3P's lessons plans

martes, 3 de marzo de 2026

From Shy to Brave: Supporting Young English Learners Through Positive Psychology

 Positive Psychology is important for young English Language Learners (ELLs) because it targets all the emotional and psychological barriers that blocks language acquisition.


Positive Psychology in ESL means teaching English with a focus on what children learn and  how they feel while learning.

For kindergarten and elementary English Language Learners, this is essential because:

1.    Language learning can create anxiety. As teachers, we have seen students feeling shy speaking or anxious to make mistakes. Use Positive Psychology to reduce fear and increase participation with ease. It involves integrating fun and play based activities in your lesson plan thinking of the students you have in class.

 

2.    Young learners need emotional safety to learn. It is important that you create a positive emotional environment to aid Language development. To create a positive emotional environment for young ELLs, you must focus on lowering the "Affective Filter".

And what is the Affective Filter? well, it is that emotional barrier that can block language learning. When students feel anxious, stressed, shy, bored, or afraid of making mistakes, their affective filter is high, and it becomes harder for them to understand and remember English. When students feel safe, confident, relaxed, and motivated, their affective filter is low, and language learning happens in a natural way.

 3.    Confidence builds communication.

When young learners feel confident, they are more willing to speak, participate, and take risks in English. Confidence helps students move from silent observers to active communicators. The more secure they feel, the more naturally language begins to flow.

  This is How My Printable ESL Resources Support Positive Psychology

My materials are designed to naturally promote:

1.    Small Success Moments, by using Matching games, Bingo games, Flashcards, Cut-and-paste activities, Mini books.

2.    Play-Based Learning Reduces Anxiety. Use Masks, Puppets, Board games, Craft activities, Spinners, Dice. Just like that you can turn language into PLAY instead of pressure. Play lowers the affective filter, which helps language acquisition.

3.    Repetition Without Shame. Use the flashcards to review activities that are included in all my resource. They work for recycling vocabulary naturally and encourage participation. Repetition becomes fun, not embarrassing.

4. Emotional Engagement through the variety of themes and Holidays available such as: Colors, Animals, Family, Emotions, St. Patrick’s Day, Valentine’s Day and count even more.

Create emotional connection — and emotion improves memory retention.

 5. Visual Support = Empowerment.  Young ELLs feel successful when they can rely on pictures, they recognize patterns and they can respond non-verbally first

Use my highly visual resources to reduce cognitive overload, Increase Independence and encourage participation.

Language + Well-Being Go Together

I have a wide variety of ESL resources that lower the affective filter and build confidence in your classroom. Visit my Teachers Pay Teachers store, Holistic English Resources by Rosa Amelia, where you’ll find carefully designed materials that combine language development with emotional safety and joyful learning.

Explore here:
👉 https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Holistic-English-Resources-By-Rosa-Amelia

 

jueves, 26 de febrero de 2026

St. Patrick’s Day Face Activities for Young English Learners

This resource is also included here:  https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Face-Unit-for-Elementary-English-Language-Learners-10106986

This Face St. Patrick’s Day resource is designed for teaching holiday vocabulary while reinforcing parts of the face, colors, and descriptive language with elementary English language learners. Perfect for centers, whole-group lessons, and seasonal review.

In this activity, the teacher uses a St. Patrick flashcard to review parts of the face with students. The teacher asks, “What’s missing in the face?” Then, draws extra facial features such as hair, nose, and ears that are not originally included.

The teacher asks the name of parts of the parts and labels it. This interactive board activity provides an engaging review of face parts.

In this activity, the teacher displays the rainbow flashcard and invites students to describe what they see. The teacher begins by modeling a simple sentence and then asks guiding questions to encourage students to add more details about the rainbow’s facial features.

As students respond, the teacher writes their ideas on the board to collaboratively build a short descriptive text.

Students place each flashcard inside a clear plastic sleeve and draw the missing facial features using dry-erase markers. As they complete the faces, students label each feature with the correct word, reinforcing vocabulary recognition, and spelling,.


