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Communication Series – A Closer Look

01/17/2021 by admin

The Kinney Brothers Publishing Communication Series is designed to extend students’ skills and interest in communicating in English. The four-book series includes Stories For Young Readers and Dialogues For Young Speakers. The textbooks work in tandem to provide students with exercises in reading, writing, listening, and speaking. Each textbook is detailed below with links for downloadable previews and purchase.

In Japan, The Stories For Young Readers series is published by Independent Publishers International (I.P.I.) and available through Nellies English Books and David Paul’s ETJ Book Service.

You’ll find an abundance of support materials for this series in our online store, Donald’s English Classroom.  Visit for downloadable audio files, Lesson Packs, and Teacher’s Answer Keys. You’ll also see links for Lesson Packs on Google Slides for online courses and Kindle Books for your digital library.

  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Nellies English Books (Japan)
  • ETJ Book Service (Japan)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (support materials)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Nellies English Books (Japan)
  • ETJ Book Service (Japan)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (support materials)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)
  • Preview Download
  • Kinney Brothers Publishing (Amazon)
  • Donald’s English Classroom (pdf color and black & white)
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (pdf Downloads) Free Sample
  • Donald’s English Classroom Lesson Packs (Google Slides) Free Sample
  • Kindle Books (Amazon)

Kinney Brothers Publishing offers a wide range of ESL textbooks including a Phonics Series that begins with your youngest students, an Easy Sight Words Series, and Trends for secondary and adult English language learners. If you’re looking for more support materials, be sure to check out Q&A, Cursive Writing!, and a treasure trove of games, charts, and flashcards in Donald’s English Classroom!

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: audio files, Communication Series, Dialogues For Young Speakers, Donald's English Classroom, educational materials, English communication skills, english language learning, ESL Activities, ESL Dialogues, ESL Flashcards, ESL Games, ESL resources, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, ETJ Book Service, Kindle Books, kinney brothers publishing, lesson packs, Nellies English Books, online courses, Stories For Young Readers

Fun Facts About English #59 – Words of Spanish Origin

06/26/2020 by admin

Fun Facts About English 59 Kinney Brothers Publishing

All of the highlighted words in the story below came into the English language via Spanish.

The English language is an amazing amalgamation of many European and other languages. Check out these posts about the linguistic influence of Native American languages, French, and classical languages like Greek and Latin!

See the previous or next Fun Facts About English

Donald's English Classroom

A good set of flashcards is worth its weight in gold! Check out all the vocabulary-building flashcard sets in Donald’s English Classroom!

Filed Under: Fun Facts About English Tagged With: alligator, Donald's English Classroom, esl, ESL Activities, ESL Flashcards, ESL Games, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, fun facts about english, kinney brothers publishing, spanish

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

Teaching Stacked Adjectives

07/01/2018 by admin

stacked adjectives kinney brothers publishing

What are stacked adjectives?

Nothing made me feel more inculcated into my own language than the idea of stacked adjectives. As native English speakers, it’s not something we often consciously think about.  Nonetheless, I’ve learned that teaching my youngest ESL students adjectival order is not only beneficial to their long-term studies, I’ve discovered a pleasurable approach that insures the lessons stick in their memory.  Unlike native speakers, it has to be taught intentionally.

In an English speaker’s subconscious mind, multiple adjectives have a specific order. When they fall out of that learned order, the brain glitches and the meaning can be lost, confused, or even misconstrued.

Let me quote from Katy Waldman’s The Secret Rules of Adjective Order:

Though red big barns and big red barns are semantically identical, the second kind pleases our ears more.  These tricky situations – neither pure correlation nor accumulation – generally occur when you cross the border between adjectival regions, such as size and color.  When that happens, an invisible code snaps into place, and the eight categories shimmy into one magistral conga line:  general opinion, then specific opinion then size then shape then age then color then provenance then material.

Thank you Katy!  Think about the following sentences:

A cat.

A black cat.

A big black cat.

A big black plastic cat.

A beautiful big black plastic cat.

A beautiful big old black plastic cat.

A beautiful big old black French plastic cat.

