I'm teaching a course using Microsoft Office (Word, Excel, PowerPoint, Access) and keep having at least some of the class get done early. Would anyone have ideas on games or other fun activities that those early finishers could do that would continue to play with some of the basic computer skills I'm trying to teach them?

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Game shows always work well as a theme for students - my students have used PowerPoint to make several different versions. Jeopardy and Who Wants To Be A Millionaire are both very popular, and making them requires students to work with a range of skills in the program.

I have found that the first to finish will have something that looks relatively plain. After that, students will start to compete - they will add theme music, appropriate sounds for both correct and incorrect answers, and even in-jokes based on episodes that they have seen.
There are so many free games available - what age are your students?
My kids are in Grade 9, so that's 14 or 15 years old.
I have taught a Business Tech course and we have students make games in powerpoint. I will try to upload the files.
Not sure if they will be interactive if converted to a different format for on-line viewing.
see attachments- basically what you do is work with action buttons to make things happen.
The kids like this. good luck.
Attachments:
These grade 9 students (14-15) are asked to make an interactive power point game suitable for younger children. here's a few more samples. You have to move mouse around to activate actions.
Attachments:
How about moving past the Office suite?

There are a lot of applications that teach other parts of computer skills. Editing audio or video teaches skills that can't be learned anywhere else. Google tools include Sketchup which allows kids to build 3D models that can be placed on Google Earth maps. Scratch is a simple programming language specifically designed for kids to learn how to control the computer, not just use it for simple tasks.
I will try to do these, too, but next semester. For now I'm confined to teaching basic office software. It's a little dull, but probably necessary.

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