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1. Play games above your grade level. Remember, only the first 3 wins of the same game will count on the Scoreboards in the same week!

2. When you are done playing for the week, on Friday, Saturday, or on Sunday before 7 pm ... you must report your total wins and your above-grade wins to Eye on the Scoreboard. You can click here or you can click on Eye to report.

3. IF you are one of the top above-grade game winners in the week ... YOU WIN!
(You win the American flags, NOT the dog!)

For 8th graders: You can win, too! EYE will count any one of these challenge level science games listed below
as 5 above-grade winsWRITE TO EYE at the end of the week!

7.1 Energy Transfer and Transformations 8.1 Forces and Motion
7.2 Structure and Function of Organisms 8.2 Heredity and Evolution
7.3 Energy in the Earth's Systems 8.3 Earth in the Solar System
7.4 Science and Technology in Society 8.4 Science and Technology in Society

 

The League rules are simple:

This is always a place to practice, where you can play any game at any grade!

You can win as many games as you want, but only 3 wins of the same game will count
on the Scoreboards in one week.
To win a game, you pass with 70% or higher.

Scoreboards count the wins at the grade level of the games being played.

So, if you win a grade 5 game, it shows up on the grade 5 scoreboard, no matter what grade you're in.


Please visit the site each week during the League's three prize seasons to learn what prize programs are active that week. Those seaons are Regular Season, October into December; The Playoffs, in January and February; and Open Season, in April and May.

Weeks during prize seasons always start Monday mornings and end at 7PM Sundays.
 

Geographic and other restrictions may apply: For example, a home user can't win a classroom prize, even though he or she might have the highest "median" score in their "classroom." Some prize donors may also reserve the right to have geographic restrictions, e.g., a recreation facility may want to promote its services only to people in a particular geographic region. There may be other such limits to prize eligibility. We will attempt to note any restrictions, such as a limited supply of a particuliar prize, or particular deadlines, grade-level requirements, etc., along with prize announcements, but the definitive statement of such further restrictions will be on this page each prize week. Finally, since it is theoretically possible for every player on the system to achieve a perfect score, prizes are always available as supplies last.


The Official CMT League reserves the right to make all League decisions in its sole discretion.

All content (c) and all brands (tm) Big Fun Education,
a tax-exempt Connecticut nonprofit.

Please ask your community to support this unique Connecticut educational program!

 

Common Core State Standards free vocabulary development online games that teach and test,
instructional quizzing by Annabelle Howard, 400 words, robust vocabulary, research Beck McKeown Kucan Bringing Words to Life

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topics for 2011-12

The Olympics People Fly OCTOBER Who Has Seen the Wind? Seeds Make Plants NOVEMBER Landscapes and Portraits A History of Phones DECEMBER Data in the Community The Water Cycle JANUARY Ants: Social Animals Apollo 11 Chinese New Year Confucius Says The Emperor's New Clothes Jackie Robinson Downtown: Ancient Rome The Oregon Trail Bee! I'm Expecting You! Paul Bunyan Perseus and Medusa Backbones Abe Lincoln The Sword of Damocles Alice in Wonderland Casey at the Bat The Planets Benjamin Banneker Five Pillars of Islam Women's Rights A Midsummer Night's Dream Classify Me! Understanding Your Heart Chinese Handwriting Percy Lavon Julian The Road Not Taken Carpetbaggers and Scalawags The Aztecs Gutenberg The Chemistry of Food Rip Van Winkle Renaissance Man From Kashmir to Connecticut All the World's a Stage The Baby Boom Einstein's Wife I Dwell in Possibility FDR's Declaration of War on Japan Cyrano de Bergerac An Honest Thief Neither a Borrower nor a Lender Be The Great Depression (1929)

The Great War I Have a Dream The Cold War Marginal World (Rachel Carson) Magnetism: Opposites Attract The Sad Astronaut The End of Apartheid (S. Africa) The Tell-Tale Heart The New Deal Surrealism

Ozymandias Entrepreneurs Churchill's Greatest Speech A Grocery Bag Grows Up New Combo: Brains and Machines Macbeth and the Weird Sisters The Gift of the Magi Physics in Sports A History of Numbers The Sea of Plastic What Is Money? Econ. 101 The Raven Native America The Importance of Being Earnest Walden A Short History of South Asia The Inca Empire Your Mother Should Know: The Beatles The Search for E.T. Frederick Douglass, July 4 Speech