Even the simple sentence, “A black big cat” is a language pothole, difficult for an English speaker to mentally ignore, let alone read when the adjectives are out of their stacked order (did you miss it or did your brain reorder the sentence?)  Figure this one out:

A yellow cotton handsome Indian new jacket.

It’s difficult to even say, much less discern what the sentence is trying to convey, coming off more like a word salad to an English speaker’s way of ordering meaning.  In their proper sequence, the adjectives should be aligned thusly:

A handsome new yellow Indian cotton jacket.

How did it happen that, without any memory of having learned this, I expect my adjectives to be in a choreographed line dance with each other?  It begins when we’re very young and is reinforced in numerous story and picture books, like Lillie’s Purple Plastic Purse, or The Giant Jam Sandwich.

So, don’t be afraid to start exposing your ESL students to adjectival order.  In fact, I recommend that you start off very young – even before they learn how to read.  With a bit of forward-thinking, it will make their elementary and junior high school English classes a little easier.  If you’ve been doing chants such as, “Five Little Monkeys” or “Five Little Ducks,” you’re not only priming your kids to hear the sounds associated with numbers and plurals, but stacked adjectives as well!

Making Sentences Without Words

Start with simple nouns that begin with a consonant, like ‘cat.’  Pull out an ‘A’ card from your ABC deck.  Then grab a few of your number, color, size, and emotions cards as well. (Download color and number flashcards from my online store for free!)

Start with a simple minor sentence.  Then add a color adjective.  Once kids understand this easy pattern, mix the cards up, and have students reorder or make new sentences themselves.  It may be helpful to teach your kids that ‘A’ means ‘1’ in this context.*  Don’t forget to make a small ‘period’ or ‘full stop’ card as well.  And there’s no need to be all academic when explaining it!  There will be plenty of time for that in their little futures.  Teach a ‘period’ as a ‘bliiiing!’ or ‘ker-dunk’ or a Khoisan click of your tongue and I promise your kids will never forget to include it – to the point of annoyance.

Now, let’s add some more adjectives.

With emotions, colors, size, and an ‘A’ card, your kids have learned to make their first stacks of adjectives – and they can’t even read yet!  You’re also teaching them to recognize ‘A’ as their first sight word.  Like many teachers, you’ve probably been drilling a lot of vocabulary in separate flashcard sets.  This exercise brings that vocabulary together into coherent and ordered meaning that visually mimics language and text.  Later on, as your students move from speech to text recognition, and then to decoding language in connected text, it will be helpful to remind them of this simple exercise and the songs they used to sing when little.  Let the kids make their own sentences or dictate sentences for an excellent listening exercise.  Always ask the students to ‘read’ their sentences and help students who don’t yet understand that the correct order is important.

Upping the Ante

Once students are confident with ordering simple adjectives, start throwing numbers into the mix. By necessity, you’ll also be putting an emphasis on the ‘s’ sounds of plurals that they’re likely already using in songs and regular verbal exercises, like “Five Little Monkeys?” and “I’m four years old.”  For more on this topic, be sure to check out my post on teaching plurals to ESL students!

Now that you’ve introduced these concepts to your kids, keep a board or table available with cards so that students can make sentences on their own.  You may be surprised at what they put together!  It also pays to have a bit of sympathy and patience. Trying to consciously LEARN this order must be terrible!  I’m glad I have no memory of it – a sort of potty training of the brain.  If you introduce this concept early on, it’s going to be easier as their studies become more sophisticated.

If you’re teaching older students, download a stacked adjective worksheet page from Stories For Young Readers, Book 2, a full textbook available on David Paul’s ETJ Book Service  or the Kinney Brothers Publishing web site.  The worksheet is very helpful when learning to do the Adjective Conga and includes an answer key.  Again, color, number, and more flashcards are available from my Teachers-Pay-Teachers store.  Please feel free to visit and download!

To learn more about early reading skills, check out my previous posts Sight Words: What, When, and How and Teaching CVC Words.  You might also be interested to learn about the most common adjectives, why Big Bad Wolf follows a different adjectival order, or test your knowledge of stacked adjectives.

Good luck and enjoy!

