• Skip to primary navigation
  • Skip to main content
  • Skip to primary sidebar
Kinney Brothers Publishing Logo

Kinney Brothers Publishing

ESL Teaching & Publishing

  • Kinney Brothers Publishing
  • KBP Shop
  • Games+
  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Press

student engagement

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

Interactive Notebooks (INBs)

05/09/2019 by admin

There came a point where I had to intervene. My students’ notebooks were a disordered mess and their bags, when emptied, were a junk pile of crumpled papers, loose cards, and past games. Taking action, I began to roll out a program using interactive notebooks.

Be sure to check out my post on CVC Interactive Notebook templates!

What is an Interactive Notebook?

You may have seen references to INBs, ISNs, or INs, all of which refer to a decades-long trend in education called Interactive (Student) Notebooks. The movement has its history in a tradition of notebooking, scrapbooking and early educators promoting creativity and interaction in student learning.

Nature journals (advocated by 19th-century British educator Charlotte Mason) provide an early example of interactive notebooks. Students began with blank notebooks and either drew or glued a plant or leaf onto a page. Then they wrote about it, labeled it, or included a related poem or thought. Ms. Mason’s Book of Centuries is another example where students explored each century with timelines, drawings, maps, and facts of interest.

The History Alive! social studies program is seen as the genesis of the contemporary interactive notebook movement. Developed in the 80s and 90s by educators at Teacher’s Curriculum Institute, History Alive! is a series of instructional practices that allow students with diverse learning styles to “experience” history. Beginning with the idea that students should be allowed to construct their own knowledge, the teachers created dynamic and highly interactive teaching strategies.

So, what is it about interactive notebooks that have attracted so many educators? How do they benefit and what can be gained for students and teachers?

Here are 7 reasons to use interactive notebooks in class by Jennifer Smith Jochen, of Smith Curriculum and Consulting, on the Minds in Bloom blog.

  • Interactive notebooks teach students to organize and synthesize their thoughts.
  • Interactive notebooks accommodate multiple learning styles at one time in (and out of) the classroom.
  • Student-teacher-parent interaction is built and strengthened with the use of interactive notebooks.
  • Students are building a portfolio that allows for teachers to track growth over time.
  • Interactive notebooks have students create a resource to use as they continue to extend their learning.
  • Students take ownership of their learning through color and creativity.
  • Interactive notebooks reduce clutter in the classroom, as well as in students’ lives.

Getting Started

When setting up an INB, whatever the subject, teachers regularly include a cover page, table of contents, a rubric for grading the notebooks, an agreement between student and teacher for the upkeep of their notebooks, and finally, a strategy for dividing the notebook into school terms and/or units taught.

When working with a two-page layout, the right-side pages are often reserved for teacher input (teacher-generated notes and handouts) and student output is on the left side — paralleling right/left brain activity. American educator and Wisconsinite, Angela Nerby, explains the breakdown of the interactive notebooks used in her 2nd-grade classes in multiple step-by-step blog posts at Hippo Hooray Teaching.

Tips for newbies:

  • Use sturdy notebooks; preferably with sewn-in pages.
  • Create a model notebook that you can use for planning and demonstration.
  • Number the pages from the outset so that everyone is on the same page.
  • Tape or create a large pocket for unfinished page elements.
  • Tape or hot glue a ribbon bookmark to the inside back cover.
  • Use liquid glue or tape. Pages glued with glue sticks quickly fall apart.
  • Have a place for students to access materials like glue, scissors, and paper. Establish a routine for cutting, pasting, and cleanup.
  • Take students step by step through the layout process with your demo book and sample elements. Stress from the beginning cutting and pasting techniques.
  • Carry through with the notebook project! The first year is going to teach you a lot about planning, organizing, and executing your INB. Use your demo book to make notes about what worked well and what needs improvement.

To help get you started, download the above templates that include a variety of basic manipulatives in pdf and png formats. They’re free, and please feel free to use them.

On the Flip Side

What interactive notebooks are NOT:

  • INBs are NOT a replacement for students taking notes. It is a center for interaction.
  • They are NOT a replacement for a textbook. However, a textbook can’t give you everything you need when teaching. I began using interactive notebooks for topics that were not covered in the textbook: picture dictionaries, songs and chants, sight word practice, extra writing practice, dictation, vocabulary activities, dialogues, clockwork, and cursive writing practice.
  • Foldables and flip-flaps can be amazing tools but they are NOT what defines an interactive notebook. What makes a notebook interactive is that an active connection occurs between the page and the mind of the student.

