An authentic reading material based on an article taken from "Time." The article is about the history of the most popular social network - Facebook. You can make it both reading and listening (if you read it out to your students, or record yourself, which I did - that was fun experience). The comprehension part contains multiple-choice, T/F questions, open-ended questions and vocabulary part.
Romeo and Juliet
This worksheet tells the story of Romeo and Juliet in the present simple. There are two reading comprehension exercises and two grammar exercises.
A card game (36 cards)
The idea is to guess what the Christmas words are and to get points.
How to play the game
Student A takes a card from a pile and reads it aloud. Students B and C try to guess the word. The one who guesses the word first gets the card (= one point). Student B takes the second card and A and C try to guess. Then student C takes a card, and so on. At the end of the game all the points are counted. The winner is the one with the most points.
The game can be played in bigger groups, too: A, B and C are the teams then. Have fun!
Reading Comprehension test for Christmas. Vocabulary exercise; ordering sentences according to the text; Multiple choice on the first two paragraphs of the text; sentence completing on the last two paragraphs and, finally, a checklist for the reading tasks.
Reading Comprehension test for Christmas. Vocabulary exercise; ordering sentences according to the text; Multiple choice on the first two paragraphs of the text; sentence completing on the last two paragraphs and, finally, a checklist for the reading tasks.
Christmas - 5 second rule - card game. How to play this game: Students take cards and must name 3 kind e.g. 3 Christmas songs. If they can´t do it, the card is given to another player who must answer it, but without using the words given by the previous player. The winner is the person with the biggest number of cards.
Article and questions from BBC news accompanied by vocabulary and comprehension exercises. The article is not too difficult, even for younger teenagers.
This is my version of a popular game - Dobble.
Dobble is a simple pattern recognition game in which players try to find an image shown on two cards.
Each card in Dobble features eight different symbols, with the symbols varying in size from one card to the next. Any two cards have exactly one symbol in common. For the basic Spot it! game, reveal one card, then another. Whoever spots the symbol in common on both cards claims the first card, then another card is revealed for players to search, and so on. Whoever has collected the most cards when the 55-card deck runs out wins!
I hope you find it useful. Please, leave a review I will be very grateful!
Cut out these cards and let your students play taboo. Split your class in two groups, the first student of group A has to describe the word on the card - he/she is neither allowed to talk any word in her mother tongue nor to say one of the words below the pictures. If a group guesses the word in about 30 seconds, they´ll get a point. Play it in tur…
You can download Part 1 here
Put all cards on the table back side up. Each student takes in turn two cards and says a comparative sentence. For example: “A bee is smaller than a tiger.” If the sentence is correct, the student can keep the two cards. The winner is the student who at the end has the most number of the cards.