Jenna and I have played “Crazy Countries” a game
much like Crazy 8 Of course the Africa
continent deck has a lot more cards than say Oceania or South America deck and
so we of course don’t play with all of the cards. We’re not learning countries so much as
continents – for I have told Jenna that whenever we use a wild card to change
suit, we have to say by continent rather than color.
I took Spanish in 9th and 10th
grade. In my first year, part of our
lessons included studying the countries
in South America . We were also assigned pen pals to correspond
with in hopes that it would help us learn our Spanish and assist our pen pal
with his or her English.
The map of South America
looks the same way I remember it looking in 1975. It looks the same way today. And I am impressed by the stableness of the
boundaries. It makes geography so much
easier to learn (and share).
After playing “Crazy Countries” (the only game we
have played thus far) I thought I would impress Jenna with my knowledge of what
countries fit where. I got half right,
and although I remembered all the names (except for Suriname )
, I wasn’t able to match them to their appropriate shape until she showed me
the flags. Not that I remember learning
the flags. It was through a different source that I thought I might have enough material for another post although I would
like to just tack it onto what I started yesterday.
My ability to recognize flags did not come from
geography. It actually came from the
Mahjong tiles found on the Internet. I
wanted to know what flags belonged to what countries, which led me to the
cards, which led me to an imaging index (as I could not find four of the flags
among the cards; and I also learned that some of the flags were out of date)