Check out the book, Interactive Notebooks and English Language Learners, by Marcia Carter, Anita Hernandez and Jeannine Richison. The authors write about addressing the needs of second language learners and how an “Interactive Notebook can be used to scaffold content to move English language learners (ELLs) to the stage where they are academic language learners (ALLs).”

Making learning fun…

In this video, Nassrin Rabi, an elementary ESL teacher in Tel Aviv, demonstrates creating a prepositions of place page for her students’ INBs. You can check out more of her videos on her Youtube channel.

This is from Victoria of CrazyCharizma, an educator known for her unique and creative materials for your INBs. Download a free version of the typewriters and try them out in class!

Since Charlotte Mason’s Nature Notebooks, and the exploratory work done by the Teacher’s Curriculum Institute, we’ve moved into the digital age — and it’s pounding on our classroom doors. If you work in a blended classroom or teach online, creating online interactive notebooks in Google Classroom helps students negotiate digital tools that are necessary to their academic and professional futures.

Here is a nine-minute video demonstration by David Lee, an EdTech Specialist at Singapore American School, showing his kids how to navigate a digital science interactive notebook.

If you’ve ever been discouraged or at a loss with your students’ notebook habits, take the initiative and give interactive notebooks a try. Yes, they are a lot of work, but the rewards for teachers, students, and parents are worth the effort!

As always, best of luck in your classes!

Donald Kinney

Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Charlotte Mason, classroom management, classroom organization, creative teaching, digital notebooks, Donald's English Classroom, education tools, educational blogging, educational resources, History Alive, INBs, Interactive Learning, interactive notebooks, ISNs, kinney brothers publishing, learning styles, student engagement, student notebooks, Teacher guides, Teaching strategies

Drills, Dialogues, & Roleplays

11/09/2018 by admin

Materials and content allowing students to engage in ‘real’ communication, or simulations of what conversations may sound like, should be a goal for many language curriculums.  Drills that develop into dialogues, which in turn pave the way for roleplays, provide a rich repertoire of practice activities to nudge students toward more meaningful, and consequently, less mechanical communication.  In fact, such activities can hold relevance for students at any level of their studies whether they’re beginners, intermediate, or advanced language learners.


Although controlled by the teacher, meaningful drills allow students to provide information in addition to the correct language form, give reason for speaking, and as a result, are more engaging and motivating than mechanical drills.


Let’s differentiate three types of exercises often used in the classroom: drills, dialogues, and roleplays, with each having their own subset of forms.

ESL drills Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom

Drills are a vital part of language study.  Simply put, a drill is a type of highly controlled or mechanical written or oral exercise in which students respond to a given cue.  Drills often have no context and exist for the sole purpose of practicing targeted skills.  They can be practiced in any order without losing the logic of the exercise.  Drills are the easiest for teachers to set up and implement and the exercises students are most likely to forget.  Why?  Because they’re often mechanical and lack meaningfulness.  In other words, students are on autopilot.  When working with drills, you’ll likely be using one of three types: repetition, substitution, or transformation exercises.

Repetition drills focus on a specific target where the teacher’s language or target text is repeated with no change; think flashcards and pronunciation drills.

Substitution drills give students practice in changing a target word or employ a grammar structure in response to a prompt or cue.

Teacher:  Blue.

Student: I like blue.

Transformation drills involve changing the structure of a sentence.

Teacher:  I like to eat cake.

Student:  I like eating cake.

As necessary as they may be, drills don’t have to be boring or lack meaningfulness!  There are a variety of creative and fun ways to liven up your flashcard drill work, making the activities more engaging and memorable for your students.  Check out my 50+ Flashcard Activities for lots of ideas to shake up your usual drill routines.

If you think of drills as a pathway to dialogues, it will significantly influence how you prepare and implement both types of exercises.

ESL dialogues Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom

While they can rely on the components found in drills, dialogues provide context and, if unordered, lose their sense of logic. Dialogues usually present spoken language in a natural or conversational tone and are typically longer than drills.  They’re beneficial for developing speaking and listening skills. Like drills, dialogues are usually exercises for guided, rather than free language practice.

Dialogues can fall into two categories: standard dialogues and open dialogues.

