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“Couch Game” is another Teacher’s Day Game.

How to Play “Couch Game”: With equal numbers of guys and girls, form teams. Write the names of all your guests on pieces of paper and give one piece to each guest at random. You become whoever your piece of paper says you are – do not disclose this. Everyone sits in a circle, alternate guy, girl, with four people on the couch and the rest on chairs. Have one extra, empty chair. The object of the game is to get all your gender onto the couch. The person who is sitting with the empty chair to their left calls out a name, trying to get the opposite gender off the couch. The person with that piece of paper must stand up and move to the empty chair. They then swap their piece of paper with the caller. The next person to call is the one with now empty space to their left. This goes on until one team has 4 of their own players on the couch

poem about wonderful teacher

Wonderful TeacherWith a special gift for learningAnd with a heart that deeply cares,You add a lot of loveTo everything you share,And even thoughYou mean a lot,You’ll never know how much,For you helpedTo change the worldThrough every life you touched.You sparked the creativityIn the students whom you taught,And helped them strive for goalsThat could not be bought,You are such a special teacherThat no words can truly tellHowever much you’re valuedFor the work you do so well.

teachers day history National Teacher’s Day history is quite interesting. Read on to know about history and origin of Happy National Teachers Day.

In 1944, an Arkansas teacher, Mrs. Mattye Whyte Woodridge, corresponded with political and educational leaders for a national day honoring teachers. She also wrote to Eleanor Roosevelt, who persuaded the 81st Congress to proclaim a National Teacher Day in 1953.

In the late 1970s, the National Education Association (NEA), its Indiana and Kansas state affiliates, and its local affiliate in Dodge City, Kansas, lobbied Congress for the creation of a national day celebrating teachers. Congress declared March 7, 1980 as National Teacher’s Day. But it was declared as National Teacher’s Day for that year only.

NEA and its affiliates continued to observe Teacher Day on the first Tuesday in March until 1985, when NEA and the National PTA established Teacher Appreciation Week as the first full week of May. The NEA Representative Assembly then voted to make the Tuesday of that week National Teacher’s Day. Since then, National Teacher’s Day is celebrated on the Tuesday of the first full week of May.

This is all about the National Teachers’ Day origin.

http://festivals.iloveindia.com/teachers-day/poems/funny-teacher-poem.html

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