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classroom games

Animal Bingo

04/26/2024 by admin

Introduce the excitement of Bingo with this cute Animal Bingo game designed specifically for your youngest students! Tailored to focus on common animals, this Bingo set is a perfect companion for ESL students honing their vocabulary skills. Animals include farm animals, woodland animals, safari animals, and household pets. The comprehensive PDF file includes 30 colorful boards in two print sizes, a handy Animal Chart, and 25 draw cards for a seamless gaming experience.

Click here to download now! https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Animal-Bingo-ESL-ELL-Newcomer-Game-2254822

You’ll appreciate the simplicity and effectiveness of this Bingo set. Bingo is an excellent activity for focused vocabulary review. During the game, students must listen attentively, scan their cards quickly, and follow the gameplay closely. Encourage full-class participation by letting students take turns pulling cards and creating an atmosphere of cooperation and pure fun. Make reviewing animal vocabulary an enjoyable journey for your students with this Animal Bingo set.

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Animal Bingo, animal vocabulary game, Bingo cards, Bingo for kids, classroom games, educational Bingo, Educational Games, ESL Bingo game, ESL classroom tools, ESL teaching resources, farm animals, household pets, learning animals, printable Bingo sets, safari animals, student engagement, vocabulary activities, vocabulary bingo, vocabulary learning, woodland animals

Halloween 2024

10/06/2023 by admin


Halloween is just around the corner! Whether you’re celebrating with family, friends, or a classroom full of excited ghosts and goblins, I’ve created a variety of activities that will help make 2024 a memorable Halloween celebration! From easy activities and games, freebies, and a full bundle of fun, check out all the links below!

Use these differentiated paper games as warm-up or cool-down activities. Best of all, they’re free! Download these games here, or by clicking on the image below.

Halloween Games Kinney Brothers Publishing

What’s a holiday party without decorations? These dancing skeletons (in two sizes) are perfect for a classroom board or a whole-class craft activity! Download for free by clicking here or on the image below.


Here are 13+ Halloween games you can play in class or at home! These games are especially recommended for teachers needing activities they can set up quickly and repeat for multiple classes.


Visit Donald’s English Classroom for a full lineup of Halloween activities! Browse classic games you can play in class or online. Download separately or save with the Game Bundle! Enjoy!


Here’s wishing you a happy and safe Halloween in 2024!

Donald Kinney
Kinney Brothers Publishing
Donald’s English Classroom

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: classroom celebrations, classroom games, Classroom Resources, Donald's English Classroom, freebies, Halloween Activities, Halloween decorations, Halloween games bundle, spooky fun

Christmas Puzzles

12/09/2020 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing Christmas Puzzles

It’s the time of year to start planning for Christmas parties! Like Halloween parties, I’m tasked with organizing a series of activities that are easy to set up and repeat over multiple days for dozens of classes ranging in age from wee little ones through junior high students.

Many games I use in class are for introducing and reviewing vocabulary. Once a year I have a window of opportunity to introduce or repeat holiday vocabulary that I otherwise never get the chance to use during the rest of the school year. Over time, and with repetition, my students pick up Halloween words like mummy and jack-o-lantern and Christmas words like elf and wreath.

Many of the paper activities I use have been created over many years and recycled as my kids grow up and move on. I’ve also used these puzzles in my adult classes as a quick warm-up during the holiday season.

You can download a free collection of paper puzzles to play in your own classes. Merry Christmas! These activities are great for introducing holiday vocabulary before parties, as a cool-down activity during parties, or a last-chance review after the holidays. Hopefully, they will spark some ideas for creating your own puzzles! They include answer keys and word banks.

Kinney Brothers Publishing Christmas games

https://www.kinneybrothers.com/DOWNLOADS/CHRISTMAS_PUZZLES.pdf

If you’re looking for more Christmas cheer, check out these Bingo, Tic-Tac-Toe, and (free) Pairs activities from my online store! Whether you’re playing in class or online, these games are easy enough to play with your youngest students. Christmas I Have/Who Has is only available as a bonus in the Christmas Game Bundle!

