Browse all our English teaching materials for ESL and EFL teachers. Ready-made presentations, warm-ups, and activities for all levels.
Here is a bright and engaging speaking activity where students explore different “profiles” and talk about spring habits using the Present Simple - simple, visual, and easy to adapt!
Learn and review daily routines in a fun way — explore Hawkins from the inside by describing the characters' daily life.
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!
A creative Valentine’s Day speaking activity for more advanced students to complete “puzzle” sentence starters using the first, second, and third conditionals while opening brackets and using the correct form of the verbs.
A creative Valentine’s Day speaking activity where students complete “puzzle” sentence starters using the first, second, and third conditionals.
This interactive A1–A2 speaking activity helps students practise days of the week, time expressions, and everyday routines through colourful weekly planners.
Christmas is the perfect time for a letter exchange, isn't it? Ask your students to read the postcards and open the brackets using the passive voice grammar.
Practice second conditional and wish grammar structures within a relevant, thematic context — let your students share their hopes for the year ahead.
A fun way to practice the past perfect tense and talk about vacation experience: make the sentences by using the pic prompts and timeline.
This A2+ activity can help your students feel like TV anchors while training their passive voice usage.
Use this activity as an opportunity to practice or review the present simple and present continuous tenses. There are 10 slides with photos that the students have to describe.
Practice using the second conditional by talking about imaginary summer plans. Encourage your students to both finish the sentences and put the verbs in the correct form.