Hello! My name is Delia and I´ve been teaching English and Spanish as foreign languages for more than 15 years now.
At present, I teach Spanish in the PYP system.
The resources I sell in my shop are mainly card games. I use them to spice up my lessons and have the kids talk in the target language as much as possible.
I hope you find them useful and enjoyable!
Hello! My name is Delia and I´ve been teaching English and Spanish as foreign languages for more than 15 years now.
At present, I teach Spanish in the PYP system.
The resources I sell in my shop are mainly card games. I use them to spice up my lessons and have the kids talk in the target language as much as possible.
I hope you find them useful and enjoyable!
This worksheet is designed to practice reading and writing and the vocabulary and structures related to toys and games.
There are 8 pages of varied activities (matching, crossword, wordsearch, comprehension, drawing etc) that will help students improve their reading and writing skills.
These activities are designed to practice the vocabulary related to toys, games and recess activities.
The bundle consists of the following:
a matching activity
a worksheet
a card game
a board game
a booklet
This booklet is designed to introduce and/or practice the vocabulary related to recess activities and games.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE STORY BOOKLET
The story booklet can be projected on the interactive board. This is a good way to make sure all the students are engaged during the reading.
Open the document in Adobe Acrobat Reader and choose Full Screen Mode from the View menu. Scroll down to turn pages.
Print the document in Booklet size on normal A4 paper.
Fold the pages in the middle and staple them.
If you do not have an interactive board in the classroom, it is a good idea to print the story in normal size to make a bigger copy that all the students can see and follow.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the verbs naming various leisure activities, sports and hobbies in the first and third person singular.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal numbers of player is 9 (4 cards per person), but it can also be played with 2 to 18 players.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice using the verb* gustar* and identifying and naming various leisure activities, hobbies and pastimes.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal numbers of player is 12 (4 cards per person), but it can also be played with 2 to 24 players.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the verbs naming various leisure activities, sports and hobbies in the first and third person singular.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal numbers of player is 9 (4 cards per person), but it can also be played with 2 to 18 players.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This game is designed to practice basic descriptions of farm animals (identifying them according to the sounds they make, their body parts, what they give us, some basic characteristics etc)
The game is similar to Spoons.
I have included two versions, with and without color background.
INSTRUCTIONS
The objective of the game is to make four of a kind as soon as possible.
In each group there is 1 picture card illustrating a particular farm animal and 3 sentence cards describing that animal.
The game can be played in groups of 8 students. If there are less than 8 students, you must take out the corresponding number of four-of-a-kind group of cards. If there are more than 8 students, you may print another copy of the game and add the corresponding number of four-of-a-kind group of cards.
Shuffle well and deal 4 cards to each player. All cards must be dealt.
All the students put down one card, discarding to their left. Then, they all take the card on their right. They keep doing it, silently, until they all reach four of a kind.
The last student to reach four of a kind is the burro (loser).
Each game is a version of the I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice talking about the days of the week and the adverbs today, yesterday, tomorrow in Romanian.
DIRECTIONS:
Print the document one-sided, laminate and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal number of players is 3 (4 cards for each student), but it will also work with 2 to 6 players. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
This booklet is designed to introduce and/or practice reading and writing in Romanian, as well as the following vocabulary and grammar topics:
months of the year
clothes
jobs
fictional and historic characters
the vocative case
the imperative mood
The story is about Pingu, a penguin who like to dress up every month.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE STORY BOOKLET
The story booklet can be projected on the interactive board. This is a good way to make sure all the students are engaged during the reading.
Just open it in Adobe Acrobat Reader and choose Full Screen Mode from the View menu. Scroll down to turn pages.
Print the document on A4 paper in Booklet size (go to File > Print > Page Sizing and Handling > Booklet)
Fold the pages in the middle and staple them.
If you do not have an interactive board in the classroom, it is a good idea to print the story in normal size to make a bigger copy that all the students can see and follow.
