Tag

Warm-up

The teacher can use this activity to start a class.

  • Hot Potato

    Students pass an object around while listening to music. When the music stops, the student holding the object says a target vocabulary.

  • He is a... / She is a... matching game.

    A quick and fun matching game designed to practice "He is a..." "She is a..."

  • What time do you get up?

    A matching game where students walk around the classroom and find the person with the matching card.

  • Pronunciation tree Th and Z

    A short warmup activity for students to practice listening to difficult sounds.

  • Pronunciation tree S and TH

    A short warmup activity for students to practice listening to difficult sounds.

  • Pronunciation tree B and V

    A short warmup activity for students to practice listening to difficult sounds.

  • Pronunciation Tree L and R

    A pronunciation tree warm up activity that lets students practice difficult sounds.

  • Review - A winner never quits

    A quick and simple warm up/ review activity for New Crown, page 8 (A winner never quits)

  • Are you From DokoDoko?

    Students ask each other "Are you...?" questions and collect signatures.

  • ABC Dominoes

    A simple ABC game where students match upper/lowercase domino letters.

  • Honeycomb Bees

    Students compete against each other to name the flashcards and try to link their bees together.

  • Get it

    Students listen for their card to be called and rush to collect toys.

  • Flashcard Police

    An engaging strategy for practicing tedious memorization. As an alternative to the “read-and-repeat”, it works best with younger students but can be altered for older students.

  • Flashcard Baseball

    Review flashcards while playing baseball with your students.

  • Drawing Dash

    You show 'drawers' a secret flashcard. They draw it, and their team guesses. How many can they guess in one minute?

  • Bridge

    Students try to race across the Vocab Bridge to the opponent’s side. This game is also known as "Snake Line" or "Janken Line".

  • I got you!

    Students try to bluff each other with simple statements.

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