Standard dialogues present students with an A B exchange.  They are useful for reading, listening, pronunciation, intonation, and other phonological features.

In open dialogues, the teacher provides only one half of the dialogue with students creating the other half.  Surveys are a perfect and extremely useful example of an open dialogue format and give students practice in asking and answering questions.

If you choose to write your own dialogues, keep these ideas in mind:

Use “natural” language as much as possible with idiomatic and sociolinguistic phrases relevant to the students’ age and experiences. “Wassup!” may work well with teens but not so much for retirees.

Keep the dialogue exchanges short enough so that students can easily remember, but long enough to provide context.  Three to five exchanges with salutations work well.

A simple dialogue can happen anywhere. Allow an extenuating or teacher-directed circumstance like an emergency or other conflict to provide urgency.  Delivering the line, “Where’s my phone?” will be quite different in a supermarket as opposed to coming upon an accident.

Depict situations or reasons for a dialogue that are relevant and useful to the learner.  Think of how differently young teens and adults may think and talk about a math test, making a reservation, or a fistfight in the cafeteria.

Allow for more meaningful practice with options for substitution within the dialogue.

Here are some ideas when presenting dialogues:

Before presenting the dialogue, introduce the topic of the dialogue by fielding students’ interest or knowledge of the subject.  Providing students with pictures that may accompany or are similar to the dialogue, can warm students up with relevant vocabulary or grammatical structures.

Have students listen to the dialogue and explore specifics about what they heard.  If you have no recordings, set up two students to read while the rest of the class listens.

Give students only one side of the dialogue and have students participate in reading and listening.

Have students reorder a dialogue that’s been cut up into its individual lines.

Try out your acting skills and use the dialogue as a telephone conversation where students only hear one side of the exchange.  Who was on the other end of the conversation?  Mother, teacher, or friend?  What questions did they ask?

Perform the dialogue in fictional circumstances.  How does the same dialogue change in a library as opposed to a crowded cafeteria, or on a cold day in the park as opposed to a sunny beach?

You may be pleasantly surprised at the willingness of students to play and the creativity they will exhibit if you mine dialogues for expressive and more meaningful practice.

ESL roleplays Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom

As students become more flexible and rely on fewer cues to initiate or carry them through a given dialogue, they are ready to move into roleplaying.

Roleplay is a way of bringing situations from real life into the classroom.  Dramatic scripts are simply extended dialogues grouped into scenes!  Semi-improvisational exercises where scenarios are presented with specific outcomes but nonspecific language, are excellent roleplay activities.  If your students are ready, full improvisation is an especially enjoyable way of getting students to explore a topic, take on specific roles, and employ learned language in a meaningful and expressive way.

Resources

Download these sample business roleplays from Trends, a compilation of readings and exercises for intermediate and advanced learners.  Try them out in class or use them as a guide in developing your own roleplays!

Trends Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom ESL roleplays

Dialogues For Young Speakers provides guided dialogues and surveys that were created with easy and natural language for beginning students.  Check out these sample pages and they may spark ideas for your own original dialogues!

ESL Dialogues For Young Readers Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom

If you need basic drills for young students, download these sample drill worksheets from Q&A, a compendium of question and answer drills with simple present through simple past tense worksheets.

ESL Q&A Kinney Brothers Publishing Donald's English Classroom

As always, best of luck in your classes!

Donald Kinney

Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: classroom dialogues, classroom roleplays, communication drills, dialogue creation, Donald's English Classroom, educational resources, kinney brothers publishing, language curriculum, language drills, language exercises, language learning, language practice, language teachers, meaningful communication, roleplay activities, student engagement, Teaching strategies

UNO

06/02/2017 by admin

UNO is a trademarked game from Mattel

Think UNO is just a quiet game of number and color matching?  Think again! 

UNO is a great game for getting your students speaking!  I use it to get my students to practice all of the following language:

  • This is a…
  • That is a …
  • These are …
  • Those are…
  • What is this?
  • What is that?
  • What are these?
  • What are those?
  • Not
  • Colors
  • numbers

Here is an example of how I use it in a class where students are learning to use the basic sentence structure, “This is a …”:

Deal out seven cards to each student and play the game as usual, only students must say what they are laying down.  For example, if a student is going to lay down a yellow 2, she must say, “This is a Yellow 2.”  The play then goes to the next student.  Let’s say he lays down a Green 2.  He must say, “This is a Green 2.”  Play the game in this fashion until one of the students lays down all of the cards in her hand and wins.

