35 Fun Name Games To Try With Your New Class This Year

Play these games in the name of fun!

Name games as an example of first day of school activities
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers

Learning new names can be equally daunting for both students and teachers. It’s not just the act of associating names with faces that’s a challenge, but also accurately pronouncing and spelling names. It’s important to get student names right because kids are more likely to feel like they’re part of an inclusive environment when they hear their names pronounced correctly. While some names are more commonplace than others, all students deserve the same respect when it comes to learning names. In fact, it might be especially important to pronounce refugee or immigrant students’ names correctly. Name games are a fun way to help everyone learn together.

Whether you choose to use a song, a silly skit, or a prop, we have games on this list that will bring a smile to the faces of all students, from preschoolers all the way up to those sometimes-surly teens. Check out all of our favorite name games to try with your class this year.

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Name Games for Preschool and Elementary Kids

1. Teacher Test

  • Time: 5 minutes
  • Materials: Name tents
  • Prep: Before the first day of school, create card-stock name tents to set on student desks.

How to play:

  1. Spend the first day of school getting to know your students’ names, using the name tents for help.
  2. At the end of the first day, have all students turn their tents face-down. Start a timer, and see how long it takes you to go around the room remembering everyone’s names. Kids love to see their teacher getting put to the test!

2. Johnny Plays the Drum Beat

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Small drum
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Introduce the simple song (see video), demonstrating how to keep time on the drum.
  2. Once students can sing along, call up the first student. Give them the drum, and ask them to lead the class in the next verse, using their own name.
  3. Repeat with each student. Pay careful attention to proper pronunciation, making this an inclusive and welcoming game for everyone.

3. Pig on Their Head

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Stuffed animals
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Play this video of the Laurie Berkner Band so kids can learn the tune and words.
  2. Now, invite kids to take turns picking a stuffed animal from the pile. As each student places their chosen animal on their head, everyone sings the verse, substituting the student’s name and animal.

4. Bumblebee Name Game

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Play the video so students can learn the tune and the words.
  2. Now, bring each child to the front of the room in turn. The class sings the song and does the actions:
    “Hickety, Pickety, Bumblebee
    Won’t you say your name for me? (Designated child says their name.)
    Let’s all whisper it. (Everyone else whispers it.)
    Let’s all stomp it. (Everyone else stomps it.)
    Let’s all clap it. (Everyone else claps the syllables.)
    Let’s all shout it! (Everyone shouts it.)”
  3. Repeat with each student.

5. Who Do We Appreciate?

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Teach your students to chant “2-4-6-8, who do we appreciate? [Name!] [Name!] Hurray!”
  2. Do the chant for every student in the class, and let them enjoy their shining moment!

6. Favorite Thing

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Have students form a line or circle.
  2. The first student introduces themself: “My name is [name], and my favorite thing is [favorite thing].”
  3. The next student takes their turn, introducing themself and also the person before them. “My name is [name], and my favorite thing is [favorite thing]. This is [first person’s name], and their favorite thing is [favorite thing].”
  4. Each student continues, introducing themself and all the students before them. This can get challenging, so you can allow other students to help out as needed.
  5. Optional: At the end, have the entire class chant the introductions together, pointing to each person in turn.

7. Action Syllables

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. In this game, each child will choose a different action to use for each syllable of their name. Here are a couple of examples:
    • Harper: HAR/clap, PER/stomp
    • Christopher: CHRIS/jump, TO/spin, PHER/clap
  2. Once each child has chosen their actions, ask them to introduce themselves to the class and demonstrate the movements. Then, the whole class repeats their name and actions.
  3. Continue until each student has had a chance to share their name with the class.

8. Banana Fanna Fo Fanna

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Teach kids the classic song, using the first student’s name. For example: “Liam Liam, bo biam, banana fana fo fiam, fee fie mo miam, Liam!”
  2. Repeat with each student’s name in turn. So catchy and fun!

