Indigeneity, Migration, & Language Bingo Cards - Print Free or Customize
Print free Indigeneity, Migration, & Language bingo cards or customize, limitless prints! Select from 29,800+ templates or use the bingo card generator. Add numbers, phrases, photos, or mix them all. Play using PDF printouts, digital bingo cards, and the digital bingo caller, or go hybrid.
About: This bingo card is perfect for workshops or classroom discussions focused on language, identity, and cultural heritage. The prompts invite participants to reflect on their personal journeys with language, from pride and resilience to moments of shame or struggle. It’s a thoughtful way to explore the complex ways migration, community, and family shape how we speak and connect to our roots.
How To: To get a PDF to print, click the Print button. You can change the card count and other printing options on the Print tab. Grid items and free space content can be changed on the Basic tab. Appearance can be completely personalized on the relevant tabs, or you can easily locate any option using the 🔍 tab.
How to play Indigeneity, Migration, & Language Bingo Cards?
- Paper Caller: Print PDF calling list & calling slips and physically choose the slips.
- Online Caller: Click on the Play button above.
- Paper Players: Print PDF bingo cards and physically mark the cards.
- Online Players: Click on the Play button above, and then click on the 🎫 button.
- Mixed Mode: Select any combination above. For example, caller can be either Offline or Online. And players can be Offline or Online or a mix of both.
Step-By-Step:
- Start by getting the Indigeneity, Migration, & Language 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 draw them randomly at play time.
- Cut the bingo cards at the cut marks if there are more than 1 bingo cards per page.
- Give one card to each player. For marking, you can use pens. Crayons are the cheapest.
- Select one person to be the caller. If you are playing in a small group, the caller may also play along with their own Bingo card.
- The caller opens the game by randomly pulling an item from the call list and announcing it to all players.
- The players scan 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 shouts "Bingo!" and wins the play.
- The caller checks that the items crossed off form a proper line as per the Bingo card and call list.
- You can play for different patterns or a full card blackout for a longer play.
This Indigeneity, Migration, & Language Bingo Cards Game contains following Words or Phrases: I speak the language my ancestors spoke thousands of years ago (McCarty, 2021), I speak 2 or more languages, I speak a language that was imposed on my ancestors (McCarty, 2021), I believed that my language/language-use made me dumb or poor (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016), I felt criticized for my language-use by a person in my own community (Anzaldúa, 2004), I felt shame for my language-use (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016), Migration impacted the language(s) I speak today (King & Rambow, 2012), My ancestors had to abandon their cultural and linguistic practices so I could be here (McCarty, 2021), I had to abandon my cultural and linguistic practices (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016), My parents told me to abandon my cultural and linguistic practices to protect me, I am a diasporic individual (King & Rambow, 2012), I never returned to my ancestral homelands (King & Rambow, 2012), I have visited my ancestral homelands and community (King & Rambow, 2012), I have experienced safe spaces to reclaim my traditional language(s) (King & Rambow, 2012), I mix my traditional customs with U.S. customs (King & Rambow, 2012), I use technology to practice language(s), I associate the language(s) I speak with struggle (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016), I associate the language(s) I speak with my spirituality, I associate the language(s) I speak with love, I associate the language(s) I speak with my community, I am proud of the language(s) I speak, I can speak my language(s) in public, My family encourages me to be proud of my heritage and language (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016), I had to be my family's language broker (Perez, Vasquez, Buriel, 2016).