Small cards activities

🎧  Listen and pick. The teacher spreads the small cards on the table and calls out one vocabulary item, such as “horseshoe.” Students listen carefully and point to the matching card as quickly as they can. This listening game helps students develop vocabulary recognition. Great for beginners.

Listen and order. Each student uses their own set of small cards. The teacher calls out a sequence of vocabulary items, such as “hat, rainbow, coin,” and students listen carefully to place the cards in the correct order on the table. This sequencing task strengthens auditory memory.



Speaking activities (productive oral skill). A student selects a small card and shows it to the class while describing the picture. Using simple language, the student names the item and mentions its facial features, such as eyes or mouth.

Reading activities. The teacher prepares the cards by cutting the words from the picture cards. Students then match each picture with its corresponding word to rebuild the complete card. This hands-on matching task supports reading development.

Writing activities. Students choose a small card and use it as a prompt to write simple sentences describing the picture. They name the item, describe its color, and mention its facial features or details. This writing task supports vocabulary consolidation.

Labeling. students observe the small card and label the different parts directly in their notebooks. They draw arrows from the picture and write the corresponding vocabulary words, reinforcing recognition of facial features and object details. This labeling task supports vocabulary consolidation, spelling practice, and visual–word association.


worksheets

Students complete the words by writing the missing letters and then match each word to its corresponding picture by tracing the lines.

Students complete the worksheet by reading the sentences, drawing the missing details, and coloring the picture according to the instructions. When finished, they share their work with the teacher, providing an opportunity for feedback.

Students read simple sentences, complete missing words, and follow directions to draw and color the picture.  Once finished, the teacher can collect and display the worksheets on a bulletin board to create a festive classroom environment that showcases student learning.

Students first use the picture worksheet to listen to the teacher’s directions and color the St. Patrick’s Day characters accordingly. After completing the coloring task, they use the second worksheet to answer comprehension questions based on the pictures.

Games

Students receive a Bingo strip with 5 pictures from the St. Patrick’s Day vocabulary set. The teacher uses the calling cards and calling mat, printed twice: one copy to place on the mat and another copy to draw and call the items. As the teacher calls each picture, students listen carefully and cover the matching image on their strip. The first student to complete the strip calls Bingo!

In this board game, students play in small groups and each chooses a character marker, which is folded and glued at the top so it can stand on the board. Students take turns rolling the dice and moving their markers along the path. When landing on a space, they name or describe the St. Patrick’s Day item shown. This interactive game promotes speaking practice.


Visit Holistic English Resources by Rosa Amelia on Teachers Pay Teachers! 🧩

Whether you're teaching vocabulary, prepositions, or celebrating special occasions, you'll find creative, hands-on activities and worksheets to make your lessons both enjoyable and effective. Here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Holistic-English-Resources-By-Rosa-Amelia

 

 

martes, 24 de febrero de 2026

U.S. Money Activities for Elementary ESL & Math Centers

 The resource is here: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/US-Money-Activities-for-Elementary-ESL-Math-Centers-15640388

Flashcards are the perfect first step for teaching money because they make abstract concepts visual and concrete. Before students can count, spend, or make change, they need to recognize and name each coin and bill. Flashcards provide clear images, repeated exposure that build this essential foundation. They allow students to sort, match, and identify values at their own pace — with no pressure.

Introduce Coins and Bills with a Wallet & Coin Purse Activity

Using a paper wallet for bills and a coin purse for coins(provided in the resource), students will watch as the teacher pulls out flashcards one by one to discover the names and values of U.S. currency.

Assemble the Wallet & Coin Purse for Flashcard Activities. Print the wallet and coin purse templates on cardstock.  Insert each one into a clear plastic sheet protector to create a pocket. Slide the appropriate flashcards into each one: Bills go into the wallet, coins go into the coin purse.

Show me! Goal: recognition. Perfect warm-up activity.

Teacher: “Show me twenty dollars.”

Students pick the correct flashcard: twenty dollars!

Coin grab. Goal: listening. Spread cards on a table. Teacher calls a coin word. Two students race to grab the correct card.