9. Name Toss

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Ball
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Start by forming a circle. Ask everyone to go around the circle and introduce themselves, saying their names clearly.
  2. Toss a ball to one student, saying, “Catch, [name]!” That student responds, “Thanks, [teacher’s name]!”
  3. That student tosses the ball to another student, and they continue the pattern of “Catch, [name]!” and “Thanks, [thrower]!”
  4. Keep the game going until everyone has caught and thrown the ball at least once.

10. Name Puzzles

Name Puzzles
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 10-30 minutes
  • Materials: Name puzzles
  • Prep: To create the puzzles, take and print a photo of each student. Paste the photos to pieces of card stock, leaving room to write the students’ names underneath each. Cut the card and photo into strips, with one letter per piece.

How to play:

  1. First, give each student their own name puzzle and give them time to assemble it.
  2. Then, have students trade puzzles with their neighbor, and put together the new ones to learn each other’s names.
  3. Continue the activity as long as you like. For the ultimate challenge, mix up the whole class’s puzzle pieces together, then see how long it takes them to separate out the pieces and put each person back together again!

11. Name Acrostic Poems

Name Acrostic Poems
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 20-30 minutes
  • Materials: Pen/pencil and paper, Acrostic Template (optional)
  • Prep: Write an acrostic poem for your own name to share.

How to play:

  1. Show students examples of acrostic poems, explaining that each line begins with the letter of a word—in this case, their name.
  2. Have students brainstorm words that start with each letter of their name, narrowing down the ones they like best.
  3. Finally, write out the poems, and have students share them with their classmates.

12. Name Ring Toss

Name Ring Toss
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Plastic cups and paper plates
  • Prep: For each student, write the letters of their name on the bottoms of plastic cups as shown in the photo above. Cut the centers out of paper plates to create “rings.”

How to play:

  1. Give each student their own name cups and a paper plate ring. Ask them to set up the cups a few feet away from them, and practice throwing the ring around each letter.
  2. Then, ask students to trade places with a neighbor, and try to throw their rings around that student’s name cups.
  3. Continue the game as long as you like, helping kids get to know each other’s names (and how to spell them!).

13. Jump In

  • Time: 5-10 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Have students stand in a circle.
  2. In the first round, each student jumps into the middle of the circle and calls out their own name, one at a time. Then they jump back to their spot.
  3. In the second round, as the student jumps into the circle, the rest of the class calls out their name together before they jump back.

14. Give Me a Name!

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

Bring each student to the front of the class. Lead the rest of the class in the classic “Give me a …” cheer to spell out their name. Example:

  • Teacher: “Give me an A!”
  • Class: “A!”
  • Teacher: “Give me an L!”
  • Class: “L!”
  • Teacher: “Give me an I!”
  • Class: “I!”
  • Teacher: “What’s that spell?”
  • Class: “ALI!”

Name Games for Middle School

15. Letter Card Trade

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Note cards, pen or marker
  • Prep: Write each letter of each student’s name on a note card, and shuffle the deck.

How to play:

  1. With the deck of letter cards face-down, have each student randomly draw as many cards as there are letters in their own name. (For instance, Ian would draw three cards, while Amelia would draw six.)
  2. The goal is for kids to trade for the cards that spell their name. Example: If Ian has an M and Amelia has an N, they could trade so each has one of the letters they need.
  3. Once a student has completed their name, they can help others find and make the trades they need.

16. Snowball Fight

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Paper and pens/pencils
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Ask each student to write down one interesting fact about themselves on a piece of paper, then crumple it up into a “snowball.”
  2. At the signal, let kids toss the snowballs around the room (gently!).
  3. After a few minutes, give the signal to stop the fight. Ask every student to find and pick up one snowball.
  4. Now, have students take turns straightening out their snowball and reading the fact out loud. As a class, try to guess who wrote each fact.

17. Trading Cards

Trading Cards
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Blank note cards and markers/colored pencils, etc.
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Have each student create their own personal “trading card” (like Pokémon or similar). They should include their name, a picture, and a few interesting facts.
  2. You have a few different options for how to use these cards:
    • Post all the cards in a central location like a bulletin board for kids to look at when they have time.
    • Lay out the cards side by side and make photocopies in sheets. Cut the cards apart and give kids their sets to trade and share.
  3. Don’t forget to make your own card to share!

