The Draw The Time ESL game is a version of Pictionary in which students have to draw the time instead of a vocabulary word.
In the Draw Your Weekend ESL activity students have describe what they think a classmate did/has done using only a drawing.
Looking for activities suitable for adults instead? Check out our article on the 15 Best ESL Games for Adults.
The Draw The Time ESL game is a version of Pictionary in which students have to draw the time instead of a vocabulary word.
In the Draw Your Weekend ESL activity students have describe what they think a classmate did/has done using only a drawing.
In the Dream House ESL project students design their perfect house and present it to the class.
In the Dream Job ESL activity, students describe their perfect job to their classmates.
In the Dream Vacation ESL activity, students imagine their perfect trip and describe it to the class.
In the Earth 2-0 ESL activity, a disaster is about to destroy life as we know it, and students have to decide who to save.
In the Emoji Story ESL activity, students use random emojis as the prompts for events.
In the Excuses Excuses ESL activity, students have to make up funny excuses for not accepting invitations.
The Family Feud ESL game is a version of the popular TV show of the same name (Family Fortunes in the UK), adapted for your English class.
The Family Tree ESL project is a well-known activity in which students create their own family tree and present it to the class.
In the Family Tree Dictation ESL activity, students have to draw a family tree based only on the description of their partner.
In the Family Tree Fill-In ESL activity students have to draw/complete a family tree from clues created by a classmate.
In the Find Someone Who ESL activity, students have to find a classmate for whom a given criteria is true.
In the Find Something ESL game, students have to find something in the room that matches a given criteria.
In the Find The Alphabet ESL activity students have to find objects that begin with each letter.
In the Five In Five ESL game, students try to guess a five-letter word using other five-letter words.
In the Flash Forward ESL activity students imagine a time in the future, and describe what their life will be like at that point.
In the Fortunately Unfortunately ESL Activity, students create a story that alternates between positive and negative sentences.
In the Freeze Frame ESL activity, students describe what they think their classmates are doing based on their positions.
The Go Fish ESL game is a version of the classic card game, in which students have to get four numbers/vocabulary items of the same type.