CLOSE READING DIGITAL INFERENCE MYSTERY: WHO ROBBED THE BANK VAULT?
This digital bank robbery close reading inference mystery is a fun way to engage your students and challenge them to look for text evidence, infer information, and read more closely.
The City East Bank is home to a state-of-the-art bank vault, to which few of the employees have access. The bank’s CEO is visiting one of his branches today to do some accounting. However, when he arrives, he discovers the vault is empty. Your students need to figure out who robbed the bank vault.
This is a Google-compatible activity, and students complete all the work on the computer. This works well with distance learning, 1:1 classrooms, remote teaching, Google Classroom, or for online education.
Included in your purchase:
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A Google Slides teacher presentation that guides the mystery with the backstory, evidence, the culprit reveal, and detailed explanations for why each suspect is innocent and why the culprit is guilty.
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An original narrative backstory that sets up and initiates the mystery.
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A variety of digital clues that require students to close read and use their inference skills. There is a social media post, a formal written warning, an email, a social media message, a witness testimony, a job posting, a text message, a receipt, and a medical bill.
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Two different slide options are provided. One more challenging option has two pieces of evidence per slide, and the other has one piece of evidence with a section for students to take notes along the side.
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A final digital response slide where students can keep track of their findings that support or refute different suspects in the mystery.
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A detailed teacher answer key in slide format for students and within the Google Slides presentation slideshow for whole-class review.
How it works:
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Decide whether you want students to work in partners, groups, or independently for the activity.
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Use the Google Slides presentation to guide you through each element of the lesson. The slides will help you introduce the story and evidence to students.
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Share the digital file with students and allow them time to make their predictions and inferences and solve the mystery.
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Once students have made their final prediction, use the Google Slides presentation to reveal the culprit and go through each of the suspects to show the evidence of their innocence or guilt.
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