18. Peek-a-Who

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: A large tarp or blanket
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Divide the class into two teams, each on one side of the room.
  2. Ask another student or teacher to help you hold the blanket up high between the two teams, making a “wall” so they can’t see each other.
  3. Each team selects one person to stand close to the “wall,” near the middle.
  4. At the count of three, drop the blanket or tarp so the two chosen students can see each other. The first to shout out the other person’s name correctly wins the point.
  5. Play until every student has had a turn at the “wall.”

19. Power Pose

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. As each student introduces themself, ask them to use a “power pose.” They could pose like a superhero, hands at their hips, or like a bodybuilder showing off muscled arms, or even just stand tall and proud.
  2. After each student poses and says their name, the rest of the class adopts the same pose and says, “Hi, [name]!”
  3. Optional: For an extra bit of fun, take a group picture with everyone in their poses!

20. Partner Name Tags

How to play:

  1. Pair up the students in your class, and ask the pairs to sit together.
  2. Give the pairs 10 minutes to discuss some icebreaker questions (post them on the board or pass out a handout to guide the discussion).
  3. Now, each person has five minutes to create and decorate a name tag for their partner, using some of the information they learned (favorite color, activity, etc.) to personalize it.
  4. Finally, have each person put on their name tag, then spend a few minutes mingling with their classmates and checking out their tags.

21. Web of Names

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Large ball of yarn
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Have students sit in a circle, and give one student the ball of yarn.
  2. That student introduces themself to the class, then holds on to the end of the yarn and tosses the ball to another classmate.
  3. The next student introduces themself, then stretches the yarn tight and holds onto it, while tossing the ball to a new person.
  4. Keep playing until everyone has introduced themselves and is holding part of the yarn. This “web of names” shows how everyone in the class is part of a larger whole.

22. Zombie Name Game

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Have the class stand in a circle and take turns introducing themselves.
  2. Choose one student to be the first “zombie” and stand in the middle.
  3. Call out a student’s name. The zombie heads toward that student.
    • If the target student says someone else’s name before the zombie reaches them, they’re safe. However, the student can’t use any of the last three names that have been called! Once they shout out an eligible name, the zombie turns and heads for the new target.
    • If the zombie reaches the target student before they call out an eligible name, that student becomes the new zombie.

23. Name Bingo

Name Bingo
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 5-10 minutes
  • Materials: Bingo cards, pen/pencils, small prizes
  • Prep: Create bingo cards with students’ names. Be sure to create a variety of cards with the names in different orders.

How to play:

  1. Give each student a bingo card and make sure they have something to write with.
  2. At the signal, kids begin mixing and mingling, trying to find the people named on their card. Once they do, they have that student initial their square.
  3. When a student has a complete row across, down, or diagonally, they call out, “Bingo!” and receive a small prize. Continue the game as long as you like.
Name Word Search
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 5-10 minutes
  • Materials: Name word search handouts, pen/pencils or highlighters
  • Prep: Use a word search generator to create a puzzle for your class to solve, and make enough copies for everyone.

How to play:

  1. Provide the handout to all students.
  2. Kids search for names on the list, working to complete the entire puzzle.
  3. After everyone has had a chance to work on the word search, invite each student up to the front of the room to introduce themselves and show where their name appeared in the grid.

Name Games for High School

25. Fingerspelling

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: ASL Fingerspelling chart (optional)
  • Prep: Learn to sign your own name using fingerspelling.

How to play:

  1. Share the ASL Fingerspelling video and/or chart handouts with students.
  2. Have students learn to spell their own name, practicing until they feel comfortable.
  3. Now, let students mix and mingle, sharing their names with their classmates using fingerspelling.

