3P's lessons plans

viernes, 13 de marzo de 2026

U.S. Money small cards for Elementary ESL

 Link to this resource: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/US-Money-Activities-for-Elementary-ESL-Math-Centers-15640388

These printable small money cards are perfect for introducing coins and bills in a fun, visual, and interactive way. Designed for easy matching and sorting, students can practice identifying the name, value, and appearance of each coin and bill. Whether used for individual practice, math centers, or group games, these cards make money concepts concrete and engaging!

 

This resource includes engaging activities designed to target all four essential language skills—listening, speaking, reading, and writing.

🎧 Listening

“Show Me the Money” Game

Cut the words from each small card.  Teacher calls out a coin or bill (e.g., “Find the dime!”).  Students listen and quickly hold up or point to the correct small flashcard.

🗣️ Speaking

“Backpack Role Play”

In pairs, one student is the shopkeeper and the other is the customer.

The shopkeeper will assign an amount of money to each item in the shop, which are the school items, using the price tags. You can laminate each card or use clear plastic sheets for reuse of the material.

The customer will have a backpack worksheet and the small cards bills and coins that you give as spending money. The customer will shop. Every item that is bought will be colored or crossed out on the worksheet.

Example dialogue:
– “How much is the pencil?”
– “It’s twenty-five cents.”
– “Here is a quarter.”

The, the shopper will write a text saying which items were bought and the shopkeeper will write which items were sold.

📖 Reading

“Money Match-Up” Centers

 Cut the cards into three slips (e.g., words, money amount and coin/bill). Mix them up and have the students match all the three parts.

✍️ Writing

“My Wallet” Writing Activity

Give each student 3–5 small flashcards. Students “build a wallet” using their template and write a few sentences about what’s inside:
“In my wallet, I have one penny and two dimes. I can buy a sticker.”

Have them write what they can really buy in their reality. Have the small cards available to guide the students, you place them on poster board or a file folder.

 

Follow me on Instagram for creative activities, classroom tips, and exclusive sneak peeks of my teaching resources! Let’s make learning exciting! DM me here: @rosamelia_eslteacher

 

miércoles, 11 de marzo de 2026

Creativity in the EFL Classroom: Engaging Students Through Games, Crafts, and More

 Creativity in the classroom means creating learning opportunities where students can explore, experiment, and express themselves while learning.

In an EFL classroom, for the students, creativity appears through activities such as games, role-play, crafts, drawing, storytelling, and interactive tasks that allow students to practice language in their own creative way.

Fostering creativity in ELL students can Deepen Language Acquisition by planning tasks that require students to use language actively. It makes students connect new vocabulary and grammar in meaningful contexts.

And for the teachers, they can become more creative by exploring ideas, experimenting with activities, and adapting materials to make lessons more engaging. Creativity in teaching grows with practice and curiosity.

A creative teacher is someone who designs engaging and interactive learning experiences that encourage students to explore, imagine, and actively use the language while developing their own ideas and confidence. Creativity is a skill that can also be learned and developed by teachers.

I often wondered if creativity could be learned. Over time, I realized that it can. As a teacher, I had to become more creative in order to keep my students motivated and engaged in learning English. Here are some things that can help teachers develop creativity in the classroom:

Learn from other educators:
Read teaching blogs, explore classroom resources, and share ideas with other teachers.

 Creativity develops through practice: The more teachers experiment with activities like games, crafts, role-play, and manipulatives, it becomes easier to choose the best activities for your students.

 Simple materials can inspire creative lessons. Flashcards, picture cards, pocket charts, and board games can be used in many different ways to creative engaging activities. Well-designed teaching resources provide ideas for games, interactive activities, and hands-on learning, helping teachers bring creativity into their classrooms.

Simple Ways to Add Creativity to Your EFL Lessons using my resources

Games

Games help with creativity because they create situations where students must think, imagine, and interact in flexible ways while using the language. Games encourage problem-solving, they require students to think about what to say, how to respond, or how to complete a task. This pushes them to use language creatively.

I create Board games, letter tiles, puzzles, domino, bingo games, and matching activities for all the themes and units.

 Crafts and Cut-and-Paste Activities

Students love creating something with their hands. Crafts allow them to connect language with actions and visuals. Crafts allow students to use their imagination, ideas, and personal choices.

Role Play and Mime
Students can act out verbs, daily routines, or classroom actions. This helps them understand and remember new language.

Role play is creative because it allows students to use imagination and language to act out different situations.

