Browse all our English teaching materials for ESL and EFL teachers. Ready-made presentations, warm-ups, and activities for all levels.
Try this if you're looking for a quick and engaging warm-up! Have your students choose a paper plane and talk about their week's ups and downs.
Looking for a creative speaking activity? Try this prediction task where students read unusual story beginnings and continue them using narrative tenses.
Dive into an exciting adventure full of crime investigations and wandering through Zootopia's towns! You'll learn how to write case files and get the most out of the movie extract.
Wrap up your lesson with a quick End of the Week Check-In ⭐ This simple speaking warm-up helps students reflect on their week using level-appropriate questions.
Let your students become the teacher! In this Find the Mistake activity, learners check short “homework” texts and correct present simple (third person) errors in daily routine paragraphs.
Looking for a fun way to practise am / is / are and do / does questions without boring drills? 🎯 This Keep or Give grammar game turns simple questions into a lively classroom challenge!
In this activity, students read funny Threads-style posts with unusual problems and give advice using target grammar. It’s perfect for speaking, gets everyone involved, and always leads to creative (and sometimes hilarious) answers!
Here is a bright and engaging speaking activity where students explore different “profiles” and talk about spring habits using the Present Simple - simple, visual, and easy to adapt!
In this fun and creative speaking activity, students complete meme-style captions using relative clauses. Each slide presents a funny situation, and learners build a sentence that makes it relatable and grammatically correct.
Here is a fun way to review the adverbs of frequency while reacting to everyday situations presented with memes. Students choose their adverb and hit the Zoom or Google Meet reactions — works even better in groups!
A creative Valentine’s Day speaking activity for more advanced students to complete “puzzle” sentence starters using the first, second, and third conditionals while opening brackets and using the correct form of the verbs.
A creative Valentine’s Day speaking activity where students complete “puzzle” sentence starters using the first, second, and third conditionals.