After you have read the story once with the kids, ask them some comprehension questions. You might want to revise colors, months of the year, professions and some verbs that appear in the story, as well as any unknown vocabulary.
This game is a version of the I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the days of the week in Spanish and the words
¨hoy, ayer, mañana´.
DIRECTIONS:
Print the document one-sided, laminate and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal number of players is 3 (4 cards for each student), but it will also work with 2 to 6 players. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
This game is a version of the I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the days of the week in Spanish and the words
¨hoy, ayer, mañana´.
DIRECTIONS:
Print the document one-sided, laminate and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal number of players is 3 (4 cards for each student), but it will also work with 2 to 6 players. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the Romanian verbs naming various leisure activities, sports and hobbies in the first and third person singular.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal numbers of player is 9 (4 cards per person), but it can also be played with 2 to 18 players.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice using the verb* tener* and identifying and naming family members and some pets.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
The ideal number of players is 6 (4 cards per player), but the game can be played by 2 to 12 players.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice using the verb* avoir* and identifying and naming various toys and games.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This is a simple board game designed to practice talking about activities at recess.
There are two different versions.
Version 1: Students express their likes and dislikes using Me encanta / Me gusta / No me gusta and the activity on the square they are on.
Version 2: Kids make sentences with the adverbs nunca / siempre / a veces plus the activity on the square they are on to talk about what they usually do or don’t do at recess.
INSTRUCTIONS
Print on A3 paper or cardboard and laminate.
You will need counters and dice.
The students take turns to throw the dice and move the counters. On each square they fall, they must construct and say out loud the word that names the picture.
If they fall on the goose, they must say the magic formula De oca a oca y tiro por que me toca, and then they can advance to the next goose and throw the dice a second time.
If they fall on Vuelve a la salida, they must go back to the start.
If they fall on Pierdes un turno, they must miss their next turn.
The first player to get to* Llegada* wins.
The ideal number of players is 2, so print as many copies as you need. If there are more than 4 players, the children will get bored waiting for their turn and they will not have enough speaking practice to make the activity meaningful from the point of view of language learning.
This worksheet is designed to practice reading and writing and the vocabulary and structures related to family members and pets.
There are 8 pages of varied activities (matching, crossword, wordsearch, comprehension, drawing etc) that will help students improve their reading and writing skills.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
It is designed to practice the verb to like and other verbs naming various leisure activities, sports and hobbies in the first and third person singular.
It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal numbers of player is 9 (4 cards per person), but it can also be played with 2 to 18 players.
Select a student to begin by reading his card out loud and then putting it down.
The other students listen attentively to each question, answer it if they have the answer card and then they read the next question. The game is over when all the cards are down.
This bundle includes a booklet, a worksheet and a card game.
All the resources are designed to introduce and practice basic vocabulary related to family members, pets and some personal information.
This game is designed to talk about feelings and emotions and some situations that might trigger them.
It is a game of matching cards. There are two sets of card, one orange (questions) and one blue (answers).
INSTRUCTIONS:
The ideal number of students is 5, but the game can be played by 2 to 20 students.
Hand out the answer cards evenly to the students. Keep the question cards and put them in a pile face down. Take a card and read the question out loud. The students who has the answer card reads it out loud and keeps the pair. The winner is the one who pairs all the cards first.
After the students have played the game a few times, you can designate one of them to read the questions.
This booklet is designed to introduce and/or practice the vocabulary related to family.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE STORY BOOKLET
The story booklet can be projected on the interactive board. This is a good way to make sure all the students are engaged during the reading.
Open the document in Adobe Acrobat Reader and choose Full Screen Mode from the View menu. Scroll down to turn pages.
Print the document in Booklet size on normal A4 paper.
Fold the pages in the middle and staple them.
If you do not have an interactive board in the classroom, it is a good idea to print the story in normal size to make a bigger copy that all the students can see and follow.