What where when school stage questions. Questions from school tournaments on the game “What? Where? When

Class hour - a game for high school students

Target: development of intellectual activity of adolescents.

Preliminary preparation: It is necessary to divide the guys into teams of six in advance. If your class is not divisible by six, then you can either increase or decrease the number of players. Teams must come up with a name for themselves and prepare answer cards.

Team______________ Question number__________

Answer:_________________________________________

Office decoration: There is a tournament table on the board. It contains the names of the teams and the question numbers. In the table you will note the points scored by the teams.

Class progress

The teams sit at separate tables. First, the teacher explains the rules of the game: he reads out the question and gives one minute to think about it, 10 seconds before the end of the minute he begins the countdown. The team captain must write the answer on his answer sheet at this time and turn it in to the teacher. If a team does not have time to submit an answer before the minute ends, the answer is not counted. The teacher then reads the correct answer and enters the data into the table.

Questions

1. Inhabitants of hot deserts and semi-deserts - the fennec fox, caracal, gerbil, long-eared hedgehog and others - have rather large ears. Perfect pitch actually has nothing to do with it, but what role do their ears play?

Answer: they help cool the body - a kind of heat exchanger.

Test: any answer containing the words “cooling”, “coolness”.

2. In the play “The Blue Bird” Maeterlinck describes Time: “An old man with a gray beard, in a classical robe, in one hand - a scythe, and in the other...” Name the second attribute of Time.

Answer: hourglass.

Test: hours.

3. Frank Baum in the book “Tik-Tok from the Land of Oz” talked about six fairies living in the palace of the Queen of Light. These were fairies (pause) of Solar, Moon, Star, Daylight, Firelight and one more, the youngest fairy, quite capable of replacing all the others. Name it.

Answer: Electric Light Fairy.

Test: any answer that contains the word “electricity”.

4. The Burmese puppet theater has a centuries-old tradition. For example, dolls depicting noble people are made from expensive camphor wood, while figures of commoners and animals are made from cheaper wood. Answer with one adjective, which mythological heroes, regardless of gender, age and rank, are stored in a separate box to avoid trouble?

Answer: negative.

Test: bad.

Failure: demons, devils - besides them there are many more negative heroes.

5. Insert the name of a popular TV show into Alexander Belyaev’s joke: “There are flowers for your mother’s uncle with a big mustache.”

gave it! - It would be better to have a vacuum cleaner, (pause)... still!” Fill in the blank.

Answer: “Field of Miracles.”

6. Listen to the list: sea otter - 60 meters, bottlenose dolphin - 200 meters, harp seal - 280 meters, elephant seal - 500 meters, leatherback sea turtle - 1200 meters, sperm whale -

2000 meters... For Pierre Frol from Monaco, this figure was 123 meters. But for a person this is a world record... What is a world record?

Answer: diving to depth.

Test: according to the instructions for the dive.

7. The wonderful wizard from Schwartz’s fairy tale “An Ordinary Miracle” nailed nails with lightning, a hurricane brought him furniture, dishes and mirrors from the city. And what natural disaster did he call upon to help his wife, who was churning butter?

Answer: earthquake.

8. In 1974, Alexander Khmelik and Boris Grachevsky lit Fitilek at the Gorky Film Studio, which soon turned into this. Name everyone who is asked to pay attention to this in the song.

Answer: girls, boys and their parents.

Answers of only boys or only girls or girls and boys without parents are not counted.

9. Monuments are erected not only to real heroes, but also to literary characters. The sculptures of Ostap Bender, the Little Mermaid, the Little Prince and even Baba Yaga are well known. And in the city of Hannibal, Missouri, there is a monument to two residents of St. Petersburg. Name them both.

Answer: Tom Sawyer and Huck Fin.

10. Among their varieties are “butterflies”, “snails”, “ears”, “feathers”, “straw”. Their standard sizes are 35-40 centimeters in length, from 0.7 to 0.9 millimeters in cross-section. Journalist Oleg Osipov writes that the convolutions of the brain of almost every resident of one European country are constantly occupied by them. Name them in your native language.

Answer: spaghetti.

Purpose of the game: development of cognitive and creative abilities, sharpness of thinking and observation, enrichment and development of students’ speech; development of intelligence; development of collective (teamwork) skills.

Equipment: laptop (computer), multimedia projector, screen, table with a spinning top and question numbers laid out in a circle, black box, compass, microprocessor, cereals (buckwheat, semolina, millet), rope.

Rules of the game: there are 6 players in a team, the number of teams is unlimited, the teams sit at the gaming table in order of drawing lots, the team ends the game after three rounds. The results of the game are determined by the results of correct answers.

Progress of the game: The ticket number given to the team is selected on the slide (you can go to the question by clicking on the ticket number; after the team answers, you must return to the slide with questions using the return button). Some slides have a speaker icon to play the melody.

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Preview:

Intellectual game “What? Where? When?"

The selection of questions and preparation of the presentation was carried out by a mathematics teacher

Sergeeva Olga Anatolevna

Purpose of the game: development of cognitive and creative abilities, sharpness of thinking and observation, enrichment and development of students’ speech; development of intelligence; development of collective (teamwork) skills.

Equipment: laptop (computer), multimedia projector, screen, table with a spinning top and question numbers laid out in a circle, black box, compass, microprocessor, cereals (buckwheat, semolina, millet), rope.

Rules of the game: there are 6 players in a team, the number of teams is unlimited, the teams sit at the gaming table in order of drawing lots, the team ends the game after three rounds. The results of the game are determined by the results of correct answers.

Progress of the game: The ticket number given to the team is selected on the slide (you can go to the question by clicking on the ticket number; after the team answers, you must return to the slide with questions using the return button

“Hello dear guests!” (MUSIC)

We are pleased to welcome you to our elite club “What? Where? When?"!

