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 game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
This game is designed to practice using the verb “ponerse”, identifying and naming clothes, parts of the body, weather and places you go. It is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills…
INSTRUCTIONS:
Print the document one-sided, laminate it and cut out the cards.
Distribute all the cards randomly to the students.
The ideal number of players is 7 (4 cards for each student), but it can be played with up to 14. 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.
These games are designed to practice using the verbs tener and * llevar*, naming and identifying clothes and accessories and making the agreement between nouns and adjectives.
This is a great way to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as pronunciation and listening skills.
There are two card games and one board game.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE CARD GAMES
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.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE BOARD GAME
Print out the board (A3 size) and laminate.
The students take turns in throwing the dice, reading the questions and answering them about themselves.
It includes a beginner version and an intermediate one. You will need dice and counters to play it.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
This game is designed to practice using the verb* tener* and naming and identifying clothes and accessories. 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.
These games are designed to revise the following basic Spanish vocabulary:
seasons
months
days of the week
parts of the day
weather
numbers
clothes and accessories
colors
describing adjectives (peoplel)
emtions
INSTRUCTIONS
The game is similar to Spoons.
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).
These games are designed to revise the following basic Spanish vocabulary:
numbers 1-20
colors
shapes
family members
greetings
polite words
classroom instructions
classroom items
parts of the school
farm animals
the sounds that farm animals make
You may print each game on sheets of different colors and play them separately.
You may also print all the games on sheets of the same color and put all the cards together (for bigger classes).
INSTRUCTIONS
The game is similar to Spoons.
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).
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).
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
This game is a way for the students to practice asking for and giving basic personal information (name, nationality, age, birthday, siblings, pets, hobbies, physical and character traits etc). There is a beginner version (with answer prompts) and an intermediate version (with clues).
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.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as speaking and listening skills.
This game is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has game.
This game is a way for the students to practice asking for and giving basic personal information (name, nationality, age, birthday, siblings, pets, hobbies, physical and character traits etc). There is a beginner version (with answer prompts) and an intermediate version (with clues).
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.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
This game is a way for the students to practice asking for and giving basic personal information (name, nationality, age, birthday, siblings, pets, hobbies, physical and character traits etc). There is a beginner version (with answer prompts) and an intermediate version (with clues).
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.
It is a great game to practice the newly taught vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
These activities are designed to practice the Spanish alphabet, spelling out words or writing down spelled words.
This bundle contains the following:
a poster of the Spanish alphabet
a worksheet
a Bingo game
a card game
a workbook to revise letters and vocabulary
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE BINGO GAME
There are 10 bingo boards and 2 letter boards.
The game can be played by a maximum of 10 students.
Laminate all the boards.
Print the Bingo boards and the Bingo letters.
Cut out the Bingo letters and keep them in a plastic bag.
Give each student a bingo board. There are two versions of each board, one with the letters printed (easy) and one blank (difficult). Choose whichever suits your students.
Take out a letter from the bag and say its name out loud.
The first student who calls out Bingo gets the letter.
The first student who fills in the Bingo board with all the letters wins.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE CARD GAME
This is a version of the classic I-Have-Who-Has Game.
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 8 (4 cards for each student), but it will also work with 2 to 16 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 reading and listening skills.
INSTRUCTIONS FOR THE WORK BOOKLET
Print the document in Booklet format.
Make 7 more photocopies of the page with the drawing box.
Put all the pages together, fold and staple to make a booklet.
You can also print it in A4 format, but you will be using a lot more paper.
Give each student one booklet and ask them to write down:
the capital letter
the lowercase letter
the name of the letter in Spanish
Then, ask students to draw an object whose name in Spanish starts with that letter.
Example:
J j jota
(and they draw a 'juguete")
I use this booklet as an activity to fill the students’time when they have finished a task before the others. It can also be used as a revision activity at the end of the year.
This bundle consists of 3 I have… Who Has…? - type games.
The games are designed to practice Spanish numbers from 0 to 1000, as well as identifying and reading prices.
Students will also revise vocabulary related to pets, school items, clothes, toys, food and drinks etc.
This bundle consists of 4 I have … Who has…? -type of games and one board game.
The games are designed to practice Spanish vocabulary related to the calendar, weather and clothes.
With these games, the students will learn through play, practicing the following:
naming and identifying clothes
the agreement between nouns and adjectives (clothes and colours)
asking and answering about the weather
naming and identifying seasons, months of the year and days of the week
naming some of the main cities in Spain
asking and answering about dates and birthdays
cardinal and ordinal numbers
associating clothes with a specific type of weather or seasons or months with seasons
This bundle consists of one matching card game and two I have… Who has…- type games.
The games are designed to practice the following:
naming and identifying a variety of animals (pets, domestic and wild animals)
naming and identifying body parts specific to animals
agreement between nouns and some basic descriptive adjectives
understanding and formulating basic descriptions of these animals - saying where they live, what they eat, what they can do (fly, swim etc), what they give us (for farm animals) etc
These games are designed to practice the French vocabulary for food, drinks, fruits and vegetables along with the verbs eat, drink, want, like .
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.
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.
This game is a French version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice the names of the clothes.
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!
This game is a Spanish version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice revising a unit on weather and clothes by asking and answering about seasons, weather, months, days of the week, birthdays, holidays, numbers, clothes etc.
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!
This game is a French version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice the names of the clothes, the colours, the agreement between nouns and adjectives and the verb “wear”.
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!
This game is a French version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice the names of the vegetables and the verb “like”.
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!
This game is a French version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice the names of the fruits and the verb “like”.
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!
This game is a French version of the classic " I have… Who has …? " game, designed to practice asking and answering basic questions (name, age, nationality, family, siblings, pets, preferences etc)
This is an easy-to-play game and a great way to practice essential language concepts with the whole class. As students match up the answers on their cards with questions on other students’ cards, they get valuable practice with vocabulary, as well as reading and listening skills.
Directions:
Cut out the cards along the dotted line and laminate. For bigger classes, you might want to print several copies of each set.
Give out all the cards in the set to the students. It is important to use all the cards.
Choose a student to go first. I usually do that by a counting rhyme.
Have the selected student read the question at the bottom of the card aloud and then put the card down.
The student who has the card with the answer then reads that answer aloud.
This student will then read the question at the bottom of their card and put the card down. Play continues in this fashion until all of the cards have been played. The game will end with the same student who started play.
Every card in the set is connected to a card before it and a card after it. To keep the game moving at a quick pace, all students need to pay attention to every question that has been asked.
I tell my younger students that this is a magic game and that the magic only works if you pay attention, which is actually true. The magic happens in the end, when the question on the last card actually matches the answer on the very first card.
Enjoy!