This is a great approach. Projecting the main image and giving students individual tracker sheets is the most practical way to manage this activity in a classroom. It keeps heads up looking at the board for speaking, but gives them a tactile way to track listening comprehension. Here are the prompts you need. I have designed the poster prompt to include roughly 18-20 distinct characters to ensure all your vocabulary is covered and to make the guessing game challenging enough. Image 1: The Main Classroom Poster (Color) This prompt is designed to create a busy, detailed scene where different groups of children are doing activities that naturally require the specific clothing items you listed. Best AI Models for this: Midjourney, DALL-E 3 (via ChatGPT Plus or Bing Image Creator), or Adobe Firefly. The Prompt: > A detailed, brightly colored educational illustration style poster of a busy school activity fair in a large courtyard. The scene is filled with diverse children aged 7-10. The art style is clear and cartoonish, similar to a "Where's Waldo" book but less chaotic, ensuring clothing is easily identifiable. Each major character has a small number next to them (1 to 20). > The scene includes distinct zones: > * A water play zone: Two kids near a paddling pool; one wearing bright orange floaties and sunglasses, another wrapped in a large striped towel wearing flip flops. > * An art zone: Three kids painting at easels, wearing messy paint aprons over T-shirts and jeans. > * A Ver más