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.
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.
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.
Need a quick speaking warm-up that works for different levels? Try Talk One Minute About… — a set of simple 3×3 speaking grids on everyday topics like daily life, shopping, housework, Easter, holidays, and free time.
Learn and review daily routines in a fun way — explore Hawkins from the inside by describing the characters' daily life.
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.
In this light and practical warm-up, students imagine they have a small budget for Valentine’s Day and must decide how to spend it wisely.
A fun and thought-provoking Valentine’s warm-up of 5 sets where students choose only three “benefit cards” and explain their decisions - from cozy moments to confidence boosts and everyday happiness!
This interactive A1–A2 speaking activity helps students practise days of the week, time expressions, and everyday routines through colourful weekly planners.
We’re hiring — can your students match the best candidate to each job? Each one requires different skills, personality traits, and strengths. Their task is to read the Candidate Profiles and decide who fits each role best.
Practice second conditional and wish grammar structures within a relevant, thematic context — let your students share their hopes for the year ahead.