Telling Time Bingo
Show a clock face or say a time in words -- students who know the matching time find it on their card and mark it off. First to complete a row wins!
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See all →- How do I use Telling Time Bingo to teach clock reading?
- Display analog or digital clocks showing the times on the card, and have students mark the matching time on their bingo grid. You can use physical clocks, draw times on a whiteboard, or show clock images to help students practice recognition skills.
- What time formats work best for elementary students learning clocks?
- Start with o'clock times and half-past times before introducing quarter-hours and five-minute intervals. This bingo card includes a mix of these formats to provide scaffolded practice as students build confidence.
- Can I use this for both analog and digital time practice?
- Yes, you can call out times using either analog clock faces or digital formats like 3:15, helping students make connections between both representations. This flexibility makes BingWow's Telling Time Bingo adaptable to your specific lesson objectives.
Telling Time Bingo transforms clock-reading practice into an engaging game that helps students master analog and digital time formats. Perfect for elementary classrooms, homeschool sessions, and tutoring environments, this educational bingo card features times like 1:00, 3:00, 6:30, 3:15, and 8:45. Young learners strengthen their ability to recognize hours, half-hours, and quarter-hours while enjoying the excitement of marking off their cards. Teachers appreciate how this activity reinforces time-telling skills without feeling like traditional drill work, making it ideal for students who struggle with clock concepts or need extra practice. Use this free, printable bingo game during math centers, as a warm-up activity, or for review before assessments. BingWow makes it simple to play online with your class or print cards for hands-on learning. The game works beautifully with small groups during intervention time or whole-class instruction when introducing new time concepts. Parents can also use these cards at home to support homework practice or summer learning. Whether you're teaching second graders their first clock lessons or helping older students refine their skills, this interactive format keeps everyone focused and motivated.