Donald Kinney

Kinney Brothers Publishing

*OK, you grammar mavens – let’s keep it simple. I understand that ‘a’ is a special kind of adjective called an indefinite article that refers to a singular noun whose specific identity is not known to the listener or reader.  Unfortunately, at their age, my kids aren’t going to get that as an explanation – nor should they be expected to.  I also use numbers instead of written words in sentences until they learn to read the numbers as sight words.  I’m aware that this is a grammatical infraction, but I pay little heed to academic imperatives when it comes to teaching my youngest English learners.  Using easy-to-understand concepts (reduced though they may be) to teach young learners is not damaging anyone.  If you are so inclined to always be aligned to Elements of Style, simply put the words on the front of all your cards and you’ll be covered.

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: adjective exercises, adjective order, Donald's English Classroom, educational resources, English adjectives, English grammar, ESL Activities, ESL classroom tips, ESL teaching, grammar instruction, kinney brothers publishing, language comprehension, language learning, stacked adjectives, Teaching strategies, young ESL learners

Planning Ahead

02/20/2018 by admin

No matter the time of year, I get inquiries about the best way to purchase Kinney Brothers Publishing textbooks and downloadable resources.  You shouldn’t have to worry about getting the materials you need for your students.  We offer many options so you can make the best choice for your classes.

In Japan, the Stories For Young Readers series, published by Independent Publishers International (I.P.I.), is available with a special discount through David Paul’s ETJ Book Service.  Print-on-demand services make this series available online through Amazon.com worldwide!  For full textbook pdf and paperless (Google Slides) downloads, visit Donald’s English Classroom!

The Stories For Young Readers series includes questions, grammatical explanations, exercises, and puzzles for beginning students. The books are designed to extend students’ skills and interest in communicating in English. Teachers can utilize the stories and exercises for listening comprehension, reading, writing, and conversation.  Book 1 focuses on present simple and present continuous reading exercises.  Book 2 takes students further with simple past, past continuous and simple future tenses.

Check out the previews or download the first readings from Book 1 and Book 2  for free!  They include audio files, answer keys and dialogues!

Stories For Young Readers Book 1

You’ll find an abundance of support materials for this series in our online store, Donald’s English Classroom.  Visit for downloadable flash cards, charts, games, textbooks, answer keys, and audio files.

Stories For Young Readers Book 2

You might also be interested in Dialogues for Young Speakers – a series of dialogues and surveys designed to extend students’ conversation skills. Following Stories for Young Readers, the dialogues progress from present simple to present continuous in Book 1, and simple past, past continuous, and future tenses in Book 2. Not only will teachers find a wealth of material that will get students up and talking, the dialogues also prove that students can effectively communicate with even a limited vocabulary. You can download these textbooks online, order directly from the Kinney Brothers Publishing web site, or order on Amazon.co.jp.  Download previews for Book 1 and Book 2 here!

Dialogues For Young Speakers

If you’d like to learn more about all Kinney Brothers Publishing has to offer, please download our catalogues!  Peruse the complete lineup of our Global Edition ESL Textbooks or check out our ESL Store right from your desktop!  Sign up for our newsletter and download a free CVC I Have/Who Has Activity Set!

Kinney Brothers Publishing Catalogues

If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me at info@kinneybrothers.com.

As always, best of luck in your classes!

Donald Kinney

Kinney Brothers Publishing

kinneybrothers.com

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Dialogues For Young Speakers, digital downloads, Donald's English Classroom, English classroom resources, English communication skills, ESL Activities, ESL curriculum, ESL Games, ESL materials, ESL support materials, esl textbooks, kinney brothers publishing, print-on-demand, Stories For Young Readers

The Last Story

04/18/2017 by admin

When Robert passed away in June of 2013, he had plans for a third book in the Stories for Young Readers series.  This was the first installment in that book and the last story he wrote and illustrated.  At the time that he wrote this, he was teaching at Saitama University and was deeply interested in fairy tales and their histories.  As he said in a discussion, he thought the story could be seen as a parallel to larger cultural issues and would be useful for promoting discussion in class.  You can click on the image to make it larger.  Enjoy.

Kinney Brothers PublishingE

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: ESL Activities, ESL Drills, ESL Flash cards, ESL Games, ESL Lesson plans, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, ESL Worksheets, kinney brothers publishing, Stories For Young Readers

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