![]() |
![]() |
![]() |
In his classic book, Mastering Elliott Wave, Glenn Neely teaches his revolutionary approach to Wave theory, called NEoWave (advanced Elliott Wave). Continuously in print since its publication in 1990, this groundbreaking book changed Wave theory forever thanks to these scientific, objective, and logical enhancements to Wave forecasting. Step-by-step, Mr. Neely explains his advanced techniques and new discoveries.
Start reading chapter 1 below...
Here are (each takes under 2 minutes to explain & play) that work for ANY subject and age group:
Tired of the same old routines? You don’t need a full tech lab to transform your lessons—just .
Skill: Concise writing After a lesson, teams have 50 seconds to write a 50-word summary (exactly). Best one “wins” a point. Why it works: Kills fluff & highlights key ideas.
Skill: Recall Teacher reads rapid-fire review questions. Students stand for “True,” sit for “False.” After 50 seconds, those standing are the “survivors.” Why it works: High energy, zero prep.
👉 What’s your go-to “under 2 minutes” classroom game? Drop it in the comments!
Skill: Summarizing Students get 50 seconds to draw a concept (photosynthesis, a historical event, a math formula). No words allowed. Neighbors guess. Why it works: Forces big-picture thinking.
Set a 50-second timer with a fun sound effect. The time pressure sharply increases focus – and laughter.
Here are (each takes under 2 minutes to explain & play) that work for ANY subject and age group:
Tired of the same old routines? You don’t need a full tech lab to transform your lessons—just . classroom 50x games
Skill: Concise writing After a lesson, teams have 50 seconds to write a 50-word summary (exactly). Best one “wins” a point. Why it works: Kills fluff & highlights key ideas. Here are (each takes under 2 minutes to
Skill: Recall Teacher reads rapid-fire review questions. Students stand for “True,” sit for “False.” After 50 seconds, those standing are the “survivors.” Why it works: High energy, zero prep. Best one “wins” a point
👉 What’s your go-to “under 2 minutes” classroom game? Drop it in the comments!
Skill: Summarizing Students get 50 seconds to draw a concept (photosynthesis, a historical event, a math formula). No words allowed. Neighbors guess. Why it works: Forces big-picture thinking.
Set a 50-second timer with a fun sound effect. The time pressure sharply increases focus – and laughter.