After 20 years in middle grades ELA, I have watched capable students miss grammar questions not because they do not understand how language works but because they do not recognize the vocabulary of grammar on a test item. A student who correctly uses a participial phrase in their own writing will stall on a multiple-choice item that asks them to identify the "participle." The terminology is the barrier, and that is a solvable problem.
The complete middle school grammar spiral system
Nine quests, every part of speech, grades 6 through 8, standards-aligned and no prep required.
Get this resource on TPT →Research on academic vocabulary development consistently supports spaced repetition across varied formats as the most effective path to durable word knowledge. Students who encounter the same term through a crossword, a word scramble, and a word search in the same week process that term more deeply than students who review a vocabulary list once before a quiz. The retrieval practice built into game formats does real cognitive work.
I use these grammar word games during the week before a language arts assessment as bell ringers or early finisher work. Students already know the concepts from direct instruction. The games give them focused, low-pressure practice connecting the terms to their definitions so that when the test uses the word "antecedent," they do not freeze. That is the entire purpose, and it works.