K-12 Article | Teaching ESL to Children Using ESL Classroom GamesMore Than Articles
Quality Content You Can Use.
[Article ID - 173979] || Word Count: 555 || Total views: 8
Article
Teaching ESL to Children Using ESL Classroom Games
Rate This Article
Current Rating: Not yet rated
We can assume that in most countries the school day has about three low energy times that everyone feels: children feel it, and teachers feel it. It doesn't matter if you are teaching the same children in an ESL class all day or if you are seeing them for a short period of time in an English Foreign Language class in their home country. These low energy times are the most challenging for teachers. ESL classroom games can help teachers and students learn through these times.
For children who are beginning to speak English, here is an ESL classroom game that you can prepare. Find pictures of things you have been talking about in the program you are using or in a magazine. Cut them out and you are ready to play!
ESL Classroom Game 1
Give each student a small piece of paper. Hold up one picture and ask one child to name it. (You might want to review the names of all the pictures you are going to hold up before you start.) If the child is right, let them have the picture on their desk for the duration of the game and stamp their small piece of paper with a picture or draw a star on it. If the student is wrong then put the picture behind the others in the pile. Continue with the other pictures. Pay particular attention to the children who are insecure. Ask them about pictures that you think they will know. As they gain confidence they'll be more successful. Sometime the fear of making a mistake overwhelms them. Another approach is to have the children answer in pairs. A good follow-up activity for this ESL classroom game is to give each child one of the pictures and have them draw it on their small piece of paper and print its name under it.
ESL Classroom Game 2
Give one or two pictures plus a small piece of paper to each student. They should all be given the same number of pictures. They are to listen while you say a sentence about one of the pictures. The student who has the right picture holds it up and gets a stamp or star on their paper of book. This can be followed by having them draw the picture on their small piece of paper and print a sentence or word about it.
About the Author
ESL-Storybooks.com is a resource site for teaching ESL to children, with original ESL stories for young beginning ESL students.Author Profile: sstocker
Welcome Guest
Give Your Articles
Use Our Articles
In PDF Ebooks- Publisher Guide
- Advanced Search
- Latest Articles
- Top Articles by Rating
- Top Articles by Views
Information
Categories
- Accounting
- Beauty
- Business
- Career
- Cars and Trucks
- Computers
- Culture and Society
- - Art
- - Awards
- - Books
- - Consumer
- - Current Affairs
- - Death and Dying
- - Education
- - - College and University
- - - Homeschooling
- - - K-12
- - - Online
- - Humanities
- - Language
- - Scams
- - Shopping
- - Social Issues
- Environment
- Family
- Finance
- Fitness
- Food and Drink
- Free Tools and Resources
- Health
- Hobbies
- Home
- Humor
- Inspiration and Motivation
- Internet
- Internet Marketing
- Legal
- Marketing
- Mens Issues
- Music
- Personal Development
- Pets and Animals
- Politics
- Psychology
- Publishing
- Recreation and Leisure
- Relationships
- Religion and Spirituality
- Science
- Speaking
- Technology
- Womens Issues
- Writing