Posted in Basic, Elite Teacher, Gold Teacher, Grammar, Middle Elementary School, No Prep Games, Pair games, Reading, Starter Teacher, Student to Student Practice, Student(s) to Teacher Practice, Upper Elementary School, Vocabulary, Young Elementary School

Hot Seat

Materials Needed:

  • Chairs, one per two teams

How to play:

  1. Divide the students into two teams, and have them stand on each side of the chair in a line. The chair is the hot seat.
  2. Set a timer (1-2 minutes recommended, but you can adjust based on the level of students or class size)
  3. Students from different teams alternate turn sitting in the hot seat. They should sit in a chair while practicing the target language.
  4. When the timer goes off, the team with a member sitting in the hot seat is the loser. Award a point to the other team they win this round.
  5. Depending on the class size, play enough rounds so that each student gets a chance to play.

Teacher’s role

Listen as students practice. correct any mistakes they make and notice common errors. Explain them between rounds so that students don’t continue making the same mistakes.

Make sure to use a timer, such as the stopwatch on your cell phone. This will make the game more fair for both teams.

Who wins

The team with the most points at the end of the game is the winner.

What’s there to love?

The hot seat is a fun, competitive game to keep students on their toes while practicing. They must be quick and careful to make sure they are not in the hot seat when the time is up.

 

It helps to improve their fluency as they try to complete the English practice writing faster than the timer.  

 
 

  1. Student to student Practice: Adjust this game by dividing your class into pairs. Give each pair a chair. They play PSS, with the winner sitting in the chair and doing the English task first. The loser stands behind the chair. 
  2. When they are done, they stand up and switch positions with the loser. 
  3. They do this again and again until the timer goes off. 
  4. The person sitting in the chair doing the English task when the timer goes off is the loser. The other person receives a point.

Watch their confidence soar

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Posted in Basic, Conversation, Elite Teacher, Gold Teacher, Grammar, Middle Elementary School, No Prep Games, Pair games, Reading, Starter Teacher, Student to Student Practice, Teens/Young Adults, Upper Elementary School, Vocabulary, Young Elementary School

Shrinking Island-The Paper Folding Game

Materials Needed:

  • 1 pc of paper per player (encouraged to use scrap/recycled paper)

How to play:

  1. Pair students up.
  2. Both players stand on their sheets of paper. 
  3. They play paper, scissors, and stones to decide who does the English practice (Read, Spell, Make a Sentence, etc.) first. 
  4. The winner should do the practice. The loser repeats what the winner said or answers the question. 
  5. After both students finish their practice, the loser must fold their paper in half and stand on it again.
  6. They continue to practice following these steps. Everytime a student loses a round, they must fold their paper in half. 
  7. The papers should get smaller and smaller as they practice. They should try their best to stand on them.

*Note* Students should not step on the floor and must try to keep their balance while playing.

Teacher’s Role

You can set a timer (3-4 minutes) to play this game or have the students play until one of them can’t fold their paper anymore.

 Walk around and check students as they practice. Make sure you help students who may be slower or need guidance with the practice. 

Who wins?

The student with the larger piece of paper at the end of the game is the winner.

What’s there to love?

Students have loads of fun playing this game. They enjoy that winning depends on how good they are playing PSS. It’s like a mini duel!

It gets funnier and funnier as they fold their paper smaller and smaller. You will also have fun watching them stand on the tips of their toes to balance on it.

They will love it. So will you.

  1. Make it Harder to Win: Adjust this game by having students fold and unfold the paper. 
  2. Every time a student wins, they get to unfold the paper, but when they lose, they need to fold their paper.
  3. Doing this will help the game to last longer. It is perfect if you want the students to get more practice.

Let the fun times continue

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