LanguageStuff πŸƒπŸŽ²πŸ–Ό
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πŸ“š Here you will find a variety of flashcards, games and decor ideas for teaching English.
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The best way to spend your last lessons is playing Jeopardy. Two variants for free in the comments:

- PDF.
- PowerPoint.
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You still have time to decorate your classroom with an awesome summer poster! This giant coloring page is a fantastic tool for interactive learning. Here are some ways to use it:

1. Vocabulary Building. Ask the children to find specific objects on the poster (e.g., ice cream, flamingo, palm tree, sun, clouds) and let them color them only after they’ve named the word correctly in English.

2. Colors. Give instructions in English (e.g. "Make the ice cream yellow").

3. Developing Speaking Skills (Picture Description). Use the phrase "I can see..." to describe different elements of the poster.

4. Prepositions of Place. Practice prepositions (in, on, under, next to, between). For example: "The flamingo is next to the ice cream" or "The sun is above the mountain."

6. Plurals. Count repeating items (eyes, feathers, ice cream cones) and name them: "One ice cream, five ice creams."

Grab it in the comments for free.
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The final lessons are just around the corner.

Check out this idea on how to use "End of the Year Bingo" as a fun "Predictive Bingo" activity.

Before starting the survey, ask your students to randomly write the names of their classmates in each cell β€” someone they think fits that specific description. Then, they go around the room to test their ideas by asking those specific classmates targeted questions. If their guess is right and the person confirms the fact, they circle the cell. The winner is the one whose intuition proved strongest with the most matches. Or you can use it like an ordinary bingo.

The file in the comments.
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Summer Taboo Game

A cool game for developing speaking skills, which will be a useful entertainment in a summer language camp or in a lesson dedicated to β€œSummer”.

Look for several game options and detailed rules in the file.

+ more Summer Games (PDF and PPT): VK or TPT
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What time is it? Just 5 minutes to summer! That means it's time to think about adventures.

We've gathered some great travel templates for you (the file in the comments), with which students can plan a short weekend trip out of town or a longer one to another city or country.

You can plan a group trip or a personal one, and even imagine that the students have their own travel agency and offer ready-made trips to future clients.
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Turning summer vocabulary practice into an exciting adventure! Here are a few ideas on how to use the "Collect the Summer Words” worksheets in a summer camp or during your lessons:

1. "Pack Your Suitcase" Team Quest
Divide the children into teams and give each team one worksheet.
The goal: Be the fastest to "collect" the words and label the pictures correctly.
Bonus point: Earn an extra point for each Present Simple sentence made with the word. For example: "I always wear sunglasses in summer" or "She builds a sandcastle on the beach."

2. "Physical Spelling" Game
If you are teaching outdoors, turn the paper worksheets into an active game. Write down word parts (from the yellow circles) on separate sheets of paper and scatter them around the area. Show the kids a picture (e.g., a crab). The children must run to the correct syllables ("cr" and "ab"), bring them to the teacher, and shout out the complete word: "Crab!"

Get it in the comments for free.
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