![the envelopes please game the envelopes please game](https://cdn.firespring.com/images/a3d78fc3-cbf5-4ed5-b38e-1caa77e4acb6.jpg)
![the envelopes please game the envelopes please game](https://i.ytimg.com/vi/JcBmMnuwZr4/mqdefault.jpg)
I posed the problem to my husband, and we reasoned through it together. In this book, I ran across a puzzle involving twelve envelopes. It’s currently out of print, but you can still pick up a few used copies for relatively cheap on Amazon. At Goodwill, I picked up a new puzzle book, Giant Book of Hard-to-Solve Mind Puzzles, for the bargain price of $2. Last week, I was feeling a bit bored from staying home so much this summer, so my husband and I spent the better part of a day visiting thrift stores as an excuse to get out of the house. This calls for a new first day of school math task.
![the envelopes please game the envelopes please game](http://ytimg.googleusercontent.com/vi/alxYVR7Whhk/0.jpg)
Next year, I will be teaching 3 sections of Trig/Pre-Calculus (students I taught this past year in Algebra 2) and 3 sections of Algebra 2 (students I have never taught before). The activity went so well that I would be tempted to do the same activity again this year, but half of my classes will be made up of students who I taught this year.
The envelopes please game code#
This next year, I will be posting the codes on a poster so that I can point students to the poster whenever a classroom code is needed. I can’t tell you how many times I had to drop everything and look up a code for a student at an inopportune time. Every time I got a new student this past year or had a student switch from one period to another, I had to remember to go and look up the Google Classroom code so they could join the class to get assignments and announcements. This past year was my first year in a 1:1 environment and my first year using Google Classroom. Two days ago, I created a Google Classroom Poster. It’s been a number of months since I’ve had a chance to just sit down and create resources without any time pressure, and I’ve forgotten how rewarding the process can be. Actually, I’ve been thinking about next year since around February or March, but I’ve finally stopped *just* thinking about next year and started creating resources. I’ve finally reached a point in the summer where my brain has started thinking about ideas for the new school year. I’m here today to share with you the Twelve Envelopes Puzzle.