Browse all our English teaching materials for ESL and EFL teachers. Ready-made presentations, warm-ups, and activities for all levels.
In this fun and creative speaking activity, students complete meme-style captions using relative clauses. Each slide presents a funny situation, and learners build a sentence that makes it relatable and grammatically correct.
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!
This interactive A1–A2 speaking activity helps students practise days of the week, time expressions, and everyday routines through colourful weekly planners.
This fun speaking game helps A1-A2 learners revise everyday vocabulary through description and paraphrasing. Students explain a word without using the “taboo” words shown on the card, encouraging creativity, fluency, and confidence in speaking.
Meet this interactive speaking and grammar activity where students become detectives and solve mini-mysteries by asking questions - perfect for question words practice.
Use this speaking activity that helps students practise giving advice while revising gerunds and infinitives - students read a short problem situation and respond with advice using specific target verbs.
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.
Practice second conditional and wish grammar structures within a relevant, thematic context — let your students share their hopes for the year ahead.
Use these 7 warm-ups to discuss various topics, such as summer, travelling, hobbies & interests, work, shopping, self-care, and gadgets.
Real people's reviews from TripAdvisor are presented. Seize the opportunity to explore top-notch hotels around the world.
Encourage your students to practice comparative forms by comparing well-known places in the pics.
Use these 8 slides presenting different people's childhood memories for practicing used to / didn't use to.