Puzzle game. Goal: reading + matching. Cut the flashcards into strips: they symbol, the coin or bill, the word. Students match all the pieces to create a correct flashcard. Works well in centers.

Class store (BEST activity ). Goal: communicative practice

Create a mini store with classroom objects. Place the labels, also provided, around several objects in the classroom. Give enough space for the students to stand for role play.

A group of students “buy” items using money flash cards, they walk around and see what they can buy with the money on the flash cards. The others are the sellers standing next to items.

Student 1: How much is it?

Student 2: It’s one hundred dollars.

Student 1: Here you are.

👉 Excellent real-life practice.

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

 

jueves, 19 de febrero de 2026

Universal Design for Learning in the ESL Classroom

 Recently, I had the opportunity to attend a webinar about Universal Design for Learning (UDL), and it truly sparked my curiosity. As I listened and reflected, I began to realize that many of the resources I create already support UDL principles in the classroom. Wanting to understand more, I continued reading and exploring this approach, which inspired me to write this blog post. My goal is to introduce UDL to teachers who may not be familiar with it and to share how practical classroom resources can help make learning accessible and engaging for all students.

What is Universal Design for Learning (UDL)?

Universal Design for Learning (UDL) is a teaching approach that helps teachers reach all students present in your class. 

UDL encourages teachers to present information in multiple ways,  it allows students to show learning in different ways, and keep students motivated and engaged.

 Why UDL is Essential for Kindergarten and Elementary English Language Learners?

Because Young English learners have different levels of English proficiency. UDL helps by making learning accessible, engaging, and successful for all students. Students don’t learn in the same way. UDL allows teachers to support all the multiple intelligences (visual learners, auditory learners, and kinesthetic) that your learners have.

 

The Three Principles of UDL in the ESL Classroom

Principle 1: Multiple Means of Representation is giving students different ways to understand information. This includes: flashcards, games, worksheets and manipulatives.

Principle 2: Multiple Means of Action and Expression. Giving students different ways to show what they know. Students can: Point, match small cards, play games, assemble puzzles, draw, color, label pictures, build sentences using cards. 

Principle 3: Multiple Means of Engagement. Keeping students motivated and interested. Find activities that are fun, interactive, visual, hands-on.

Use board games, cutouts, pocket chart activities, and sentence-building games that make learning feel like play. Engaged students learn faster and retain vocabulary longer.


My ESL Resources Naturally Support UDL

Visual Support with Flashcards, worksheets, and games, which helps students understand vocabulary quickly. Visual learning is essential for English learners.

 

My resources have Hands-On Learning with cutouts, small cards, and manipulatives that allow students to physically interact with the language. Hands-on learning improves memory and understanding.

 

Gradual Language Development. My resources move students from:

recognition → matching → speaking → writing

This progression aligns perfectly with UDL principles.

 

Example of UDL in Action Using my Resources

Monster Preposition Resource

Representation: Students see pictures of the object in different locations.

Action and Expression: Students place cards, play games, or describe the picture.

Engagement: Students stay motivated through interactive activities.

All students can participate at their own level.

 Why UDL Improves Learning Outcomes for English Language Learners

• Understand vocabulary faster

• Feel more confident

• Stay engaged

• Participate actively

• Develop language naturally

• Experience success

When students feel successful, they become more motivated to learn English.

 

Teachers Benefit from Using UDL-Based Resources because:

• All students can participate

• Less frustration for struggling learners

• Easier differentiation

• More engagement

• Better classroom management

• Stronger learning outcomes

Using my resources can make it easy for teachers to implement UDL without extra preparation.

 

Universal Design for Learning helps create an inclusive ESL classroom where all students can succeed. By using visual, hands-on, and interactive activities, teachers remove barriers and support every learner.

My ESL resources naturally align with UDL principles by providing multiple ways for students to understand, practice, and use English. This makes learning more effective, engaging, and accessible for kindergarten and elementary English learners.

LINK to my TPT store: https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Holistic-English-Resources-By-Rosa-Amelia