Teacher PD Bingo Cards - Print Free or Customize
Print free Teacher PD bingo cards or personalize, limitless prints! Select from 15,000+ designs or use our bingo card generator. Add numbers, phrases, images, or all of them. Play using printable PDF, digital bingo cards, and our digital bingo caller, or mix physical and digital.
About: This bingo card perfectly captures the quirky, relatable moments that come up during educator professional development workshops, especially those focused on language instruction and best practices. Full of familiar phrases, classroom lingo, and common mishaps, it’s a lighthearted way for teachers and staff to engage, laugh, and bond during PD sessions or staff meetings.
How To: To download a printable PDF, click the Print button. You can modify the card count and other print preferences on the Print tab. Grid items and free space text can be added on the Basic tab. Appearance can be totally customized on the relevant tabs, or you can easily search any setting on the 🔍 tab.
How to play Teacher PD Bingo Cards?
- Paper Players: Print PDF bingo cards and manually scratch the cards.
- Digital Players: Click on the Play button above, and then click on the 🎫 button.
- Digital Caller: Click on the Play button above.
- Paper Caller: Print PDF calling list & calling slips and manually select the slips.
- Mixed Mode: Select any combination above. For example, caller can be either Paper or Digital. And players can be Paper or Digital or a combination of both.
Step-By-Step:
- Start by downloading the Teacher PD Bingo PDF by clicking on the "Print" button above.
- Open the PDF and print it.
- For random calling, you can print another copy of the call list, cut, fold and then pick them randomly at play time.
- Cut the bingo cards at the cut marks if there are more than 1 bingo cards per page.
- Distribute one card per 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 play by randomly pulling an item from the call list and announcing it to everyone.
- The players scan their cards to see if they have the announced word. If they do, they cross off that word.
- The first player to finish a horizontal, vertical, or a diagonal line of marked items yells "Bingo!" and wins the game.
- The caller confirms that the items marked form a proper line according to the Bingo card and call list.
- You can play for varied patterns or a full card blackout for a longer game.
This Teacher PD Bingo Cards Game contains following Words or Phrases: Multilingual, "We're all language teachers.", Asset based, Sheltered instruction, Unfunny joke, Funny joke, Someone arrives late., Quality Interactions, "Best practice", Out-of-date pop culture reference, "Let's put that question in the parking lot.", Cognitive engagement, Callback to a SWEL session last year, Someone asks a question right before we all get to leave., "This won't take the whole time.", "Does that make sense?", "Find an elbow partner.", Someone is grading papers., It's way too hot in here., It feels like Antarctica in here., Someone is using multiple highlighters., Someone's phone rings., Someone complains about a student., Unexplained acronym, "Will this take the whole time?", WASC, Academic language, Rigor, Scaffolding, Data-driven, Someone asks a question that's really more of a rant., Post-its are put on a poster and never seen again, "Let's do a gallery walk.", Proficiency levels, Everyone groans when asked to "stand up and move.", Chart paper falls off the wall., The sound doesn't work for a video., Someone smells a marker., "Let's circle back to that.", Non-evaluative, Collaboration, "Let's jump right in.", None of the markers work., Scaffolding, Fire drill, Forward Together, Sentence frames, "Find someone you don't normally work with.", Need area, Making a group poster, Excessive use of post-its, "Waterfall…", The presenter show photos of their pets., The presenter shows photos of their kids., The presenter uses a meme from 2010., The presenter points out a typo on their own slides., Awkward icebreaker, Someone takes drink from a giant water bottle., Someone tries to quietly open a very loud snack wrapper., Achievement gaps, Relationships.