Today a team of teachers is playing against teams of experts.

Dear club members and spectators!

During the game, you must carefully monitor the progress of the discussion and at the end choose the best player.

Our experts are invited to the club! (MUSIC)

And now I will introduce you to the rules of the game!

You see a game circle on the table that contains questions on 5 subjects

– geography

– biology

– physics

  • computer science
  • literature

Connoisseurs must answer 18 questions. For each correct answer they are given 1 point.

Question 18 – BLITZ. This envelope contains 4 questions that experts must answer quickly. If they do not answer at least one question, a point is awarded to the teacher team.

Once during the game, experts can take help from spectators.

So let's start the game!

Game questions

1.BLACK BOX. Question from Leonid Nikolaevich. The black box contains a device that became known in Europe in the 12th century. It was believed to have been invented by the Chinese 4,500 years ago. This version is now recognized as erroneous. The basis of the device is a magnetic needle. ( Compass)

2 . The question is asked by Leonid Nikolaevich. Africans call this mountain “Mountain of the Cold Deity.” Name it if the coordinates of the mountain are 3 0 S and 38 0 east. (Kilimanjaro)

3 . Leonid Nikolaevich is playing with you. This region of Russia does not border with other regions and is separated from Russia by a distance of several hundred kilometers. Name the area.(Kaliningrad region)

4. Question from Lyubov Alexandrovna.He has a long beard, he is very angry, but this is not Karabas-Barabas. “In his wonderful beard lies fatal power, and, despising everything in the world, as long as the beard is intact, the traitor does not fear evil,” Alexander Sergeevich Pushkin wrote about him. So who is this and from what fairy tale?

(Chernomor, "Ruslan and Lyudmila".)

5 . Riddle from Oksana Anatolyevna.I am water, and I swim on water.(Ice)

6. Oksana Anatolyevna plays with you. Decipher the word denoting a physical phenomenon:

(Inertia)

7 . After rains, earthworms appear on the ground and sidewalks. How can we explain this?(Earthworms don't get enough air)

8 . BLACK BOX. Question from Anastasia Nikolaevna.The black box contains samples of cereals. Name these cereals if 1 wow obtained from buckwheat, 2 1st from wheat, 3rd from millet. (Buckwheat, semolina, millet)

9. The question is asked by Anastasia Nikolaevna. This animal is black and orange, tailed, similar to a lizard, but not a reptile. In the spring it lives in the water, but is not a frog. What is it called?(Triton)

10 . BLACK BOX. Question from Olga Anatolyevna.A person has this, and a computer also has it and needs it to process information.

What's in the black box?(Brain, microprocessor)

11 .

How many digits are there in the binary number system of 13?(4)

12 . The question is asked by Olga Anatolyevna.Once upon a time there were two figures: THE CIRCLE AND THE SQUARE. There were 3 houses on their street: one house had a window and a chimney, another had a window but no chimney, and the third had a chimney but no window. Each figure lived in his own house. CIRCLE AND SQUARE lived in houses with windows. SQUARE loved warmth and often lit the stove.

Who lived in which house? (Square lived in the first house, Circle in the second)

13 . Black box: Question from Svetlana Vyacheslavovna.With the help of this item, the hero of Pushkin's fairy tale was able to obtain a debt. What's in the black box?

(Rope, “The Tale of the Priest and His Worker Balda.”)

14 . The Eskimos believe that it can be liquid, light, heavy, fragile, shiny, and there are more than two hundred types of it. What is it about?(Snow.)

15 . The question is asked by Anastasia Nikolaevna.Those who have had the chance to get to know them closely say that each of them is “two tons of bad character.” Who are they?(Rhinoceroses)

16 . Olga Anatolyevna asks.Blaise Pascal's invention in 1642 greatly facilitated the work of his father, the royal intendant of Normandy. In 1673, Leibniz's invention made it possible to perform all operations. Both scientists could easily do without the help of their inventions, which cannot be said about 80% of schoolchildren who, according to tests conducted by the Russian Ministry of Education, will not be able to perform a single operation without modern versions of the invention of the 17th century. What name was given to the invention of Pascal and Leibniz?(Arithmometer.)

17 . Question from Oksana Anatolyevna.Known for surviving the winter cold near warm springs, baby Japanese macaques like to do the same things human babies often do in the winter. What?(Playing snowballs)

18. BLITZ tournament

1) Name the highest continent. ( Antarctica)

2) How many legs does a grasshopper have?(6)

3) Which device requires 101 buttons to operate?(Keyboard)

4) What is a molecule? (smallest particle of matter)

I thank the experts for an interesting game! See you again! (MUSIC)

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Quiz for schoolchildren “What, where, when?”

Leading. Good afternoon, dear experts! It is very pleasant that the most knowledgeable, the most inquisitive and the most attentive gathered here. So, we have three gaming tables, with flags of different colors on them. The game will have several rounds on the following topics: geography, music, wildlife, literature, riddles. Let's start with a round of general questions. Questions will be asked to three teams at the same time, at the signal “The minute has passed” you begin the discussion. The first team to raise the flag answers.

