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READING AND WRITING IDEAS There are loads of fun reading and writing activities which would make pleasing fillers for your World Book Night party. Why not try some of these…

Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

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Page 1: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

READING AND

WRITING IDEAS

There are loads of fun reading and writing activities which

would make pleasing fillers for your World Book Night

party.

Why not try some of these…

Page 2: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

JUDGE A BOOK BY ITS COVERSpread a load of books across the library floor. If you can

get hold of them, you could use the World Book Night

books.

1 Give everyone just 30 seconds to pick a book that

appeals to them just from the cover.

2 Look at the blurbs and see if they are still appealing.

3 Read the opening line and complete the verdict.

At each stage, share your findings with the group.

Page 3: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

• Judge a book by its cover

• Match book covers and extracts

• Play Balderdash or the Dictionary Game

• Play Ex Libris

• Make magnetic poetry or cut up poems

• Make a Poetree

• Write text or twitter plot summaries for famous books

• Read extracts from World Book Night books

• Have a competition to find the best opening to a book

• Have a World Book Night quiz

Page 4: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

MATCH BOOK COVERS AND

EXTRACTS

Photocopy some opening paragraphs from novels and

some book covers and see who can match the writing

with the covers.

Page 5: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

BALDERDASH OR THE

DICTIONARY GAME

Pick an obscure word from the dictionary and have

everyone create their own definition of the word.

One person collects in the definitions and then reads out

the whole pile, being careful to surreptitiously include

the real definition.

Then, everyone votes on which is the real one.

There are points of getting the right answer and points for

fooling your friends.

Page 6: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

EX LIBRISLike the Dictionary Game but with fiction.

Pick a book off the library shelves and read out the blurb on

the back.

Everyone writes an imaginary opening line or paragraph to

the book.

The person in charge reads out all the openings, including

the real one.

As before, points for picking the right one and points for

fooling your friends.

Page 7: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

MAKE MAGNETIC POETRYIf you don’t have a magnetic surface or can’t get hold of

magnetic words, you can easily make your own by

photocopying a range of poems and cutting them up into

words.

Leave the words on a table and let people make their own

poems. You could cut and stick them into poems or simply

take photos and recycle the words.

For a different slant on the same theme, cut poems up into

lines and see who can put them back together.

Page 8: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

WRITE TEXT AND TWITTER PLOT

SUMMARIES OF BOOKS

You could do this as a competition or just as a fun exercise

whilst nibbling on snacks. Write some, read them out and

see if you can guess which books are being described:

“Reader I married him, shortly after nearly marrying a vicar

and leaving his ex-wife to burn down his house and top

herself.”

Page 9: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

MAKE A POETREE (OR A NOVELTREE

OR AN AUTHORITREE!)A Poetree is a representation of a tree hung with leaf-shaped

poems.

You could stick the shape of a tree on the library wall or use a

fake Chrismas tree or similar.

Print out some famous poems for people to hang and leave

some blank leaves for people to write their own poems on.

To change the focus to novels, why not make a ‘noveltree’ of

favourite books and an ‘authoritree’ of authors. And if you’re

really clever you could theme them on different branches to

help other young people to chose what to read next.

Page 10: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

READ FROM THE WORLD BOOK

NIGHT BOOKS

Revive the lost art of listening to stories by allocating the

WBN books to different participants and having each

participant read out the opening to the novel.

For added tension, why not award points for best reading

and best book with a prize for the winner.

Page 11: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

WORLD BOOK NIGHT QUIZ

Have a quiz master set some questions. To keep the book

focus, have some rounds that are of a literary nature.

• Who wrote Pride and Prejudice?

• What’s the second book in Twilight series called?

• Which book features the character Augustus Waters?

Page 12: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015

AND THE AWARD FOR BEST

OPENING LINE GOES TO:The opening of a book should grab the reader straight away

and there are some really memorable ones available.

Do some research and, on World Book Night, have a

competition to see who can come up with the best

opening line.

Read them out and have each person score each opening

out of ten.

Add up the scores and, hey presto, you’ll have a winner!

Page 13: Reading and Writing Ideas Party Ideas 2015