More Sponge Activities to Teach English

Sponge Activities that Teach English

Teaching English requires a panoply of skills. One of them is preparation. ESL teachers need a good supply of ready to go materials when the inevitable surprise comes up. Like when a lesson finishes early and you want to fill a gap with a useful activity.

Consider adding these 5 activities to your collection of back pocket activities, fun language-focused exercises, video lessons and pair work discussion builders that require little prep.

Most of the activities are geared towards a conversation class (high beginner+), but  can easily be adapted for writing classes with some imagination.

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Teach English with Logic Puzzles and Word Games

help students learn thinking with wod gamaes

Can you turn brain teasers into a powerful ESL creative writing activity? Absolutely. Logic puzzles and word games add variety to your lessons, keep motivation high, and create natural moments for ESL writing practice. With the right structure, you can turn quick puzzles into rich ESL classroom activities that build vocabulary, grammar accuracy, and clear written explanations.

In this post, you’ll see how to use logic puzzles as the backbone of an ESL writing lesson, how to turn them into creative ESL prompts, and how to add simple conditional writing practice without redesigning your whole course.

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Three EFL Pair Work Activities

Three EFL Conversation Activities

Sometimes an EFL class needs activities which get away from the textbook in order to keep everyone motivated, including the teacher. Here are three activities that work well with pairs or small groups.

These EFL conversation activities help students learn English by involving a number different language skills including task-based problem solving, fluency, intensive listening and precise vocabulary.

1. What Happened? – Be Precise

This fun exercise that will challenge your intermediate+ level EFL students. Watch a short video which contains 13 segments (the video is about one minute long). Each segment shows dots and lines moving in way that visually illustrates an abstract concept.

Now describe each segment with precision. Sounds easy? Ha.

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Teach EFL Students Critical Thinking

Teach Reasoning in the EFL Writing Class?

Teachers sometimes lament the fact that EFL students can’t seem to write well-reasoned, logical arguments in English.

The underlying socio-linguistic factors thought to influence higher order cognition of that kind are plentiful. For example, some people suggest the way we talk affects our thinking, or the way we write script gives people from some cultures an analytical advantage. Or, it might simply be that people from different cultures see the world differently, as suggested by the Michigan Fish test, and therefore cannot write about experience in the same way.

Here’s another idea.

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