Ice breaker games during seminars


















Thanks for pointing this out. Thanks Sabahat. I agree so grateful you share these activities with us. I am looking forward to trying them next week with my students especially the storytelling icebreaker. Thank you! Hi Lisa. Thanks for sharing! I will do the same and share with my team at work. I also love how you have transformed some of the classic icebreakers,into online icebreakers. I am super thankful for this post. Great ideas, and I like that many are tried and true and will be familiar.

The number of these is really setting me up for my 1st two weeks! I so appreciate these creative and fun ideas. They are not only interactive, but they promote a fun and relaxed environment as the students get to know each other online. I made notes for icebreakers that are appropriate for second graders. Thank you for these awesome online activities. I can use some of these in the homeroom guidance period. Thank you very much for sharing these ideas.

They are indeed very helpful. With your permission, will be using some for my online teaching. Thank you very much. God bless! Hi: This list of Icebreakers is great.

Is it possible to get a link that I can share with my teachers? Your product and services are both informative and useful for teachers. Thank you, MC. Hi Migdalia. You could use the shortened URL for this page and email the teachers that.

I am delighted that I came across this post. It is so comprehensive. Activities are simple and will help to promote the community. Great job! I will be introducing some of these great icebreakers right this week in my training. Thank you. A nice set of ice breakers. School education is not easy to handle in the online mode. There is a big gap, and students do miss the kind of interaction that takes place in a real classroom environment within a conducive space and customised furniture.

The teachers are eager to get back to the normal classroom teaching model. I will use one of them with students of medicine school in my online class tomorrow.

Thanks for your efforts. Thank you so much for your generosity in sharing these activities… They would be very useful in my teaching. All the ideas are great. More than using it as an icebreaker i used it as an activity in between my classes, since its an hour class students find it difficult ti sit in a stagnant place and listen to the class.

These ideas helped a lot for the students to keep them active and alert. These activities are really interesting. Your creative ideas help us to inspire the students. Very good ideas for engaging the participants. I found these quite thought provoking as well. Thank you for sharing. Icebreakers are really good, they create friendship, teamwork, and easy completion of work as a team. It is the best method,it inspires students and there is sharing of ideas. Your email address will not be published.

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed. Last Updated on September 13, Here are 21 free to use icebreakers for online teaching that you can use. Page Contents. See the recommended one-word ice breaker. This great ice breaker has been used successfully for so many years that its origins are lost in memory.

This ice breaker or warm-up activity is fast, easy, and fun. It is a guaranteed success to liven up your meetings and training classes. It makes every participant right. Try out this always successful, laughter-generating, simple ice breaker exercise.

From trees to dogs to vacation spots, people have favorites. The purpose of this ice breaker is to quickly warm up the group with fun and laughter. The ice breaker is a winner because it makes everyone right. Every employee has favorites and the topic is a low-stress ice breaker. It's also fun to ask why it's their favorite. Want to know more about creating quick, fun ice breakers for meetings? I am a proponent of ice breakers that reinforce the content and goal accomplishment of a team building or training session.

There is a place, however, for a fun ice breaker whose only purpose is to help session attendees know each other. Here are ice breakers that take time to prep, but are quick to do at the meeting. Here's a fun ice breaker that warms up a group and enables participants at a meal to get to know each other quickly. Usually, ice breakers are recommended that bring participants into discussion about the content of a training or team building session.

But an ice breaker over a meal can be fun and not so focused on a topic. It can be both professional or personal. You can then regroup and open a discussion about lessons that people learned from their failures.

Showing vulnerability is also a form of strength. Inspired by the classic kindergarten exercise where kids bring an object to school and describe it to their fellow pupils, show and tell is a great activity for getting to know the team better. Tell your colleagues to bring an object that has special meaning to them or that is tied to an exciting story.

Give each group member minutes to tell the rest of the group about it. This icebreaker is ideal for small teams or done in groups because people might not be willing to talk in front of larger crowds of people. Not everybody is happy with improvising. This is another great get-to-know-each-other-better game, inspired by our Head of User Research, Neil Sharman.