26. Group Juggle

  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Small ball
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Give one student the ball. Have them say their own name, then choose someone in the circle to toss the ball to, saying their name: “Olivia, [tossing ball] Alex.”
  2. Each person repeats the action, throwing the ball to someone who hasn’t had a turn yet, until everyone has gone.
  3. Now, give the ball to the first student again. The class must try to toss the ball around the circle in the exact same order as they did the first time.
  4. Optional: Increase the difficulty by adding a second or even third ball going at the same time!

27. Guess Who

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Every one in the class closes their eyes. Choose one student at random to say “Hello!”
  2. The other students try to guess who the speaker was. (This can be especially challenging if you allow students to use funny voices when they talk.)
  3. Repeat until everyone has had a turn.

28. Alliterative Names

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Give students one minute to come up with an alliterative adjective to describe themselves that matches their name. For example: “Energetic Emma” or “Laughing Lucas.”
  2. Go around the room and have each student introduce themselves with their alliterative name.
  3. Optional: Point to students at random and see if the class can remember the alliterative name they chose.

29. Missing Name

Missing person Card Game
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 5-10 minutes
  • Materials: Note cards and marker
  • Prep: Write each student’s name on a card so you have one for each.

How to play:

  1. Gather students around a central table or space on the floor. Lay out all the cards face-up, but keep one card face-down. See how long it takes kids to figure out which classmate’s name is missing.
  2. Shuffle the cards and repeat as many times as you like!

30. Roll the Dice

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Dice
  • Prep: None

How to play:

Each student rolls a die. The number that they land on indicates how they should introduce themselves:

  1. Share your name and spell it backwards as fast as you can.
  2. Share your name and your favorite color.
  3. Share your name and the last movie you watched.
  4. Share your name and the names of the people on either side of you.
  5. Share your name and your favorite ice cream flavor.
  6. Share your name and the month you were born.

31. Name Impulse

  • Time: 5-10 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Sit or stand in a circle. Choose a student to start by saying their own name.
  2. Immediately afterward, the person to their left says their own name. Repeat this all the way around the circle.
  3. Now the fun begins! Start a timer, and see how quickly the group can go around the circle saying their names. Try to beat your own record!

32. Letter Lineup

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: None

How to play:

  1. Share the challenge: Students must line up in order of the number of letters in their first name, but they cannot talk while doing so!
  2. To break ties, count the number of letters in students’ middle names, and then use last names too if needed.
  3. Time the group. If anyone talks, they must move around the room to mix themselves up and start over again!

33. Name Pictionary

Pictionary
Sarah Cason via We Are Teachers
  • Time: 15-20 minutes
  • Materials: Paper and pen/pencil or markers
  • Prep: Create an example for your own name, as shown in the photo.

How to play:

  1. Share your own Pictionary name with your students to demonstrate the task.
  2. Have each student create their own Pictionary name drawings with blanks for the letters.
  3. Collect all the drawings and mix them up, then pass them back out randomly. Each student solves the puzzle they receive, then finds the creator and chats with them for a minute or two.

34. Emoji Name Tags

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: Adhesive blank tags, pens or markers
  • Prep: Create your own emoji name tag.

How to play:

  1. Give each student a blank tag and pens or markers. Ask them to write their name on the tag, along with a few emojis that describe themselves.
  2. Bring each student to the front of the class to introduce themselves and explain the emojis they chose.

35. Name Clusters

  • Time: 10-15 minutes
  • Materials: None
  • Prep: Make a list of the “cluster” ideas you’ll use.

How to play:

  1. To create your “cluster” ideas, come up with different ways students can gather based on their names. For instance:
    • Gather in groups based on the number of letters in your first name.
    • Gather in groups with others whose name ends in the same letter as yours.
    • Gather into two groups: even number of letters in your name, and odd number of letters.
    • Gather into two groups: names that start with vowels, and names that start with consonants.
  2. As students gather in these clusters, give them a minute or two to chat with their group mates before moving on to the next.

What’s one of your favorite name games? Come share in the We Are Teachers HELPLINE group on Facebook!

Plus, check out Elementary Icebreakers To Start the School Year Off Right!

Learning names is an important part of the start of any school year. Try one of our fun name games with your class!