General questions round

1. You all know the mighty hero Ilya Muromets. How many years did Ilya lie on the stove? (33 years)

2. Which branch does not grow on a tree? (Railway)

3. Remember what spell Mowgli knew? (“You and I are of the same blood - you and I”)

4. Remember in which fairy tale by A.S. Pushkin a fundamentally new wage system was introduced. Show her. (Three clicks)

5. It’s cold in winter, so we dress warmly - felt boots, fur coats, hats. Does a fur coat keep you warm in winter? (No, it just keeps you warm)

6. Who has a mustache longer than his legs? (At the cockroach)

7. What is this herb that even the blind can recognize? (Nettle)

8. What did the poodle Artemon wear on his front leg from A. Tolstoy’s fairy tale “The Golden Key”? (Silver watch)

9. What is the name of the living quarters for the crew on a ship? (Cockpit)

10. In Ancient Rus', silver bars served as money. They were called hryvnias. If an item was worth less than the entire block, then a part of it was cut off. What was the name of the severed piece of silver bar? (Ruble)

Round of quick questions

1. What do the rider and the rooster have in common? (Spurs)

2. What kind of fuel is produced in the swamp? (Peat)

3. Where do they dance lezginka? (In Georgia)

1. Under what bush was the hare sitting during the rain? (Under the wet)

3. What is czardas? (Hungarian dance)

1. How can you carry water in a sieve? (Frozen)

2. What country is worn on the head? (Panama)

3. When are eggs tasty? (When you eat them)

Geographical round

1. The deepest lake in the world. (Baikal)

2. Which continent has no rivers? (In Antarctica)

3. Between what two identical letters can you put a small horse and get the name of the country? (Japan)

4. Name the star closest to Earth. This star is visible during the daytime. (Sun)

Musical round

1. What notes can be used to measure distance? (Mi-la-mi)

2. Which Austrian composer was already performing in concerts at the age of six? (Mozart)

3. Which composer composed and played his works while deaf? (Beethoven)

4. What two notes grow in the garden? (Beans)

5. What song did the short kids sing when they were flying in a hot air balloon with Dunno? ("In the grass Grasshopper sat")

Round “Wildlife”

1. What bird breeds chicks in any frost? (Crossbill)

2. During the flight of these birds, it seems that a solid flame is moving. What kind of bird is this? (Flamingo)

3. Which bird flies the fastest? (Swift, up to 140 km/h)

4. What poisonous plant is used to prepare medicine used for heart disease? (Lily of the valley)

5. What plants do not have roots, stems, leaves, flowers? (Algae)

6. What kind of wood is used to make skis? (Birch)

7. Which predatory animal’s track is similar to a human’s track? (Bear)

8. What kind of wood are matches made from? (From aspen)

9. Which plant juice helps with mosquito bites? (Parsley)

Literary round

1. Which literary character owns the running shoes and the magic staff? (To Little Muk)

2. Name three Russian epic heroes. (Dobrynya Nikitich, Ilya Muromets, Alyosha Popovich)

3. What medicine did Malvina Buratino want to give? (Castor oil)

4. What academic title did the owner of the Karabas-Barabas puppet theater have? (Doctor of Puppet Science)

5. What did Pinocchio love more than anything in the world? (Scary adventures)

6. What money coin was used by the residents of the town from the fairy tale “The Golden Key”? (Soldo)

7. “He swayed, swayed on his thin legs, took one step, took another step, hop-hop, straight to the door, across the threshold and into the street.” Who is this? (Pinocchio)

8. “A long, wet, wet man came out with a small, small face, as wrinkled as a morel mushroom.” Who is this? (Seller of medicinal leeches Duremar)

9. What was Gulliver’s profession? (Ship's doctor)

Round of riddles

1. He won’t knock, he won’t blurt out, but he’ll come through the window. (Dawn)

2. Stronger than the sun, weaker than the wind, no legs, but walks, no eyes, but cries. (Cloud)

3. The fur coat is new, but there is a hole in the hem. (Ice hole)

4. It curls around the nose, but is not easy to handle. (Smell)

5. Blue uniform, yellow lining, and sweet in the middle. (Plum)

6. Not the sea, not the river, but agitated. (Ears of corn in the field)

7. She will be born in water,

But strange fate:

She's afraid of water

And he always dies in it. (Salt)

8. Sits on a spoon with its legs dangling. (Noodles)

9. What kind of animal:

White as snow

Puffed up like fur

Walks with shovels

And he eats with a horn. (Goose)

10. Gray, but not a hare, with hooves, but not a horse. (Donkey)

11. Many arms, but one leg. (Tree)

12. Two daughters, two mothers, and a grandmother and granddaughter. How many are there? (Three)

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GAME “WHAT? WHERE? WHEN?"

(grades 7-9)



Rules of the game





Questions for the game

“Assorted” questions.

Questions and queries:




Questions from the field of history:

1. Explain the meaning of the words:

  • veche (national assembly);
  • Magi (priests);

drawing


How the prophetic Oleg is getting ready now


Vsevolod the Big Nest.)

GAME “WHAT? WHERE? WHEN?"

(grades 7-9)

Several teams of 6 people can take part.
Teams choose a captain and come up with a name. The game is played in a large room, on the walls of which are hung
posters with the name of the game, colorfully designed images of question marks, drawings of an owl, etc.

There is a table for the presenter on the stage. Behind the presenter's place there is a scoreboard to display the game score. During the game all teams
sitting in the hall. Each team is at a separate table. Teams must familiarize themselves with the rules of the game, and the host reminds them.

Rules of the game

The facilitator reads out the question and gives all teams one minute to discuss. After a minute has elapsed, a sound signal sounds, after which the teams must submit their answers in writing to the presenter within 20 seconds. After 20 seconds, a second beep sounds, after which no more responses from commands will be accepted. The presenter quickly looks through the sheets with the teams’ answers and reads out, without naming the teams, the “original answers.”
Then he pronounces the correct answer, and the results of the first question are recorded on the scoreboard.
If the question is answered correctly, the team receives one point.
The rating of the question is written in parentheses - the number of teams that did not answer the question. The game continues and the next question is asked.
After completing half the game, a musical break is organized to relax and relieve tension. This could be some number performed by the guys. After a musical break, the game resumes. The team that wins the game (scoring the most points) is awarded commemorative medals to the winners, personalized diplomas of the champions of the game “What? Where? When?”, as well as prizes.

