ESL/EFL Summer Ideas
Are you hot for summer? Here’s a collection of Summer themed classroom activities to get inspired and maybe use in these last days of school.
Are you hot for summer? Here’s a collection of Summer themed classroom activities to get inspired and maybe use in these last days of school.
There are so many creative people out there and I’m thankful that I am able to reach their work and ideas, especially when these are kindly offered and can really inspire me and my work! Such is the case with patternsforcolouring (the first two pictures) and doodle-art-alley (the third picture belongs to this site), where amazing colouring pages can be spotted. All you need to do is choose a pattern you like, download it, print it out and start colouring. The colouring pages in patternsforcolouring are offered under a Creative Commons licence (CC BY-NC-SA 2.0 UK).
I particularly like these sites, because there are artistic colouring pages, like the ones above, that can generate writing activities. I am thinking of using the “kitties” one as a prompt for a cartoon-like dialogue among the kitties, after the pupils colour, cut and stick their figures on a seperate sheet of paper. I will ask my pupils to write summer themed dialogues and this is going to be a cute activity for the last days of this school year.
I can do something similar with the “Happy” one. The children can assort their colouring with sentence completion:
In summer I am happy because…
Summer makes me happy because…
In summer there are a lot of happy moments. I like…I usually…
As for the underwater scene, it is a game itself since it belongs in the Blopper category, where the colouring pages hide irrelevant figures. When the students have spotted them, they can simply label them or even create a story according to their level.
Great! I have new activities for this year’s last class! What are you planning to do?
It has been a while, since the 1st Graders learnt, painted and played with the farm animals. The templates for the animals were provided in the curriculum pack and we followed most of the activities suggested.
The painted animals with the peg legs came out really cute and they needed their own stage to help the pupils role play some farm dialogues. Two pieces of polysterene foam, some crepe paper, two empty boxes of cereal and some internet search provided me with the materials to set up a farm scene.
The pupils participated in twos to act out simple dialogues like:
– “Hello! I’m a cow. I’m black and white.”
– “Hello, cow.I’m a horse. I’m brown. “
– “How are you, horse?”
– “Fine, thank you.”
The barn template came from homemadebyjill.blogspot.gr and I found it here. It is for personal use only.
The farmer template can be found here.
More inspiration for farm craft ideas here.
I have recently stumbled upon this cute and easy to put up template at madebyjoel.com . I instantly thought how beautifully pupils could use it to create a small city and practise buildings vocabulary, prepositions of place and directions. Since there are little paper dolls included, pupils can grab their own and role play dialogues or follow directions.
I haven’t tried it, but I suppose this printable could be easily glued onto a piece of cardboard so as to form a 3-D city. With a couple of multiple printouts, they can form their city the way they like and even put labels on the buildings and name their streets and avenues on the cardboard. This could be done as group work and when finished, pupils could start playing and practising the city related language.
I am sure the reality of the three diamentions will help pupils clarify phrases such as “opposite the cinema” or “walk past” and “cross the street” as opposed to “go along the street”, not to mention the simpler ones like “left” and “right” which some children take time to tell apart.
You can find this template here. Craft and find your way in the city!
Check my board to get some ideas for 1st May and get crafty! 😉
Yes, I fully admit it! I have fallen into an Easter crafts hunt frenzy and guess what … I am tremendously enjoying it!
The thing is that I have mostly focused on Easter basket crafts that combine some english language use, so here are the results for some efl Easter baskets ideas. Note that even if some of the crafts that follow do not have any Easter message written on them, you can ask pupils to add an Easter wish on a little flag, ribbon, banner or egg as an extra cut out decoration for their basket. Another idea is to use the basket as a speaking prompt for the children to learn and use some Easter vocabulary by saying what they would like their basket to be filled with.
Actually, I have been inspired to create my own Easter basket craft worksheet, especially since I could not find all the characteristics I needed in just one single worksheet. Nevertheless, my web exploration cannot go unshared, so here we go.
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Here’s a fresh Easter worksheet I have created that combines reading,vocabulary practice, culture learning and crafting fun for early EFL learners.
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The students of Class E1 prepared and displayed their project on “Unusual Greek Customs”. The customs chosen were “The Day of Babo” and “First Weekend of Lent”. It was an excellent activity for the students to investigate, learn new vocabulary, use the Present Simple, collaborate.
Here comes the procedure followed:
In order to help my students better understand and organise their information I also handed them the following questions to answer:
Amazing work, dear students!