The special cards in the deck are as follows:

  • This is a Wild Draw 4
  • This is a Wild card
  • This is a Green Draw 2
  • This is a Red Skip
  • This is a Blue Reverse

When the students start contrasting ‘this’ and ‘that’, bring that to the game.  Now, students must say what the previous student laid down before saying what they are about to lay down:  “That is a Yellow 2.  This is a Blue Skip.”

As the students progress further, the expectations for play expand as well.  For example, when the students are learning plurals, and the contrasting words ‘these’ and ‘those’, support this by incorporating them into the game.  When a student has two or more of the same card in his hand, he can now lay them all down at once, saying, “These are Red 7’s”.  The next student must then say, “Those are Red 7’s before saying what he is about to lay down.  In this game now, students are contrasting ‘this’, ‘that’, ‘these’, and ‘those’.

Have your students learned ‘not’?  Throw it in!  Now when a student lays down a card, she must first say what it is not, and then what it is:  “This is not a Green 9.  This is a Blue 4.”  And for added fun, the students can be allowed to say anything that their card is not:  “This is not a gorilla!  This is a Blue 4.”

And of course, you play the game in which students ask questions too!  In this case, the student would lay her card down and ask the next student, “What is this?”  The next student must answer, “That is a Green 8,” before laying down her own card and asking the next student the appropriate question.

As you can see, there are a lot of options for using UNO to support the language you are teaching.  Give it a try, and let us know how it goes, and how you might have used it differently!  Or maybe you have another card game that you like to use to get your students talking.  Please let us know.  We’d love to hear about it!

Mike

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Classroom Activities, Donald's English Classroom, Educational Games, ESL teaching, grammar practice, kinney brothers publishing, language learning games, sentence structure exercises, speaking activities, student engagement, teaching English, teaching resources, UNO card game, vocabulary games

The Oasis of The Seas

05/13/2017 by admin

One of the schools I taught at in Japan was an intensive academic prep program for students getting ready to study in universities abroad. 

This is a lesson guide for The Oasis of The Seas from the textbook, Trends, Business & Culture Reports, Book 2. You can download this lesson to try out in class.

In the speaking and listening courses, my job was to get the students talking as much as possible, to work on group tasks, and give presentations.  One of the best tools I had for this was our textbook, Trends, Business and Culture Reports, as it allowed me to have the students run their own lessons.  Here is an example of how I would do it (or rather, how the students would do it) using the reading and exercise pages The Oasis of the Seas.

The day before class I would choose one student to be the “Teacher,” and give him or her the first page of The Oasis of the Seas.  The student was to read the story and prepare to lead the class through the reading and exercises on the page.

Before class the next day, the “Teacher” was to write the questions from the Discussion Questions section on the whiteboard. 

He or she would then greet the students and make small chit-chat with them for a minute or two, asking them how their evening was the night before, etc.  The teacher would then introduce the topic for the day – Traveling – and explain that they were to start by discussing the questions on the board.  He or she would then read each question in turn, and ask the students if they have any questions about them.  If yes, the teacher would answer the questions, and then say, “Okay, let’s go, up, up, up!”, to which the students would stand up, get into pairs, and discuss the questions, the teacher changing the pairs every 10 minutes for a total of 30 minutes discussion time.

The teacher would then have the students sit down and take out a notebook and pen for dictation.  He or she would then ask the students to write the questions as he or she spoke them from the Comprehension Questions section.  The students could ask the teacher to repeat the questions as necessary until they had all of the questions written in their notebooks.

Then, the teacher would explain that he or she was going to read twice the story called The Oasis of the Seas, and that they should listen and take notes on a new page in their notebooks.  The teacher would then read the story twice while the students listened and took notes.  When finished, the teacher would ask the students to get into pairs and work to answer the questions from their notes, stressing that the answers must be complete sentences.    

When the students were finished, the teacher would ask the pairs in turn to read and answer the questions.  The teacher would not let on whether the answers were correct or not, but respond with, “I see,” or “Really?” or “Okay, interesting.”  Then, the teacher would hand out the two pages of The Oasis of the Seas, and ask the students to check their own answers with the reading.  Once this was finished and the questions gone over again to make sure of the answers, the teacher would then ask the students to practice the reading aloud in pairs, working on fluency and pronunciation.