It can be music bands, hobbies, movies, etc. Have you heard of Fika? For Swedes, however, it is much more than that. Take Fika to an online environment. You can call it however you like — virtual watercooler talks, virtual happy hour — your choice. But be sure to schedule an informal team catch-up from time to time just to chat with your teammates about something other than work.

In remote times, it will help you feel less isolated. Good productive idea exchanges make for great virtual icebreakers too.

Instead of just shouting ideas at each other, try visual brainstorming. Take advantage of one of the visual collaboration tools such as Mural. We tried it recently during our Brand team meeting and it was an hour well spent — productive, creative, and fun. We set up a virtual whiteboard, and each of us was supposed to write our ideas on little stickers that we then posted on the board. It nicely simulated a real-life brainstorming session. There are other apps that provide immersive team experiences, for example, Topia.

With this one, you can even design your own virtual world. This icebreaker activity is awesome for getting to know your colleagues better and have a good laugh together while sharing funny stories behind each finger down!

If you need inspiration for Never Have I Ever questions, find of them here. When was the last time you randomly bumped into someone in a hallway in your office and shared a good chat with them?

Or, had a deep conversation about life, the universe, and everything with a bunch of colleagues in a kitchenette or by the watercooler? Before we can enjoy this again, try Donut.

Donut is an app for Slack that randomly pairs two or three colleagues together for a scheduled video call. You can make use of that time however you like: Have a virtual coffee, a peer learning session, or a chat about a book that you recently read.

Need a full-scale team-building activity? Try virtual escape room. There are plenty of escape room platforms out there, for example, Escape Live. You can choose from various different session types or themes. Our People team has recently done a wine tasting Zoom call and it was a great team bonding experience.

It lets you enjoy some informal time with your colleagues, which, amid all the meetings is a nice change. Plus, you get to indulge in some fine beverages, what a treat!

This is a great icebreaker that allows for more intimate conversations among your teammates. Give your colleagues a thought-provoking question to ponder, then pair them randomly using breakout rooms check whether your video conferencing tool allows for it. Next, allow all groups a couple of minutes to discuss the topic before coming back to the main room to share what each pair talked about. Introverts will appreciate this, as it feels more comfortable to share something in a pair, compared to the whole team.

Online team-building games are fun and social — they encourage interaction among coworkers and help bring back the camaraderie of a physical office.

The waters of the internet are full of options, but to inspire you, we recently discovered Bored — a suite of Slack games for remote teams.

You simply add the tool to your company Slack and play fun games with your colleagues right in the Slack channel. Apart from the ever-popular game of trivia, Bored has games in which you roast your colleagues, or play a game of accusations and deception.

When a group does not know each other, it may be difficult for people to start talking. Here is our list of icebreaker games that lets your team have a great time, while also providing shared experiences to facilitate future interactions. Icebreaker Bingo is one of the best games you can play for new introductions. The game is a familiar format, easy to learn and a lot of fun.

Plus, the game format lends itself to prizes and other forms of recognition. Here is a free icebreaker Bingo card template you can play with. In this game, eight individuals, each representing a different intelligence, are stranded on a desert island.

Because the island has a finite amount of resources, your team must decide what order to eliminate the individuals in, in order to ensure survival. For similar ideas, check out this list of problem solving games. While Speed Networking may seem better suited for large group icebreakers, this activity can also be reworked as an intimate icebreaker activity. This exercise provides a fast and easy way for teams to get to know each other.

To play Speed Networking, using a random team generator , pair your team into groups of two. Then, give each pair icebreaker questions and five minutes to make their way through as many questions as possible.

After five minutes are up, switch up the pairs. Since you are playing with a smaller group, you can cycle through the pairs more than once, so your colleagues can ask even more questions or simply chat about some information that came up in a previous question. Need help thinking of ways to break the ice? Check out our list of icebreaker questions for some pointers. Hometown Map is an icebreaker game for work that is easy to set up.

To start, pin a large world map to a bare stretch of wall and place a marker, small Post-It notes, and box of push pins nearby. Then, notify your team to use the push pins and Post-Its to mark birth places or hometowns on the map over the next few days.

When your team members walk past the map, the pins may prompt your colleagues to ask each other about experiences growing up in different places.



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