Manipulatives and Pocket Chart Activities

Moving cards, pictures, and sentence pieces allows students to experiment with language structure. Pocket charts may look simple, but they can actually support a lot of creativity in the EFL classroom because students can move, organize, and build language in many different ways.  Students can combine word cards and picture cards to build their own sentences. They can try different combinations and see how meaning changes.

 Creativity helps transform the EFL classroom into an environment where students feel motivated, curious, and confident to use English. When teachers use games, crafts, role-play activities, and manipulatives, students can explore language in meaningful and enjoyable ways.

If you are looking for creative ways to make your EFL lessons more engaging, I invite you to explore my teaching resources. In my Teachers Pay Teachers store, Holistic English Resources by Rosa Amelia, you will find games, crafts, flashcards, pocket chart activities, and board games designed to spark creativity and active learning in the classroom. Click here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Holistic-English-Resources-By-Rosa-Amelia

lunes, 9 de marzo de 2026

Weather Prepositions Activities | Sun and Cloud |

 This resource is included in the complete resource, ready to download:

https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Weather-Flashcards-for-Elementary-ESL-EFL-3664474


In this weather-themed resource, students practice describing the position of the sun and clouds. The set includes flashcards, small cards, cutouts, matching activities, puzzles, a flap book, games, and worksheets that allow students to practice prepositions through hands-on and visual activities

Each flashcard shows the sun and the cloud in a different position. Teachers can use the flashcards to introduce new vocabulary, model sentences, and practice speaking with the class.

Weather Reporter Activity. Students become weather reporters and describe the weather using prepositions. Give a student the printable Weather Reporter badge and the microphone prop. The student stands in front of the board where the Weather Prepositions flashcards are displayed. The student looks at one flashcard and reports the weather to the class. The student says a sentence such as: The sun is next to the cloud.

Encourage the student to point to the picture on the board while speaking like a real weather reporter. You can repeat the activity with different students so everyone has a chance to be the weather reporter.

Flashcard Corners Game. Place the flashcards in different corners of the classroom.

Teacher says: “The sun is in front of the cloud!”

Students run to the correct flashcard.  Excellent for high-energy classes.


Draw What You Hear. Have students draw a cloud on paper. Teacher says sentences:“Draw the sun on the cloud.”

Students draw the sun in the correct place. They check when you show the flashcard for self- correcting.  Perfect for a listening activity worksheet.

Complete the Sentence. Place the weather pictures on the board and write incomplete sentences. Give students the preposition labels to place it in the blank to complete the sentence.

These small preposition cards are perfect for hands-on practice with the sun and cloud theme.

Partner Guessing Game. Students work in pairs. Student A secretly chooses a small card. Student B asks: “Where is the sun?”

Student A answers: “The sun is under the cloud.”

Student B finds the correct flashcard.

Match the Sentence. Place the weather picture cards and the printable sentence strips on the table. Students match the cards and then read the sentences aloud and check their answers.

You can also use the prepositions words to match.


This hands-on cutouts helps students visualize and practice prepositions of place.

Activity 1. Give a student a sun and cloud cutout cards. The teacher says a sentence and students must place the sun correctly. Students physically move the card to show the position.  Great for TPR (Total Physical Response) learning.

Classroom Sky Scene. Stick the printable large cloud poster on the board. Give students the large sun cutout. Students come to the board and place the sun according to a sentence: “Put the sun next to the cloud.”. Great for whole-class practice.

These worksheets are ideal for independent work, centers, review activities, or homework.

Roll and Color – Weather Prepositions. Give students the dice with the weather preposition pictures and the coloring worksheet. Assemble the dice beforehand.  Students take turns rolling the dice. After the dice lands, they look at the picture on the top face and find the matching preposition picture on their worksheet. Students then color the correct picture on the worksheet.

Students can glue the worksheet on their notebooks as a reference.

Complete the Sentences. Look at the pictures and read each sentence.
Write the correct preposition in the blank to complete the sentence. Then color the suns and clouds according to the description in each sentence.

Color and Match. Students read and color the suns and clouds according to the description. Then match the pictures to each sentence.

Where Is the Sun?. Students write the correct preposition of place to complete the sentence.

Read, Draw and Color. Read each sentence carefully. Then draw the sun in the correct place in relation to the cloud.


Prepositions Flap Book

Students cut the flaps and glue the page onto another to create a prepositions flap book. They write a sentence for each flap lift the flap to describe the picture.