Donald's English Classroom Christmas games

Wishing you a Merry Christmas and a Happy New Year in 2021!

Donald Kinney
Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: christmas bingo, Christmas I Have/Who Has, Christmas parties, christmas puzzles, Christmas vocabulary, classroom games, Educational Games, festive activities, holiday activities, holiday classroom resources, kinney brothers publishing, teaching resources, Tic-Tac-Toe, vocabulary games

Clock Work

08/25/2018 by admin

Kinney Brothers Publishing Clock WorkYuki had a green paper watch wrapped around his wrist with the hands of the clock permanently drawn to 3:00.  I asked him what time it was.  “Oyatsu no jikan!” (Snack time!) he replied.  “Oh!” I said.  “That’s something to look forward to!”

Yuki couldn’t read a clock yet, but at four years old, his teachers were introducing the concept of analog clocks in a fun way and anchored in a daily event that was important to him.

Those little paper watches are super easy to make and kids really like them.  Download a free set of templates by clicking on the image below.  Teachers also use these watches for sight-word and CVC word practice!

Watch Templates Kinney Brothers Publishing

How and when to begin…

I begin teaching my ESL kids clocks when they start learning in their own language.  Because my classes are only once a week for 50 minutes, I regularly teach a little bit about clocks over a very long period of time.  Starting with paper watches, I plan ahead by planting seeds for future practice.

For young English language learners, reading, writing, and speaking the time is a convergence of several different concepts and skillsets.  Numbers alone can be used to teach most of the language skills necessary for reading digital clocks and speaking the time.  Once kids have learned CVC words like six and ten, sight words like one, two and it’s, and CVCe, or long ‘e’ words, like five and nine, reading time as text can begin. As for the concept of reading an analog clock, you can give that up to the culture at large and simply ride closely on its coattails.  As your kids learn to tell time at home and at school, be there to support their efforts and begin introducing easy, parallel English lessons.


FYI – In Japan, being able to hear the spoken hourly time and read digital time is part of the first (Bronze) level of the aural  Jidou Eiken tests for young English language students.  Click the link to learn more and download sample tests.  It’s worth investigating if only to learn about the vocabulary required to pass the three-level tests.


Getting ready…

Practicing time can begin very early on.  I prefer flashcards to plastic clocks with hands that can be manipulated simply because they don’t break and they aren’t perceived as a toy that older kids may object to.  With a good set of clock flashcards, there are numerous games you can play that will make repetition more enjoyable.

Here are a few fun ideas to try in class:

  • Make sure that clock is part of your primary classroom vocabulary flashcards.
  • Place a clock image of the time your class will end on a classroom board.  Kids will become super clock-watchers.
  • Set a time for a simple event to happen – like dropping your pencil or clapping your hands.  Be sure you’re distracted when the time comes and be surprised when it happens.
  • Hand out hour flashcards and have students play a simple I Have/Who Has activity.  “I have 1:00.  Who has 2:00?”
  • Hand out hour flashcards and have students line up in order of the hours.
  • Tack hour cards around the room (add half hours, quarter hours, etc. as your lessons progress) and have students individually go to the time directed.
  • Hand students a stack of clock flashcards and have them sort the cards into time order.
  • Write digital times on the board and have students match the time with analog flash cards.
  • Once kids start learning to read time as text, write times on the board and have students match the times with analog cards.  Setting this up as a relay brings a competitive and fast-paced edge to an otherwise simple exercise.

Remember, clock exercises are another opportunity to review the challenging numbers eleven and twelve, and later on 20, 30, 40, and 50.  If you need a good set of number flashcards, you can download them here for free.  If you’re in need of a refresh on your flashcard activities, download 50+ Flash Card Activities for ideas to get you going.

Diving in…

Once students are comfortable with reading simple hours, it’s time to begin doing worksheets.  Tack completed worksheets into interactive notebooks so they can be reviewed later.  Over time, these worksheets will become an invaluable and easy-to-access reference for future lessons where time is practiced.

