Start your English lessons with engaging warm-up activities designed for all proficiency levels. Our ready-made warm-ups help teachers create the perfect atmosphere for learning.
A cozy, creative spring warm-up where students build their dream bouquet using flowers that represent spring vibes, habits, and experiences.
A light and engaging warm-up where students choose between two spring-inspired options and explain their choice.
Here is a fun way to review the adverbs of frequency while reacting to everyday situations presented with memes. Students choose their adverb and hit the Zoom or Google Meet reactions — works even better in groups!
In this light and practical warm-up, students imagine they have a small budget for Valentine’s Day and must decide how to spend it wisely.
This is a cozy, low-prep warm-up designed for A1–B2 learners aimed at boosting the aesthetics and speaking skills in your winter lessons.
Step into 2026 using these 2 vision boards that help students practise future simple and be going to while reflecting on their goals, plans, and dreams.
Here is a speaking warm-up that helps students reflect on their Christmas and New Year experiences while revising past simple and present perfect.
This winter warm-up is aimed at speaking, reflection, and gentle grammar revision, with tasks adapted for different levels - choose three words that best describe your winter and share.
Here is a festive speaking warm-up where students choose what they would like to put into their Christmas stocking from a set of cozy activities, everyday benefits, or winter wishes.
It is a fun and engaging icebreaker game that may come in handy for winter and Christmas vocabulary revision. Set a challenge for your students to explain 5 words in 1 minute!
This festive warm-up invites students to review winter holiday vocabulary and share their thoughts on Christmas-related statements.
Hope your young learners are excited about upcoming winter holidays! Revise the winter and Christmas vocabulary with the help of these picture stories — what does that emoji mean?