Suggested use, and practical subject-related examples

This learning activity can be meaningfully integrated into different subjects by adapting the card sets and the types of creative connections students are encouraged to make.

Language Arts / English

  • Vocabulary development (nouns, adjectives, verbs, categories)
  • Story-building: cards become story elements, characters, settings
  • Exploring synonyms, antonyms, rhyme associations
  • Creative dialogue: “I have… a forest. Who has… something that could appear in my story?”

Mathematics

  • Number sequences: “I have 12. Who has… something divisible by 3?”
  • Shapes and geometry associations
  • Fractions, patterns, or measurement vocabulary
  • Logical reasoning: cards connected through rules or features
  • Science
  • Animal classifications, habitats, food chains
  • Weather types, materials, states of matter
  • Energy sources or environmental concepts
  • Creative analogies (e.g., “Who has something that could produce light?”)

Environmental Studies / Social Studies

  • Categories related to community roles, feelings, fairness, responsibility
  • Ethical connections: “I have kindness. Who has a situation where kindness is needed?”
  • Exploring values and relationships

Arts

  • Symbolic connections between images and emotions
  • Using cards as inspiration for drawings, collages, or story illustrations
  • Exploring colour associations and sensory links
  • Creative transitions: “Who has a card that matches the mood of my card?”