingo Cards?
- Digital Players: Click on the Play button above, and then click on the 🎫 button.
- Paper Caller: Print PDF calling list & calling slips and manually draw the slips.
- Digital Caller: Click on the Play button above.
- Paper Players: Print PDF bingo cards and manually cross off the cards.
- Hybrid Mode: Pick any combination above. For example, caller can be either Paper or Digital. And players can be Paper or Digital or a mix of both.
Step-By-Step:
- Start by getting the CAHSPR Bingo PDF by clicking on the "Print" button above.
- Open the PDF and print it.
- For random drawing, you can print another copy of the call list, cut, fold and then pull them randomly at play time.
- Cut the bingo cards at the cut lines if there are more than 1 bingo cards per page.
- Distribute one card per player. For marking, you can use pens. Crayons cost the least.
- Pick one person to be the caller. If you are playing in a small group, the caller can also play along with their own Bingo card.
- The caller begins the play by randomly pulling an item from the call list and announcing it to all players.
- The players look at their cards to see if they have the called word. If they do, they dab that word.
- The first player to finish a horizontal, vertical, or a diagonal line of crossed items announces "Bingo!" and wins the play.
- The caller confirms that the items crossed off form a proper line according to the Bingo card and call list.
- You can play for different patterns or a full card blackout for an extended play.
This CAHSPR Bingo Cards Game contains following Words or Phrases: "I have more of a comment than a question", Slides don't advance, "I'm here presenting on behalf of [someone else]", Runs over time, moderator waves furiously, Runs over time, moderator does not react, Invokes primary care access crisis when only peripherally relevant, Introduce yourself to a professor whose work you have read, but you have never met, Meet a trainee at your same level but a different institution, Meet someone from McMaster you have never met before, Get Doug Archibald's signature on this card, Ask a question at a presentation, Sit with a stranger at a meal, See a citation written by someone you know in a presentation, See a citation you have read in a presentation, Ask a stranger to tell you about their poster, Nametag worn outside of conference venue, Find someone who has the job you want, ask them a question about it, Joke about whether Covid is over or not, Conclusions not supported by data presented, Spot someone online shopping on their phone during a presentation, Question that is actually self-promotion, More than 3 self-citations in a presentation, Someone asks you about this bingo card, you tell them it's because your supervisor is THE BEST., Find an economist to sign this card, Meet someone who does not study/work at a University, Learn about a new theory relevant to your work, "Landmark" used to describe a study in a presentation, Talk of revolution in a presentation.