By this time, at least half of the 90-minute class period would be finished, and I would then take over, thanking the “Teacher” for his or her work. 

I would then move the students through the rest of the exercises in The Oasis of the Seas and end with setting up the Presentation Task section, giving them one week to research one of the famous buildings listed in the section, or one of their own liking (no two students could do the same building), and prepare to give a presentation to the class, covering the information asked for, and other information they think is interesting.

If you try this in class, let us know how your students responded.  We’d love to hear from you!

Michael Kinney
Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: academic preparation, class activities, classroom management, Donald's English Classroom, ESL teaching, esl textbooks, Interactive Learning, kinney brothers publishing, language skills development, Michael Kinney, Oasis of the Seas, student engagement, student presentations, student-led lessons, study abroad, teaching methodology, Trends Business and Culture Reports

Selling Wellness

05/13/2017 by admin

Health and medicine are major topics in our social and media discussions.  How well your students understand the news articles and conversations happening around them determines the extent to which they can make informed decisions about their well-being.

Of course most beginner-intermediate ESL students have learned about the body, and how to talk about simple ailments, but Selling Wellness, from Trends, Book 2, challenges students to take their skills in reading, listening, and discussion around health and medicine to the next level.  Starting off with a short paragraph on prescription drug sales in the United States, Selling Wellness engages solid intermediate-level students with reading and discussion exercises that center on health and exercise, taking medicine, pharmaceutical advertising, and the growing epidemic of pharmaceutical drug abuse and unintentional deaths by overdose.

Selling Wellness also includes a simple review of body part vocabulary, commonly-used idioms dealing with illness, and a survey exercise that can be used either in-class, or as a homework project.    

The way I run this lesson…

I start off with writing the questions from the Discussion Questions section on the board.  Students stand and discuss the questions in pairs, changing partners every five or ten minutes.

Next, I tell students to take out a notebook and prepare to write the questions from the Comprehension Questions section.  I then dictate the questions, which the students write in their notebooks.

After this, the students turn to a new page in their notebooks.  I then read the report twice, and the students take notes.  Then, students pair up and work out the answers to the Comprehension Questions.

Finally, I hand out the two pages of Selling Wellness to the students, and the students work to check the answers to their questions, and practice reading the paragraph for themselves out loud.

From here I have the students drill each other using the Selling Wellness Drill section.  With this, students change pairs, with one student turning his or her paper over, and the other student asking the questions.  The partner listens closely to each question and gives a full answer.  For example, if the question is, “Are Americans taking less medicine?”, the student should answer, “No, Americans are not taking less medicine.  They are taking more medicine.”  This is a great listening-and-response drill, and it further reviews the information given in the reading.

Next I have the students work out the Identification: Body Parts section, and then move on to the Discussion Exercise 1 section.  For this discussion section, I give the students five or ten minutes to write out their ideas on their own, and then I put them in small groups for discussion.

Finally, depending on the amount of time left in class, I either set the students off to survey each other using the Survey Exercise section, or I assign the Survey Exercise as homework, giving them parameters on how many people they must ask, etc.

Another option for teaching this lesson would be to make it even more student-centered by having the students themselves run the class!  See my blog entry titled, The Oasis of The Seas.

Please share your ideas…

Or maybe you have your own ideas on how to run this lesson.  Please share!   I would love to learn about any other ways you get your students talking and learning about health and fitness.

Michael Kinney
Kinney Brothers Publishing

Filed Under: Kinney Brothers Publishing Tagged With: Classroom Activities, discussion, Donald's English Classroom, drug abuse, esl, exercises, health, intermediate students, kinney brothers publishing, lesson planning, listening, medicine, pharmaceutical sales, reading, student engagement, teaching, teaching methods, Trends Book 2, vocabulary, wellness

Primary Sidebar

Search

New from Susan Good!

Balancing Busy How to Support Your Child's Schedule

Kinney Brothers Publishing

Kinney Brothers Publishing Catalogue

Donald’s English Classroom

Donald's English Classroom Catalog

Click to see full listings!

Jooble Ad ESL Tutor Jobs

Weekly Fun Facts About English!

Fun Facts About English

Now in Japan!

Independent Publishers International

Copyright © 2025 · Genesis Sample on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in

 

Loading Comments...