A nice board game that can be used with teenagers and adult students to encourage them to use Present Perfect in speaking. The questions refer to real-life situations and provide students with Present Perfect interrogative patterns.
Print on card and then cut the mini cards and use them to help students form Wh- questions in the past. The cards can be used for speaking and/or writing activities or even as homework (for example, in one-to-one classes). They can be used to encourage conversations among students while practising the past form of questions. I use them with my Flyers and KET students but I think they could also work with young adults at a pre-intermediate level.
How much do your students know about the coronavirus and COVID-19? They can test their knowledge (and learn more) by playing this highly adaptable board game. The game includes questions which need to be filled in with one word each. The words are available on a separate sheet of paper. For an extra challenge, students can try to fill in the gaps without looking at the paper. The key is provided. The game can also be made into a contest. Students have to research online the answer to each quest
These materials include a board game in both black-and-white and color version, and two pages with activities that are designed to help students practise spelling and using homophones. All the activities are built around pairwork and group work. This product also includes instructions and ideas on how to use the materials. I designed this product with students of English as a Second Language in mind (teens and adults). The product also encourages self-practice and self-study. I look forward to
Use these conversation cards to review the Present Simple and the Past Simple or simply as fillers in your one-to-one English sessions or in class. They can be used both with speaking and writing activities. Print them, cut them out and have students pick them out of a bag.
This is a worksheet that can be used in a rip'n run type of activity in the classroom with either young learners or adults. Print the worksheet and cut on the dotted lines so you'd get strips of papers with sentences on them that the students can rip. Students find and correct the mistakes in pairs or groups.
Here’s a board game that you can use to review collocations with ‘take’. Useful for group work in the classroom or one-to-one English sessions. Can be used for both speaking and writing activities.
Here’s a black & white handout that I made for classes of adult learners to review collocations with ‘do’ and ‘make’. It also works well with teenagers. I’ve used it with pre-intermediate students and stronger elementary students. The first part is meant to test and drill the collocations (which you had previously taught) and then come some freer practice activities, including a Find Someone Who activity. Happy teaching!: )
Mini-cards with present continuous questions. Fill in the gaps and then chat with your partner using the questions on the mini-cards. The product includes the gapped questions (both color and white & black version), the key and a page of empty mini-cards which students can use to write questions of their own using Present Continuous.
Here's a set of mini-cards you can use with students that have learned the Present Perfect Simple recently and need a bit of practice using it while talking about (scary) life experiences. I've focused on vocabulary related to mysteries and spooky experiences. There is a set of black & white mini-cards and a coloured set. It's best if you print them on white card and then have the students cut them out. Even if students answer 'no' to most questions on the card, they can be encouraged to furthe
This is a board game (which can also be cut into mini-cards) that students can use to practise using prepositions of time in conversation. It is aimed at adult students of pre-intermediate or intermediate level. The materials include instructions, a board game in colour and black-and-white version, a gap-fill exercise which helps students prepare for the board game and the key to the exercise and the board game.
This is a board game that can be used after you've taught Present Perfect Simple (with present time expressions). The students work in pairs or groups and answer the questions in the squares. You need counters and dice.
Print on card, then cut the cards and use them to encourage beginner-level students to talk about their Christmas experiences. I designed the cards with my Starter YLs in mind but you can also use them with Movers and maybe even Flyers.
Every card offers a choice and is meant to be the starting point of a conversation that would encourage students to use comparatives. They can be used in speaking or writing activities and they work great as debate starters. I use them with teenagers and adults but maybe they could work at lower levels as well.
Print them on card and then cut them and place them in a stack. Organize students into pairs or small groups and let them chat using the prompts on the cards.: )
Food diagram that can be used to brainstorm specific vocabulary.
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Experience
I'm a freelance translator and a CELTA-certified English trainer working for a private school in Bucharest.
Teaching style
I focus on a student-centered approach to teaching and I do my best to be a facilitator and a delegator, aiming to foster independence and exploration in the learning process.
My own education history
B.A. in Romanian and English literature and language;
M.A. in Slavic Studies;
CELTA-certified teacher (Pass B)
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