Give the students the worksheet first and explain the game, then organize the classroom as follows. Get the students to put their tables together with the person sitting next to them. Most classrooms in Japan have six lines of seated students. Doing this will create 3 lines of desks pushed together, with each line usually having 10 to 12 students each. The students will then ask the student facing them a question, and when they are finished, either the boys or the girls (the teacher can work that out) stand up and move one seat down, with the end person rotating from one end of the row to the other.
The teacher puts a cross in one of the eight small squares on the left (it doesn’t take too long). The students then ask their partner the 4 questions, and by doing so they can determine the name of their partner. They then cross off that name in the bingo section at the bottom and at the end the people with the most bingos win.
On the second page, the students write three sentences, either using the provided hints or completely original ones. They then ask their partner the questions and write down their answers in the second section.