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Whether you run a classroom or workspace, teaching or working with new people can be a little awkward at first. Don’t worry. There are plenty of fun, easy ways to bond with your new group. We’ve outlined a few simple games that can help you break the ice.

1

Group Bingo

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  1. Create a bingo board with different traits or attributes listed in each square, like "Born in January" or "Has a pet cat," and give each person a copy of it. Then, have everyone chat with each other and try to find people that have the traits listed on their bingo cards. When a player finds someone who has one of the included traits, they write that player's name down in that square. Whoever gets bingo first wins!
    • To encourage more conversations, only use a person’s name once on your bingo card.
    • Prompts that you could include on the premade bingo card might be “has lived in another country,” “born in January,” “has a pet cat,” or “plays soccer.”
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3

Jenga Questions

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  1. Write a get-to-know-you question on each of the wooden blocks. Then, set up your Jenga tower as normal. Invite each member of your group to carefully remove a block and answer the question that’s written on it. Continue cycling through your group members until the tower falls down. [1]
    • Questions like “What’s the best present you ever got?” “What’s your favorite time of year?” and “How do you like to spend your alone time?” are all great icebreaker questions.
    • “What are 2 things you’re good at?” “What’s something you can’t live without?” or “What are you looking forward to?” are other excellent questions.
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6

String Game

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  1. Cut out several different lengths of string, and let the group members each pick one. Then, invite each person to wrap the string around their finger. Each group member must volunteer a fun fact about themselves for every loop that the single piece of string creates around their finger. [4]
    • You can play a sillier version of this icebreaker by using toilet paper instead of string. People grab as much toilet paper as they normally would use from a roll. Then, each person shares a fun fact about themselves for every square they pulled off.
9

A Great Wind Blows

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  1. Invite everyone to sit in a circle of chairs. Make a general statement using the phrase “A great wind blows for everyone who…” Invite anyone who identifies with the statement to stand up and seat themselves in a different chair. For every round that someone stands up, remove a chair from the circle—if someone can’t find a chair, then they’re out of the game. [7]
    • You might say, “A great wind blows for everyone who likes spicy food” or “A great wind blows for everyone who speaks another language.”
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