Items on the game must include:
The French and Indian War
Proclamation of 1763
Taxes (sugar, stamp, Townshend, tea)
Writs of Assistance
Vice-Admiralty Courts
Quartering Act
Boston Massacre
Boston Tea Party
The Intolerable Acts
Lexington and Concord (Shot heard 'round the world)
Think of the game as a timeline. Each of the laws and events above are in order as they happened.
So the game should start with the French and Indian War and should end with the battle of Lexington and Concord.
Example: a player might land on a space that says you were arrested for smuggling and must stand trial in a Vice-Admiralty court- you are sent to england, lose a turn.
In this example, the player learned that smugglers stood trial in Vice-Admiralty courts and that you had to be sent to England to do so.
Scoring Rubric for Board Game:
To earn an A
-must have all events listed on board
-game must be “playable”. In other words, possible to win, clear instructions, etc.
-game clearly teaches player about every event/law I listed
on the board.
-game includes pictures, color.
-game is neat, easy to read, no spelling errors
To earn a B
-must have all events listed on board
-game must be “playable”. In other words, possible to win, clear instructions, etc.
-game clearly teaches player about most of the events/laws I
listed on the board.
-game includes pictures, color.
-game is neat, easy to read, no spelling errors
To earn a C
-must have all events listed on board
-game must be “playable”. In other words, possible to win, clear instructions, etc.
-game clearly teaches player about some event/law I listed
on the board.
-game includes pictures, color.
-game is neat, easy to read, 2 or less spelling errors
To earn a D
-Does not have all events listed on board
-or is not
“playable”. In other words,
possible to win, clear instructions, etc.
-or game does not teach player about any of the events/laws I listed on the
board.
To earn an F
Did not complete a game
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