Want to create interactive content? It’s easy in Genially!

Get started free

Periodic Table Breakout

Lindsey Bowen

Created on February 1, 2024

6th Science

Start designing with a free template

Discover more than 1500 professional designs like these:

Essential Map

Akihabara Map

Frayer Model

Create Your Story in Spanish

Microcourse: Key Skills for University

Microcourse: Learn Spanish

January School Calendar

Transcript

Board

Challenge

3 Digit Code

Puzzle #1

Classify
7 Digit Code

Puzzle #3

Properties
6 Digit Code

Puzzle #2

Who am I?
4 Digit Code

Puzzle #5

Valence boxes
5 Digit Code

Puzzle #4

Scrabble
4 Digit Code

Puzzle #6

Task Cards
An awesome subtitle here

LOCKS

Submit Answers
3 Digit Code

Puzzle #7

Decode triangles
4 Digit Code

Puzzle #8

Match symbols

Nonmetals

Metals

Metalloids

Can be good semiconductor

Copper

Neon

Generally good conductors

Can be gaseous state

Sulfur

Mostly solid state

AI

Can be brittle

Arsenic

#1

Puzzle

B1 B4 C3 A4

C4 B1

D3 D5 C2

D4 D2 B4 A1 C3 B2 C1 A5 D3

#7

Puzzle

Code

my perfect

Just me and

Match - Hanging out

Sulfur

Cobalt

Boron

Copper

Carbon

Nickel

Silver

Sodium

Nitrogen

Co

Be

Mg

Ag

Ni

Na

Ca

#8

Puzzle

Don’t trust ________; they make up everything!
Think like a proton and stay _______!
Protons + ________ = atomic _____

COUNT TILE POINTS IN ORDER

#4

Puzzle

#5

Puzzle

Respond to questions.

1.

Make sure to answer all 8 questions once each.

2.

#6

Puzzle

WHO

AM

Silver colored, very reactive metal, with 1 valence electron in period 4
Non-reactive gaseous element with 2 full energy levels
Nonmetal with atomic number of 53 and 5 energy levels
Atomic # ??
Atomic # ??
Atomic # 53

#2

Puzzle

Find the group number.

Shiny, malleable, & good conductors: Cu, Ag, & Au

Nitrogen and phosphorus

Unreactive Group

Silver colored, very reactive metals

#8

Puzzle

What does it say?

18 14 17 19 20 13 15 0 8 17 4 3 1 24 0 19 14 12 8 2 13 20 12 1 4 17 0 13 3 5 8 13 3 0 21 4 17 0 6 4

An awesome title here

The interactive visual communication step by step:
  • Plan the structure of your content.
  • Give visual weight to the key points and the most important ones.
  • Define secondary messages with interactivity.
  • Establish a flow throughout the content.
  • Measure results.

You’ve been kidnapped and taken to the lair of the evil scientist, Dr. Wackadoodle. He will only let you leave if you can answer a series of puzzles about the Periodic Table. Your freedom depends on it. The countdown begins now. Good luck to you.

Submit your Answers