If two teams score the same number of points, the total rating of all questions is taken into account to determine the winner.
Whichever team has more of it wins the game.

Questions for the game

“Assorted” questions.

1. Name the star closest to the earth. (Sun.)

2. Name the largest plucked string musical instrument. (Harp.)

3. Name the very first female astronaut. (V.N. Nikolaeva-Tereshkova.)

4. Name the highest mountain on our planet. (Qomolungma or Everest, 8848 m.)

5. Name the most important book of Muslims. (Koran.)

6. Name the smallest bird. (Hummingbird, less than 2 grams.)

7. Name the most common tree in Russia. (Larch. It makes up 45% of forests.)

8. Name the largest berry. (Watermelon.)

9. Name the most common name on the pages of Kir Bulychev’s works. (Alice.)

10. Name the smallest monetary unit in the United States. (Cent.)

11. What is the name of the highest ocean wave? (Tsunami.)

12. Name the most popular vehicle in East Asia. (Bike.)

13. Name the most common drink to quench your thirst. (Water.)

14. Name the largest island on the planet. (Greenland.)

15. Name the most frequently published book in the world. (Bible.)

16. Name the most common shoes in Russia in the 18th century. (Lapti.)

17. Name the most fun circus profession. (Clown.)

18. Name the most popular flower in Holland. (Tulip.)

Questions from the field of literature.

1. Beauty is life. (N.G. Chernyshevsky. This formula is given in the dissertation “Aesthetic relations of art to activity.)

2. You may not be a poet, but you must be a citizen. (N.A. Nekrasov. “Poet and Citizen.”)

3. Those born to crawl cannot fly. (M. Gorky. “Song about the Falcon.”)

4. Man - it sounds proud! (M. Gorky. “At the Bottom.”)

5. I want the feather to be equal to the bayonet. (V.V. Mayakovsky. “Home.”)

6. No one will embrace the immensity. (Aphorism from “Fruits of Thoughts” by Kozma Prutkov.)

7. You are heavy, Monomakh’s hat. (From A.S. Pushkin’s tragedy “Boris Godunov.”)

8. Signed, off your shoulders. (From Griboyedov’s comedy “Woe from Wit.”)

9. Look to the root! (Aphorism by Kozma Prutkov.)

10. There is a Russian spirit there, it smells of Russia. (A.S. Pushkin. “Ruslan and Lyudmila.”)

Questions and queries:

1. Which Russian poet was hanged by order of the tsar? (K. Ryleev.)

2. Name 11 operas and ballets based on the works of A.S. Pushkin. (“Eugene Onegin”, “Queen of Spades”, “Aleko”, “Mazeppa”,
“Ruslan and Lyudmila”, “Dubrovsky”, “Mozart and Salieri”, “Boris Godunov”, “Bakhchisarai Fountain”, “Golden Cockerel”, “Bronze Horseman”.)

3. The title of which work of a famous Russian writer is an adverb? (“On the Eve” by I.S. Turgenev.)

4. Which novel by a famous Russian writer begins with words in French? (“War and Peace” by L.N. Tolstoy.)

5.Which sailor, who has never sailed, is mentioned in one of the novels by I.S. Turgenev? (“Sailor the Cat” in “The Noble Nest.”)

6. Name Timur from A. Gaidar’s story “Timur and His Team.” (Garaev.)

7. Which Russian writer spoke eight foreign languages? (Griboedov. Was a diplomat - Latin, English, French, Arabic, Italian, Persian, Greek, German.)

8. Which writer wrote epigraphs for which works: “Take care of your honor from a young age”, “There is no point in blaming the mirror if your face is crooked”?
(A.S. Pushkin to the story “The Captain’s Daughter.” Gogol epigraph to the comedy “The Inspector General.”)

9. Which of the Russian writers skated at the age of 70, was into cycling at the age of 75, and rode fast at the age of 82?
astride a horse? (L.N. Tolstoy.)

10. What is the name of the work on which M.Yu. Lermontov worked for 12 years? (“Demon”, in 1829-1841)

11. Which of the Russian writers took part in the defense of Sevastopol, and what work was written by them under the impression of this
events? (L.N. Tolstoy. “Sevastopol Stories.”)

12. Which Russian artist bought the great Ukrainian poet from captivity? (K. Bryullov bought out T. Shevchenko.)

13. What literary works formed the basis of the paintings:

a) “Mermaid” by Kramskoy (“May Night”. N.V. Gogol);
b) “Cossacks” by Repin (“Taras Bulba” by N.V. Gogol);
c) “Barge Haulers on the Volga” by Repin (“On the Volga” by N. Nekrasov);
d) “Rest after the battle” by Neprintsev (“Vasily Terkin” by A. Tvardovsky)

14. What work was created by A.S. Pushkin after studying the greatest work of ancient Russian literature, “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign”? ("Ruslan and Ludmila".)

15. Whose words are these: “There is still gunpowder in the flasks.” (Taras Bulba from N.V. Gogol’s story “Taras Bulba”.)

Questions from the field of history:

1. Explain the meaning of the words:

  • veche (national assembly);
  • polyudye (collection of tribute by the prince from the territories under his control);
  • Magi (priests);
  • wrote (a stick with a sharp end for writing on birch bark).

2. Which temple was the prototype of Sophia of Kyiv? (Sophia Cathedral in Constantinople.)

3. Name at least 3 tribes of the Eastern Slavs. (For example: Kivichi, Vyatichi, Radimichi, Polyane.)

4. About whom the Russian chronicler wrote: “He walked easily and silently on campaigns, like a leopard. He did not take a tent with him, but slept with the saddle under his head. Was he open and brave in battle? (Prince Svyatoslav.)

