Screen
Play
Sixteen Ready-to-Use Interactive Visual
Games to Get Your Students Laughing and Talking
Written by: Doug
Fields
For PC and MAC
Format: CD-ROM
ISBN: 0310238773
Publish Date: 8/17/01
Publisher: Zondervan
Synopsis:
An easy-to-use CD-ROM loaded with 16 computer generated games--for
use with Microsoft PowerPoint--designed to minimize prep time and
maximize laughter and fun.
Download
a PowerPoint® sample from Screen Play. If you do not
have PowerPoint® installed on your computer, you'll need the FREE
PowerPoint®
Viewer from Microsoft to open the sample.
Description:
What is the life expectancy of a microwave oven?
Is it true that the only real-life person to be made into a PEZ®
head was Ronald Reagan?
Is Squeaky Fromm a real or fictitious name?
Give up? Hey, you better not! The fun’s just begun!
You’ve landed in the realm of Screen Play, a visually compelling
CD-ROM containing 16 ready-to-use games, each filled to the gill
with a ton of mind-bending, hilarious trivia (and some serious
stuff) that all comes alive on screen--it’s a veritable
PowerPoint® party!
Try out Screen Play with your group. You can use the games for--
loosening up a group . . .
. . . a lighthearted part of your lesson . . .
. . . background eye-candy for pre-meeting mingling . . .
. . . team competition at camps and retreats . . .
--and virtually any other youth ministry occasion that requires
pure entertainment. Just load the CD-ROM into a computer that’s
hooked up to a video projector or TV monitor, then get ready for
other question screens such as:
What is the most frequently sung song in America?
Can a parent in Nebraska be arrested if his child cannot hold back
a burp during church?
What is the life expectancy of a fruit fly?
Is it illegal for a person in Tennessee to lasso a catfish?
Brand-new brainteasers, random jokes (that are actually funny), a
truckload of bizarre pop-culture trivia, and even some subtle
educational info--just what you need to lighten the moment, the
event, or even add to your lesson. And the games are already in
PowerPoint®, so all you have to do is start the "slide
show," ad your kids get serious laughter and interaction
time.
Screen Play is the ideal digital game for groups--and not just for
teenagers, either, but for all ages, middle school and older.