Supreme Court Cases Bingo Cards
These cards are about Supreme Court Cases. They were made using such words as Abrams v. United States, Gideon v. Wainwright, Kastigar v. U.S., Plessy v. Ferguson, and Roth v. United States.
We made the cards using Bingo Card Creator. You can download a PDF file of eight cards ready to cut up and play.
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Try one of the following:
- Make your own custom bingo cards with a free trial of Bingo Card Creator.
- Download Eight Supreme Court Cases Cards
- Download Adobe Acrobat Reader (if you are having problems opening the cards).
- See the word list for this card.
- Print out a call list.
- Browse other cards in the Government category or browse other categories.
- so you can come back tomorrow.
- Want to link to this page? click here.

Words List For Supreme Court Cases Bingo Cards
| Abrams v. United States | Brown v. Board of Education of Topeka | Dred Scott v. Sandford | Engel v. Vitale | Gibbons v. Ogden |
| Gideon v. Wainwright | Gitlow v. New York | Gregg v. Georgia | In Re Gault | Ingraham v. Wright |
| Kastigar v. U.S. | Marbury v. Madison | McCulloch v. Maryland | Miranda v. Arizona | New York Times v. Sullivan |
| Plessy v. Ferguson | Powell v. Alabama | President Nixon v. United States | Regents of the University of California v. Bakke | Roe v. Wade |
| Roth v. United States | Slaughter-House Cases | Strauder v. West Virginia | Texas v. Johnson | Wesberry v. Sanders |

How To Play Supreme Court Cases Bingo
- Print out your free Supreme Court Cases bingo boards, or make custom ones with Bingo Card Creator. Click here to get started.
- Give one card to each player.
- Call off words randomly, for example by using a call list. You can either just say a word, like "McCulloch v. Maryland", or you can make up a more involved clue involving McCulloch v. Maryland.
- When a word is called, each player should find it and mark it.
- The first player(s) to clear five words in any direction (horizontal, vertical, or diagonal) wins a small prize.
Notes: How long a bingo game lasts depends on what pace you read the clues at and how many players you have. If you read faster, such as for older or more experienced students, or if you have more players, the game tends to end more quickly. In general, I suggest allocating between twenty and thirty minutes to a bingo game. Since they can potentially end as early as the fourth word called, though that is quite rare, I encourage you to keep playing in the event of the game being over earlier than you expected it to be. Almost 90% of bingo games with a 25 word list and 25 players will see their first bingo within 7 to 11 words being called.