5. What does Monomakh’s hat have to do with Vladimir Monomakh? (According to legend, the Byzantine Emperor Constantine Monomakh gave it to his grandson Vladimir. From the point of view of historians: the hat has nothing to do with Vladimir, since it appeared in Rus' much later under the Mongols-Tatars.)

6. Explain the meaning of what is happening on drawing. (By order of Vladimir, on the day of the baptism of the Kievites, all pagan idols were thrown into the Dnieper River, this caused horror and fear among the population, a desire to save their gods and the old faith.)

7. U A.S. Pushkin has these words:
How the prophetic Oleg is getting ready now
Take revenge on the foolish Khazars...
What does history say about this? Did Oleg take revenge on the Khazars or did another prince do it? (Prince Svyatoslav defeated the Khazars.)

8. Is it true that the poem “The Tale of Igor’s Campaign” is dedicated to Igor, the son of Rurik? (No. It was written later, in the 12th century, Igor here is brother
Vsevolod the Big Nest.)

9. The chronicles brought to us the image of Prince Andrei Bogolyubsky as a proud and arrogant man. Explain whether only character traits
the prince was forced to look down on everyone? (As doctors established from the remains of Andrei Bogolyubsky, his 3 cervical vertebrae were fused, which made it impossible to tilt his head down; the prince’s head was always raised high.)

10. X-XII century. Confirm or refute the idea that the Russian people who lived at this time were dark and illiterate. (No. Already under Yaroslav the Wise, schools were opened for boys, and under Vladimir Monomakh for girls; numerous birch bark letters are known from Novgorod, etc.)

Questions from the field of geography:

1. Who made the first trip around the world? (Fernand Magellan.)

2. This point on the Earth is interesting because its geographic coordinates are zero. Where is this point? Find it on geographic
map. (Atlantic Ocean. Gulf of Guinea.)

3. This city was born from a Roman military settlement, then a mighty fortress with its bloody military history appeared. Around it, block after block, new areas were piled up - chaotically and unplanned. The city was not built for fun, luxury or entertainment - it was needed here, at the mouth of the river, for trade, for raids on foreign lands. It was the abode of merchants and warriors. Now it is one of the largest cities and ports in the world, containing approximately 14% of the country's total population. Until 1953, in the suburbs of the city there was a world-famous observatory through which the Earth’s prime meridian passes. Name the city and the famous meridian that runs through it. At the mouth of which river is this city located? (London, Greenwich, Thames.)

4. What is the length of the equator in degrees, kilometers? (360, 4000 km.)

5. Can geographic latitude be equal to 95 degrees? (No.)

6. What is the length of the arc of the equator? (40,075.696 km.)

7. Write down the numerical scale and construct a linear one, if named 1 cm - 5 km (1: 500000); in 1 cm - 3500 km (1: 350000000), in 1 cm - 100 m (1: 10000).

8. How can you use contour lines to determine which slope is steeper? (Where the horizontal lines are closer to each other, the slope is steeper.)

9. How does relative height differ from absolute height? (Relative height is the height of one point relative to another, absolute height is relative to sea level.)

10. What does the term “geography” mean? (Ground description.)

Questions from the field of computer science:

1. What was the original meaning of the word:

  • computer? (The person doing the calculations.)
  • calculator? (Stone (pebble) for counting.)

2. What information processes do you know? (Storage, transmission and processing of information.)

3. Name the first programmer. (Lady Ada Augusta Lovelace, daughter of Lord Byron.)

4. What name did Blaise Pascal give to his summing machine? ("Pascalina", 1642)

5. What does jacquard fabric have to do with computer science? (In Jacquard looms, the pattern was set using punched cards.
Charles Babage used this idea to process information using a computer.)

6. What is a chip? (Integrated circuit on a silicon chip.)

7. What diameter can a flexible disk have? (8"" (first floppy disk 1971); 5.25"" (1976); 2"" (1985); 3"" (1982); 3.5 (1987) inches.)

8. How old are the accounts? (2000-5000 years China, Egypt, Greece.)

9. What is a flowchart? (Diagram showing the sequence of the main steps of the program.)

10. How does a logical error differ from a syntax error? (Syntax error - typo detected by computer, logical
The error is not noticed by the computer, but leads to incorrect results.)

Physics questions:

1. In a moving carriage of a passenger train, there is a book on the table. A book is at rest or in motion relative to:

a) table,
b) rails,
c) the floor of the carriage,
d) telegraph poles.

Answer: At rest.

2. What kind of motion is called uniform?

Answer: Uniform motion is motion when a body travels the same paths in equal intervals of time.

3. Why is it easier to jump over a ditch with a running start?

Answer: During a run, a person acquires speed and, after taking off from the ground, continues to move by inertia.

4. Why is it dangerous to cross the road in front of nearby traffic?

Answer: The car cannot stop immediately when the brakes are turned on; it continues to move forward for some time (moves by inertia).

5. Are cold water molecules different from hot water molecules?

Answer: The molecules are not different, only the speed of their movement is different.

6. Explain why gases can be compressed more than liquids?

Answer: The distances between gas molecules are much greater than the distances between liquid molecules.

7. Why can the scent of flowers be felt from a distance?

Answer: Due to the phenomenon of diffusion.

8. Why do odors of odorous substances spread quickly in calm air, but a dye (for example, blue) spreads slowly in calm water?

Answer: The rate of diffusion in gas is greater than the rate of diffusion in water, because in gases molecules move more freely and the distances between them are greater than in liquids.

9. The molecules of a solid are in continuous motion. Why don't solids break up into individual molecules?

Answer: There are attractive forces between molecules.

10. Molecules of a substance are attracted to each other. Why are there gaps between them?

Answer: Repulsive forces arise between molecules at close distances (smaller than the diameter of the molecules).

11. What is the reason for the destruction of buildings during an earthquake?

Answer: The phenomenon of inertia, because the soil, together with the foundation of buildings, begins to move, but the building itself remains at rest.

