A simple worksheet for early learners to practice the alphabet. Also ideal for ESL/ESOL learners who are new to the alphabet.
Your learners must simply continue the sequence of letters starting form random points in the alphabet.
A simple worksheet for early learners or ESL/ESOL learners who are new to English where they can copy the days of the week to improve their spelling, handwriting and knowledge.
If you’re getting started teaching about festivals and holidays of different cultures, here’s a quick start activity.
Use this word search to introduce the names and spellings of popular festivals from different cultures.
A brief exercise to get your pupils talking about festivals and holidays.
There are a small number of the most popular and well-known festivals from different cultures in coloured boxes. Students are asked to circle the holidays they celebrate.
This exercise can be used to start a conversation about what holidays they celebrate, which holidays they know about and which they have never heard of.
A simple exercise for any of your learners who might be of early learning or simply new to the alphabet such as ESOL/ESL learners. The learners must simply distinguish the capital letters from the lowercase letters .
A simple exercise for early years learners or those who are new to the English language and the Latin alphabet.
Here, the learner must simply identify which letters are uppercase/capitals verses lowercase, and mark them out.
A simple exercise where your pupil traces the letters of the alphabet (uppercase).
Perfect for small children who are starting to learn how to write and ESOL/ESL learners new to the English alphabet.
A simple worksheet for introducing your pupils to the English alphabet. This worksheet features both upper and lower case letters together.
Ideal for very young children who are first learning to read or ESOL/ESL learners who are new to the English alphabet.
A simple activity for early learners or those who are brand new to the English language such as ESOL learners or any learners who need practice for their literacy.
The worksheet gets learners to get to grips with the English alphabet by colouring in each letter with the colour they think it should be. It might be a good idea to ask your students why they chose the colours they did for the letters.
A simple activity for early learners or those who are brand new to the English language such as ESL learners or any learners who need practice for their literacy.
The worksheet gets learners to get to grips with the English alphabet by coloring in each letter with the color they think it should be. It might be a good idea to ask your students why they chose the colors they did for the letters.
A simple grammar exercise. This was created for ESOL learners but can be applied to young learners too. The students must write the correct contraction in the space provided.
Ideal for all levels (but primarily aimed at children and young adults) this is a fun starter activity word search to help warm up a group of learners or introduce vocabulary and spelling relevant to the Halloween holiday.
Here is a simple worksheet where your learners can design their own Halloween pumpkin. The exercise is intended to introduce the Halloween holiday to learners, get them talking about the holiday, how it is celebrated, and why we create pumpkin lanterns for this particular holiday.
This exercise is aimed at younger learners, but it can be fun for all ages.
Students will need items like pens, pencils, colouring pencils, crayons and a good imagination.
A straightforward exercise designed to test your students attention to detail.
In this activity there are ten exercises where the pupil must find the word that doesn’t rhyme with the other words. Some of them are a bit tricky to help you really test your students. Some of the exercises have no non-rhyming words.
Perfect for the Halloween season, this exercise is aimed at an older age group. Using the story of Mary Shelley, the students are challenged to write their own short ghost story for Halloween.
The first sheet briefly introduces the story of Mary Shelley and how she was inspired to write ‘Frankenstein’, followed by two sheets, one of questions to try and trigger ideas amongst your students, the second of suggested words to help as writing prompts.
Perfect little activity for the Halloween season! Great starter activity for teaching young children (along with beginner ESOL/ESL learners) about emotions and feeling.
The activity features five blank pumpkins and invites your learners to draw faces to match the words described.
This simple, colourful activity is great for engaging young learners or those new to English such as ESOL learners. They simply have to identify which letters are vowels.
Help the mother bird work out which eggs are hers by finding the vowels.
A nice and simple worksheet that I’ve been using with my ESOL learners to practice how to make words into ‘er’ and ‘est’. Can also be adapted to child English language learning.
Worksheet activity, maybe ideal for homework (if you’re into giving out homework). I’ve made this worksheet for ESOL learners, but it can be handed to young learners.