
The easier, more common jobs at the start and the less common jobs towards the end.

The 104 jobs are divided into 13 groups of 8 according to difficulty. But, overall I think each job is quite well defined. There is a little bit of overlap - for example, cleaner and janitor are quite similar. These are all the possible jobs that I could think to represent visually. Then you have to click on the text to make a basic sentence about the job. Once you guess correctly, you are presented with a different image which more clearly represents what the job does. You have to look at the silhouette and try to guess which job it corresponds to. In the 3rd part, you are shown an image silhouette and text options underneath. You have to move the images or words so that they match up correctly. The second part is a matching game in which you are presented with 8 images and 8 words. This part also serves as the content selection screen - you can use the arrows to choose the set of 8 jobs that you would like to practice. And you can click on the images to hear the job title being spoken. You can move the mouse over each item to see the job title that matches each picture.

The first part is a simple preview screen in which you view 8 job vocab images. The target audience is ESL learners who want to practice and review job related language.

The target language is the job titles and a one line description of what a job does. This is a game for learning English jobs vocabulary and language.