Questions from the field of art and music.

1. Name the names of famous Russian landscape painters. (Shishkin, Levitan, Kuindzhi, Polenov, Aivazovsky.)

2. In which painting by Russian artists is the sea depicted by one painter, and man by another? (“Pushkin by the Sea” Aivazovsky and Repin.)

3. Which of the most famous Peredvizhniki artists do you know? (Kramskoy, Perov, Savrasov, Ge, Shishkin, Makovsky, Repin, Surikov,
Vasnetsov, Levitan).

4. Which paintings by Russian artists were once removed from the exhibition by the Tsar? (“Refusal of Confession” by Repin and “Rural Procession for Easter” by Perov.)

5. Which of the great artists was an anatomist, biologist, astronomer, musician, writer, architect? (Italian Leonardo da Vinci, 16th century.)

6. The whole world knows the cartoons with the signature “Kukryniksy”. But it's a pseudonym. Who are the authors of these works? (Soviet artists: Kupriyanov, Krylov, Sokolov.)

7. Which Russian artist devoted his entire creative life to creating one painting? (Ivanov Alexander Andreevich “The Appearance of Christ to the People.”)

8. Which great composer began his concert career at the age of six? (Mozart.)

9. Which famous Russian composer was a chemist by profession, an academician of the Medical-Surgical Academy? (A.P. Borodin.)

10. Which famous Russian composer was a general of the Russian army, a scientist in the field of military engineering, a professor of engineering
academy? (Cui Caesar Antonovich.)

11. The great Russian composer Borodin died before finishing his opera “Prince Igor”. Who finished it? (Rimsky-Korsakov and Glazunov.)

12. Which famous Russian composer was a participant in the Patriotic War of 1812, and then, following a false denunciation, was arrested and exiled to Siberia? (Alyabyev Alexander Alexandrovich.)

13. What musical works are dedicated to the legendary battleship Potemkin? (Opera “Battleship Potemkin”, composer
N. Rechmensky.)

14. Based on the excerpt of the song, tell me what the name of the song is (and who are the authors of the lyrics and music)?

Why are you looking askance, my dear?
Bowing his head low.
It's hard to say and not say
Everything that is in my heart.
(“Moscow Evenings”, words by M. Matusovsky. music by V. Solovyov-Sedoy.)

  • From these questions you can create a quiz game for participants of any age from 5th to 9th grade.

Intellectual game “What? Where? When?"

For 5th – 6th grades.

Teacher of ShSR “Alter”:

Sabitova N.G.

Karaganda

The game is played in the form of a brain ring between three teams. The age of the players is 5th – 6th grade. There are 6 people in the team.

Equipment:

· 2 cubes (on the sides of one cube there are numbers from 1 to 6, on the sides of the other cube there are colors: green, red, blue, yellow, orange and white);

· colored plates with the name of the subject: green - biology and geography; blue – logic; red – mathematics; yellow – history; orange – Kazakh, English languages; white – Russian language and literature;

· a set of questions by subject;

· emblems for players;

· signal cards;

· questions to play with the audience.

Rules of the game:

· The game is played up to 6 points scored by one of the teams.

· The order of play of the teams is determined by drawing lots.

· The team players roll the dice in turn, determining the question number and the color of the item.

· The right to be the first to answer is given to the team playing the round. For the correct answer, the team receives 1 point. If the team cannot give an answer, then the right to answer is given to the fans. For the fans' correct answer, the team receives 0.5 points.

· If both the team and the fans do not give the correct answer, then the right to give the correct answer passes to the team that first raised the signal card. In this case, the team receives 0.3 points for a correct answer.

Leading:

Dear viewers, we have gathered with you today at a game between three teams of experts.

Very often we hear that school science is boring. They are not boring - they are just very serious.

From the first years of life until old age, a person constantly turns to numbers, figures, rules, and concepts that he learned at school. When he wakes up, he usually remembers what day it is, what time he needs to go to school or work, and when he will return home. Every morning he looks at the thermometer to determine whether the day will be warm or cold and put on appropriate clothing. During the day, he needs to repeatedly calculate how much something costs, how much he needs to pay or receive, and before preparing dinner, he will have to measure out how much cereal, butter, and flour to take. They measure in spoons, glasses, liters, grams, centimeters, hours, minutes. While traveling, determines the route to follow using the geographic data of the destination. Once in another country, he uses all the means of communication available to him - facial expressions, gestures, and above all - language. Using the basics of school subjects has become so common and natural for us that we forget: once upon a time people, our ancestors, did not know any of this and, apparently, discovered science with great difficulty and for a long time. Today we will take a short trip through school subjects. And teams of experts will help us with this.

Today we are playing a game: “What? Where? When?". And I invite teams of 5/1, 5/2 and 6 classes to the tables. Let's meet the teams. (Welcome and introduction of teams of experts)

Math questions:

1. Sofya Vasilievna Kovalevskaya (1850-1891) plays with you

Kovalevskaya is an outstanding Russian mathematician; the world's first woman professor and corresponding member of the St. Petersburg Academy of Sciences. In 1888, S. Kovalevskaya completed her scientific work - “The problem of the rotation of a rigid body around a fixed point.”

The natural and oldest measure of length is the step. However, to measure large distances in ancient times, other measures were also used. For example, the ancient Roman mile was equal to 1,000 steps.

In Ancient Rus', the following units of length were used:

oblique fathom (248 cm) – the distance from the toes of the left foot to the end of the fingers of the raised right hand;

fly fathom (176 cm) - the distance between the ends of the fingers of hands spread to the sides.

Attention, question: Dear experts, what was the distance from the end of the fingers to the elbow of the bent arm called?

Answer: Elbow.