Matching Mat Activity

Students look at each sun and cloud picture on the mat and choose the correct preposition card. They place the card in the empty space that match the picture.


Puzzle Sentence Activity

Students assemble the circle to create a complete sentence. When the puzzle is finished, students read the sentence aloud, for example:
“The sun is under the cloud.”

Board Game

Students move their tokens around the board while describing the position of the sun and the cloud in the pictures. Each time they land on a space, they make a sentence such as “The sun is behind the cloud.” If they land on “Move 1 Space,” they advance one extra space.

Join Us at Holistic English Resources by Rosa Amelia! 🌟Explore resources for kindergarten to elementary learners and bring excitement to your classroom today!

👉 Visit My Store Here

viernes, 6 de marzo de 2026

Present Continuous with School Actions –for Elementary ELLs

This resource is found here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Present-Continuous-for-Elementary-ESL-4403402


This resource was designed to help elementary English language learners practice action verbs and build sentences. The variety of materials also makes it easy for teachers to use them for whole-class lessons, centers, pair work, or review activities.


Teachers can use the flashcards for vocabulary introduction, quick review activities, classroom games, and speaking practice.

Action +  write a Sentence Strip with Flashcards. Fold the word from each flashcard if you want and have students write a sentence for each card in Present Continuous.


Wrong Sentence Flashcards. Print the sentence slips. Have a student show the flashcard and you read the sentence slip. If it doesn’t match, have the class say the correct sentence: “No! She is gluing!” Perfect for grammar correction practice.


 “Act It Fast!” Game. Show one flashcard secretly to one student. Student acts the verb. Class says: “He is reading!”

Action Hunt Around the Classroom. Hide flashcards around the room. Students find one and say: “He is writing!” and writes the sentence on a mini whiteboard.


Match Game. Place the flashcards on the board. Hand in the sentence strips for the students to match.

The small cards are perfect for a variety of classroom games and practice activities.

Build the Sentence.  Give students the word cards: Pronouns,Verb cards,Objects.

Students build sentences: He is swinging on the swing.

Listen and Point. Place the small cards on the table. Say a sentence and have the students point to that card and repeat the sentence. You can fold the word to make it more challenging.

ctivity, students practice the spelling rules used when changing verbs to the present continuous (-ing) form. Place the three rule pockets on the table or board. Students take turns choosing a small verb card and placing it in the correct pocket according to the spelling rule.

The pockets should be prepared before the activity. You can use the Envelope method – Glue the printed pocket label onto a small envelope.

These worksheets allow students to practice grammar in a clear and meaningful context.

Write the Number.  Each picture shows an action in the present continuous. Students find the matching picture and write the correct number on the line.

Write the Verb Ending Match. First, complete the verbs by writing the correct –ing ending.

Then, draw a line to match each verb with the correct picture.

Present Continuous Word Search. Students find the words that can be horizontal, or vertical. When found a word, highlight or circle it in the word search.


What Are You Doing? Worksheet. Students read the sentences and answer.


Write the Question.

Students practice forming sentences in the present continuous tense.


Spelling Sorting – Present Continuous form of the verb. Students practice the spelling rules used to form verbs in the present continuous tense. They write each verb in the correct pocket according to the spelling pattern.


Write the Verbs. Students write the correct action verb in the space below.

These games encourage students to read, speak, match, and build sentences while reinforcing the vocabulary and actions presented in the unit.

Spin and Cover Game

Students play in pairs. One student spins the spinner using a paper clip and a brass fastener placed at the center of the wheel. The spinner will land on a picture that shows an action.

The student says the verb aloud. The other student looks at the verb list and covers the correct word with a small piece of paper. Students continue spinning and covering the verbs until all the actions are covered.


Sentence Association Matching Game

Print the classroom scene mat and the sentence strips. Students place each sentence on the correct part of the mat to match the action in the picture.

Students can work individually, in pairs, or in small groups.

Flap Book – Present Continuous

To wrap up the unit, students complete a fun interactive flap book. After coloring and assembling the booklet, they lift each flap to reveal a sentence written by them in the present continuous tense that describes the picture.


There is a Halloween section in the complete pack of the resource. Here is the blog post:   https://eflelementaryresources.blogspot.com/2025/10/halloween-witch-actions-present.html


If you’re looking for more creative ideas and engaging resources for teaching young learners, visit my blog for preschool teachers here: EFL Preschool Teachers Blog. You'll find practical activities, tips, and resources designed to make learning fun and effective for little ones!