I currently teach high school maths (and have done now for ten years). I'm in the process of sorting through my resources and will be adding more weekly!
I currently teach high school maths (and have done now for ten years). I'm in the process of sorting through my resources and will be adding more weekly!
A murder was committed last night during a Halloween party.
As the highest-ranking crime detective, you must solve the crime and find out who the murderer is.
You have the names and details of 32 suspects who were at the party when the crime took place. The murderer is one of them.
There were five witnesses to the murder. Each witness has left you a clue. The clues have been given in code so that only you, with your amazing code‐breaking skills, will be able to crack them and solve the crime.
You can decode the clues in any order you wish. Every time you solve a clue you can eliminate some suspects.
Each clue will remove half of the suspects from the list, until you are left with just one…
Who is the murderer?
Game Play
The murder mystery takes approximately 30 minutes based on players’ experience, skill, age and group size.
Extra Ideas
For groups or pupils who solve the mystery quicker than others why not have them write a secret message of their own for their classmates to decode.
You could have some keys printed out for them to use (e.g. Morse code, pig pen cipher, braille, semaphore etc… these are easily found with a quick web search)
You could suggest they hide a message in a passage of text (e.g. have their message in capitals or back words letters with in text) or for it to be read left to right.
They could design their own code / create symbols for each letter of the alphabet and use it to wrote a secret message.