If you’re looking for worksheets, here are the first ‘hour’ exercises from my textbook, Clock Work.  Download and try them out in class.  They’re free and I think you’ll like how the worksheets are differentiated.  Click on the image above to visit my web site and learn more about the textbook.

After lots of hour practice, adding half hours is the easy next lesson.  From this point, understanding and retention should begin to happen faster.  Then, it’s step by step, reviewing and practicing numbers in quarters, tens, and fives for times like 9:30, 3:15, 10:40, and 8:55.  To repeat, if you see your kids only once a week, plan on teaching a little over a long period of time, and don’t forget to review.  It will add up!

Clock games…

I’d love to hear the approach and activities you use when teaching time to younger students.  I have a lineup of games I like to use, like Clock Bingo, Clock I Have Who Has, 4 in a Row, and clock game boards.  Clock flashcards and differentiated worksheets provide repetitive practice and handy visuals for explaining time concepts.

Over the years I’ve learned that teaching students how to tell the time in English is not a one-off lesson.  From the early skill of reading an analog clock, then reading and expressing time in text, to understanding the language variances of telling time in English, a little at a time goes a long way.  Make sure students are solid in the early lessons and you’ll have fewer problems building their language skills later on.

As always, best of luck in your classes!

Donald Kinney

Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: analog clocks, classroom games, clock flashcards, clock worksheets, Donald's English Classroom, educational resources, english language learning, ESL Activities, ESL teaching tips, flashcard activities, free templates, Jidou Eiken, kinney brothers publishing, paper watches, teaching time, time-telling skills, young learners

Swimming With Sharks

05/08/2017 by admin

On the lookout for games…

In my kids classes I am always looking for ways to anchor the question and answer dialogues they are learning with ‘real world’ application. Of course, there’s only so much that the ‘real world’ actually enters the classroom to allow repeated practice of such basic dialogues as What’s your name?, How old are you?, Where do you live?, Do you like…?. Do you have…?, What’s this?, and What’s that?  So I’m always on the lookout for games that can serve this purpose. Swimming with Sharks is one that I regularly use, and that the students really love to play.

Swimming With Sharks is a game that is introduced in Phonics & Spelling, Book 2, and is designed to get the students to practice reading and speaking the three-letter words they are learning. The game is very simple. Students place a game piece (an erasure, or some other small personal object) on Start. Then, each student takes turns rolling a die and moving their game piece that many places on the board. They have to then say the word they land on out loud.  If they land on “net”, they can climb over the net to the next space, thereby getting further along on the board to the goal of reaching the safe space of the ship. If they land on “red”, they must go back to the previous “red”, or back to start. And if they land on the “shark’s nose”, they must go back to start.

To use the same game to practice dialogues, I use a separate Swimming With Sharks game board that has blank spaces along the board instead of words. When students land on a blank space, they must ask another player a question. If the student cannot think of a question to ask, he or she must go back the same number rolled on the die. Likewise, if the student who is asked cannot answer the question, he or she must move their game piece back that many spots on the board. The same rules apply for landing on “net”, the color “red,” and “shark’s nose” as in the game in Phonics & Spelling, Book 2.

This “blank” version of Swimming With Sharks can be used with any set of questions-and-answer dialogues you want your students to practice. Download it!  It’s on us.   Let us know what games you use to get your students talking!

What games do you use to get your kids talking?

If you like to play board games in your classes, take a look at this Blank Game Boards Bundle from Donald’s English Classroom.  These blank boards offer teachers the flexibility of creating their own game boards.  It includes Swimming With Sharks and a whole lot more!

Best of luck in your classes!

Michael Kinney
Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: board games, classroom games, dialogue practice, Donald's English Classroom, Educational Games, ESL Games, Free downloads, Interactive Learning, kinney brothers publishing, Phonics & Spelling, swimming with sharks, teaching resources

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