3P's lessons plans

viernes, 17 de julio de 2026

Simple Past Tense Flashcards | ESL & EFL Activities for Elementary English Learners

LINK to more than 100 flashcards with regular and irregular verbs:   https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Product/Simple-Past-Tense-Flashcards-ESL-EFL-Activities-for-Elementary-English-Learn-17063519

 

Teaching the simple past tense becomes easier when students have strong visual support. These Simple Past Flashcards help learners recognize common irregular and regular past tense verbs, build vocabulary, and confidently talk about completed actions. Use them to introduce new verbs, practice pronunciation, ask and answer questions, play engaging classroom games, and encourage meaningful speaking activities. Perfect for ESL, EFL, and elementary English classrooms, these versatile flashcards make grammar lessons more interactive, memorable, and fun while helping students develop confidence using the simple past in everyday communication.

Yesterday or Today?

When introducing the Simple Past Tense, it is important to help students understand that verbs change depending on the time. Start by comparing the same action in the present and the past. Display the flashcard with the verb cook under Today, with the verb word folded, and explain that we use the base form of the verb to talk about actions happening now. Then, point to Yesterday and show the matching flashcard with cooked, explaining that the action happened in the past.

Introduce Past Tense Verbs with Acting

Choose a volunteer to act out one of the verbs from the flashcards. For example, hold up the cried flashcard while the student pretends to cry. Encourage the class to observe the action carefully. After students recognize the action, invite everyone to say the complete sentence together: "He cried yesterday!"

Repeat the activity with different volunteers and additional past tense flashcards.

One of the best ways to introduce the Simple Past Tense is by talking about real-life experiences. In this activity, the teacher selects several past tense flashcards and places them on the board to describe what she did yesterday.

As the teacher points to each flashcard, she models complete sentences such as, "I cleaned the house," "I danced," "I listened to music," and "I played the piano."

Once students are familiar with the structure, encourage them to create their own "What I Did Yesterday" stories. They can choose different flashcards and use them to talk about their own experiences.

Guess the Past Tense Verb

Since students already know these action verbs in the present tense, they can use their prior knowledge to predict the correct past tense form.

To prepare the activity, fold the bottom part of each flashcard so the verb is hidden and only the picture is visible. Show one flashcard at a time and ask students to identify the action. Then, challenge them to say the verb in the simple past by adding -ed.

For example, display the picture of a girl walking with the word hidden. Students look at the picture and say "walked!" After several guesses, unfold the flashcard to reveal the correct answer. Read the verb aloud together and have students repeat it as a class.

Irregular Verb Flashcard Listening Game

 Before beginning, give one irregular verb flashcard to each student. The teacher calls out a complete sentence using one of the irregular verbs. For example, "He rode a unicycle." Students listen carefully and identify the verb they hear. The student holding the rode flashcard quickly stands up, raises the card, and shows it to the class.

Continue the game by calling out different sentences using the remaining irregular verbs.

This interactive activity develops listening comprehension.

Sort Regular and Irregular Verbs

One of the greatest advantages of using verb flashcards is their versatility. The same set of flashcards can be used to help students understand the difference between regular and irregular past tense verbs.

Display the flashcards on the board and divide them into two categories: regular verbs and irregular verbs. As each regular verb is placed on the board, draw students' attention to the -ed ending by circling it with a marker. Encourage learners to notice that regular verbs follow a predictable spelling pattern, while irregular verbs change in different ways and must be learned individually.

As you sort each flashcard, discuss why it belongs in its category.

Discover the Patterns of Irregular Verbs

Although irregular verbs do not follow the -ed rule, use this visual activity to help learners understand that not all irregular verbs change in the same way.

Display the irregular verb flashcards on the board and organize them into three categories. In the first column, place verbs that do not change in the simple past, such as cut and hit. Explain that these verbs keep the same spelling in both the present and the past.

In the second column, display verbs that change only one vowel. Use flashcards such as swim → swam, sing → sang, and ride → rode. Circle the vowel that changes on each flashcard and encourage students to compare the present and past forms. This helps learners recognize that many irregular verbs follow similar vowel-change patterns.

Finally, create a third column for verbs that change completely, such as catch → caught, take → took, and go → went. Explain that these verbs have unique past tense forms that must be learned and practiced individually.

Using the flashcards in this way transforms vocabulary cards into an effective grammar tool. Students can clearly see the different spelling patterns, compare verb forms, and organize new language visually.

Sorting irregular verbs into categories

Play this game with irregular verbs spelling patterns. Instead of memorizing each verb individually, students analyze the flashcards and decide whether the past tense form stays the same, changes one vowel, or changes completely. Place the category signs in different parts of the classroom and distribute one flashcard to each student. Students read their verb, walk to the correct category, and explain why they chose that group. As a class, discuss each verb and compare the different spelling patterns. This hands-on movement activity promotes critical thinking, strengthens visual memory, and helps English language learners recognize common irregular verb patterns while actively participating in the lesson.


Follow me on Instagram for creative activities, classroom tips, and exclusive sneak peeks of my teaching resources!

🌟 Why follow me? 🌟
Hands-on games and activities for young learners
Fresh ideas for holidays and themed lessons
Classroom inspiration to keep students engaged
Exclusive updates on new resources

👉 Let’s make learning exciting! Follow me here: @rosamelia_eslteacher

Let’s grow and inspire each other! 💖

No hay comentarios:

Publicar un comentario