“Eat Poop You Cat” Could Be A Great Game For English Language Learners

_Alicja_ / Pixabay
“Eat Poop You Cat” (I have no idea who came up with that name) is a great game I recently learned about – it’s a variation of the Telephone Game (one person whispers a phrase in the ear of one person, then they do the same to the next person, etc.), which is an old stand-by in ELL classrooms for practicing speaking.
In EPYC (I’ll abbreviate the name of the game for the rest of the post), one person writes a sentence on a piece of paper, passes it to the next person who has to draw it. Then, that person folds the paper so the next person can’t see the sentence – only the picture. That person has to write a sentence describing the picture. They fold the paper so the next person can’t see the picture, only the sentence. They pass it on, and that next person draws a picture using that sentence as a guide.
While this is going on, everyone has a paper and is either writing a sentence or drawing. At the end, everyone can have fun seeing each unfolded paper and how they evolved.
You can see a more detailed and illustrated explanation of how to play it here.
I had ChatGPT create a game handout, including some sentence starters, which you can download here.
I’m having a hard time visualizing how this would work out in a way that not everyone is either doing all sentence-writing or all drawing all the time. I asked ChatGPT for suggestions about it, and none of them seemed very workable. I think the easiest way to deal with it, if it’s a problem, is just play two short games – maybe stopping each at six “turns.” At that point, see what people came up, and then give everyone a fresh hand-out. In the second game, if they wrote sentences in the first game, they start off drawing, and if they drew, they write sentences.
Or, perhaps I’m overthinking this.
There’s a free game version of this you can play called Exquisite Monster, and you can play in a closed virtual room.
There are also online games of completely different drawing versions of the Telephone game. One’s called Drawception and the other is DrawPhone.
I’m adding this info to:
The Best Ideas For Using Games In The ESL/EFL/ELL Classroom
The Best Online Games Students Can Play In Private Virtual “Rooms”