2. Playing with you is Leonty Filippovich Magnitsky (1669-1739), the first teacher of mathematics and marine sciences in Russia, who had an original mathematical talent.

Attention question:Dear experts – Blitz sector:

1). The shortest distance from a point to a line. (Perpendicular)

2). Lilies grew on the lake. Every day their number doubled, and on the 20th day the entire lake was overgrown. On what day was half the lake overgrown? (On the 19th)

3). How many days are there in summer vacation? (92)

3. Euclid is playing with you - Ancient Greekmathematician , author of the first theoretical treatise on mathematics that has come down to us.Attention question:

“Mono” “di” “poly” is in Greek;

“uni” “bi” “multi” - this is in Latin.

How would it be in Russian?

Answer: One, two, many.

4. Dear experts - Blitz sector:

1. What shaft is depicted in Aivazovsky’s painting? (Ninth Wave)

2. A city consisting of 101 names. (Seva-sto Pol)

3. Three hens will lay three eggs in three days. How many eggs will 6 hens lay in 6 days? (12 eggs)

5. Hans Christian Andersen plays with you.

The name of this ancient unit of length served as the name of a fairy-tale heroine.

Attention question:

What is this unit of length?

Who is this heroine?

Answer: Inch. Thumbelina.

6. Mathematics teacher T.S. Grigorieva plays. and Sabitova N.G.

In ancient times there was no such term. It was introduced in the 17th century by the French mathematician François Viète, and translated from Latin it means “spoke of the wheel.” What is this?

Answer: Radius

Questions on biology and geography

1. Played by geography teacher Chalapko L.M.

This is the only point in the northern hemisphere that does not participate in the daily rotation of the Earth around its axis. There is no change of day and night, no longitude, no east, west and north directions, and any point on the Earth’s surface is located in relation to it only in one direction. All meridians pass through this point.

Attention, question: What is this point?

(North Pole)

2. Thor Heyerdahl plays with you - famous traveler, anthropologist, author of many popular science books.
Sector "Blitz":

3) A part of the ocean or sea that extends deep into the land. Here the tide height reaches its maximum. (Bay)

3. Attention, black box!

Some of you have THIS. At one time, the church forbade the use of THIS, since IT distorts reality. Name an item that has been seriously competing with THIS lately.

(Glasses)

4. The “black box” contains the fruit, consumed fresh, dried and soaked. This fruit belongs to a plant of the dicotyledonous class. Its wild ancestors grow in the Caucasus and Central Asia. The plant is cross-pollinated, very frost-resistant, can withstand frosts down to -30 degrees Celsius! The fruits are healthy and contain substances that remove heavy metals from the body. The southern capital of Kazakhstan is named after this fruit. What fruits are we talking about?

(About apples)

5. plays with you Christopher Columbus- Italian traveler, navigator. One of the South American countries, Colombia, is named after him. It is traditionally believed that it was he who discovered America for Europeans. Attention, "Black Box"!

The “black box” contains a talisman that medieval knights wore on their chests. He was credited with a miraculous property: supposedly he was able to protect a warrior from arrows and sword blows. The philosophers of antiquity, cutting this mysterious object crosswise, explained to their students the structure of the Universe, i.e. it was a visual aid for studying astronomy. At all times and among all peoples, medicinal properties were attributed to it, and in the Middle Ages they claimed that even its smell protects against disease. And in our time, it is used to prevent colds, and they even smear their heads with its juice to make their hair grow thicker.

Attention, question! What's in the black box?

(Bulb)

6. Dear experts! What substance did the French pilot and writer Antoine De Sainte - Exupery write a hymn to: “You have no taste, no color, no smell, you cannot be described, you are enjoyed without understanding what you are. You are life itself." This is the most common substance on Earth.

(Water)

History questions

1. Played by history teacher Isina A.S.

Sector "Blitz"

1) Nowadays, no one has a question: what to write on? Of course, on paper. What did the ancient Egyptians write on? (Papyrus)

2) This Saka queen ordered Cyrus's head to be placed in a bag filled with blood. (Tomyris)

3) Name the first period of the Stone Age (Paleolithic)

2. The black box contains what in German means “sample” and in Greek means “papyrus for writing.” They can be geographical, administrative, political, economic - schoolchildren, travelers, and the military cannot do without them.

What's in the black box?

(Map)

3. The question is asked by history teacher Isina A.S. Attention to the screen! Here is a unique architectural monument of ancient Russian architecture, which is located in Russia, in Karelia, on the island of Kizhi. In one minute, name an item that is necessary in the construction of such structures, but which was not used in the construction of this architectural monument.

(Nail)

4. Attention, “black box”. In ancient Rome, taxes were required to be paid on the first day of each month. The first month of the year was called “calenda” by the ancient Romans. Debts were recorded in special debt books. In the black box lies one of these debt books. Attention, question: What is in the black box?

(Calendar)

5. Sector "Blitz"

1) Image of God in the form of a figurine (Idol)

2) Burials in the Bronze Age (Mounds)

3) Upper wooden dome of the yurt (Shanyrak)

6. Sector "Blitz"

1) One of the first tools of ancient man (Chopper)

2) The “Golden Man” was found in the famous Saki monument... (Issyk)

3) Name of the New Stone Age (Neolithic)

Logic questions

1. The school has 400 students. How many students have the same birthday?

(Thinking time 1 min.)

Solution. Since the number of days in a year is less than 400; 365 (or 366) students may have birthdays on different days of the year, and everyone else will have their birthdays coincide with the first.

Answer: 35 people will match.

2. In 1900, January 1 was Monday. What day of the week was January 1, 1995?

(Thinking time 2 min.)

Solution. If the year is not a leap year, then it shifts the day of the week by 1 (365: 7 = 52 ost 1).

