Since this is a game about baby animals, consider purchasing a small stuffed baby animal as a prize. The one with the most correct answers wins the prize. When the timer goes off, you can either ask everyone to turn in their papers, or you can read out the correct answers and ask everyone to announce their number of correct. You can also send them back to check their answers and figure it out for themselves. Whether or not you choose to tell the player which answer is wrong is completely up to you. If they have them all correct, they win, otherwise the rest of the group keeps playing. If someone finishes before the timer goes off, check the answers they give against the answer sheet. Set a clock, an egg timer, or set the alarm on your phone. Tell your guests that they have three to five minutes to fill out the sheet. To prevent any frustration of this nature, try setting a time limit on the game. This might lead to frustration with the game. However, depending on your guest list, you may have a group of people that simply don’t know what to call a baby spider. You can let guests race and see who can fill in all the blanks first. There are several ways to play this game.
Use these animals names with pictures to play a variety of matching activities.
This resource is easy to download, print and use as a fun and educational game in the classroom. You hand out a sheet of paper an ask each guest to write down the name of each kind of baby animal. A set of lovely teacher-made sorting cards, allowing your children to sort and match animals. That’s the crux of the Baby Animals Shower Game. Who can resist the cuteness of a baby lion, or a baby seal? Even baby skunks are kind of cute. New babies are wonderful, no matter what species.