From 1900 to 1994 inclusive, 94 years passed, and 23 of them were leap years; the day of the week moved, taking into account the seven-day period, by 5 days ((94 + 23) : 7 = 16 ost 5). Therefore, January 1, 1995 fell on a Sunday.

Answer: Sunday.

3. There are two vessels with a capacity of 3 liters and 5 liters. How can you use them to get 4 liters of water from a tap?

(Thinking time 1 min.)

Solution. 1st transfusion: pour 3 liters from a 5-liter vessel into a 3-liter vessel, 2 liters of water remain in it.

2nd transfer: pour 2 liters of water from a 5-liter vessel into a 3-liter vessel. 1 liter of water is missing from the top.

3rd transfer: from a full 5-liter vessel, add 1 liter of water to a 3-liter vessel. There will be 4 liters of water left in a 5-liter container.

4. . A vessel filled to the top with water has a mass of 5 kg, and a vessel half filled has a mass of 3 kg and 500 g. How much water does the vessel hold?

(Thinking time 1 min.)

Solution. 5 kg – 3kg 500g = 1kg 500g is the mass of half the water in the vessel. Then the mass of all the water in the vessel is exactly 2 times greater, that is, 3 kg. Answer: 3 kg.

5. A snail climbs up a 10-meter-high pole. During the day it rises by 5 meters, and at night it drops by 4 meters. How many days will it take for the snail to reach the top of the pillar?

Answer: 6 days

6. Question:In a square dance hall, you need to arrange 10 chairs along the walls so that there are equal numbers of chairs against each wall. How to do it?

Answer:

Questions on Russian language and literature.

1. Sector “Blitz”: Name the fairy tale:

1) “A soldier walked along the road: “One-two, one-two!” A satchel behind my back, a saber on my side...” (“Ognivo”)

2) “He heard one amazing story, full of exciting adventures, from a swallow...” (“Thumbelina”)

3) “His mother is an old tin spoon, and he has 24 brothers...” (“The Steadfast Tin Soldier”)

2. Dear experts, Hans Christian Andersen is playing with you: “One of my fairy tales describes an effective test for identifying membership in the royal family. This 'test' is in a black box."

Attention, question: What test are we talking about?

(Pea)

3. Solve examples from grammatical arithmetic. In your answers you should come up with words denoting the names of the birds.

1) Karo + so (Soroka)

2) Flag + monica – ka (Flamingo)

3) Poison + body – o (Woodpecker)

4) Gol + willow (Oriole)

5) Ditch + section – ia (Starling)

6) Salo + dot – o (Swallow)

4. Dear experts, Russian language teacher E.N. Vodopyanova is playing with you:

Solve the charades:

1) Between conjunction and preposition

Put on a heavenly phenomenon

And three composed syllables

They will give a fence or a barrier (O-grad-a)

2) My first syllable is on a tree

My second syllable is a conjunction.

But in general I am matter,

And I'm fit for a suit. (Cloth)

5. Cartoon break!

(Series of the cartoon “Masha and the Bear”)

6. Sector “Blitz”: Answer the questions with a proverb or saying:

1) Whose soul is in darkness? (Alien soul - darkness)

2) To what metal can silence be compared? (Word is silver, silence is gold)

3) What does money love? (Money loves the account)

Questions on English and Kazakh languages

1. Why is the offer unique?

"The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog"?

(It uses all 26 letters of the alphabet)

2. What's interesting about the word " racecar"?

(It is read the same from left to right and from right to left)

3. Which word can English poets never find a rhyme for?

a) month

B) lake

c) house

d) town

(month)

4. Name the English word where they occur three double letters in a row.

(B ookkee per)

5. Sector "Blitz"

1) What is the difference between fairy tales and legends? (The legend describes events that took place once upon a time)

2) Name a fairy tale in which a cat paid with its tail for a rash act. (“Makta kyz ben mysyk”)

3) Name the cunning man who managed to get ten choice sheep from the bai for a gnawed bone. (Aldar Kose)

6. Musical pause

Playing with spectators

1. Guess the antiphrases. Well-known proverbs serve as clues.

1) The evil proposal is disgusting for the dog too. (A kind word also pleases the cat)

2) The night is short from the morning if you are full of worries. (It's a long day until the evening, if there's nothing to do)

3) Started idleness - work cowardly. (Business before pleasure)

4) You can cut through weak enmity with a saw. (You can’t cut a strong friendship with an ax)

5) You can't sell stupidity for dollars. (Money can't buy intelligence)

6) Generosity is the end of rare happiness. (Greed is the beginning of all grief)

2. Guess the charades:

1) The first three letters are a siren signal,

And the last two are a pretext.

The whole thing - everyone saw it in the forest

And burned it in the stove in winter. (Pine)

2) You will add a preposition to the building,

but in general you will melt the ore (House - on)

3) The first syllable is among the notes,

The second is on the dance floor,

All together - a root crop,

Ripening in the garden. (Re – pa)

3. Ancient man (Australopithecus)

4. The oldest religious concept (Totemism)

5. The first cohesive permanent team of relatives (Rod)

6. The main condition for human development (Labor)

7. Ancient Greek historian (Herodotus)

8. Material for covering and insulating yurts (Koshma)

9. A woman turns to someone in your class and says, “I am your mother, but you are not my son.” What would that mean? (She addresses the girl.)

10. 1% of one thousand rubles? (10 rubles)

11. Unit of speed at sea? (node)

12. Is it possible to get zero when multiplying numbers? (yes, if one of the factors is zero)

13. What is 1 pood equal to? (16 kg)

14. How many vertices does a cube have? (8)

15. How many steps does the staircase have, where the middle step is the eighth? (15)

16. Multiply the number of continents by the number of oceans. What did you get? (24)

17. A rooster standing on one leg weighs 3 kg. How much does he weigh standing on two legs? (3 kg)