Tag Archive | "Guessing Game"

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New game-like worksheets March 2010 Part Two


Worksheet for MyStoryMaker online storytelling (see Sean Banville’s blog for more details on using that site)

Company buffet meeting (if they can talk about food, they can do the language of meetings- with a little bit of culture sprinkled on top)

Famous Australians subject questions quiz

Household countable and uncountable guessing game

Talking about photos extended speaking

People around you vocabulary

Korean cultural codewords language of generalisation

National theme parties will for offers game

Testing vocabulary definitions game

IELTS university vocabulary sequencing

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New PDF handouts Jan 2010 Part Two


If you can’t open PDFs for any reason or want to edit before you print, just highlight the text on the webpage, right click, copy, paste into a word processor programme and format and edit to your heart’s content. Feel free to add your school’s name etc before you give it to students, but obviously no selling or publishing without permission.

Talking about a movie extended speaking (mini presentations- the easiest task based learning you and they will ever do!)

Talking about a news story extended speaking (ditto)

Discussion questions about small talk

Discussion questions about festivals, celebrations and public holidays

Weekend discussion questions tense review

Types of communication weekends guessing game Version 2 (useful for teaching the difference between a text and an email, a memo and a note, a schedule and a diary etc- and typical language to use in all those and more!)

Formal and informal emails and letters useful links

oa phonics drawing race (pictionary for boat, soap, goat etc)

oa phonics A4 picture flashcards

Toy vocabulary flashcards

Giving opinions about media and the arts (lots of lovely adjectives)

Media vocabulary game

Another batch around the same time next week, scroll down for weekend worksheets and Jan 2010 Part One, or just click on the Worksheets page at the top for more worksheets than you could ever possibly need.

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New games and other photocopiables November 09 Part Three


As promised, here are the good ones to make up for the crappy ones in Part Two below. Btw, if something sounds almost what you are looking for but not quite, a good tip I’ve worked out over far too many hours on the internet is to click on the link anyway then to delete just the last part of the URL in your web browser (for example leaving http://www.tefl.net/alexcase/worksheets/telephoning where once there was http://www.tefl.net/alexcase/worksheets/telephoning/phone-phrasals/), and see what the rest of that section has to offer.

Plot summaries add the relative clauses (this is the kind of thing I should do more of- ignoring copyright law to add some skills work to my grammar games)

Superstitions going to predictions (with a surprising amount of reading- for me- in this one too. Also with lots of cultural bits, which is much more like my usual kind of thing)

Six word murder mystery challenge (with no language focus of any kind whatsoever- don’t know what was coming over me that month!)

Telephoning getting through or not (back to my “classics”- as functional language is at least as unteachable as grammar, just throw a whole lot at them in the hope that a different one will be new and memorable for each student or heard by them and so reinforced soon)

Present Perfect sentence completion guessing game (another of the most adaptable games in TEFL, the subject of my book that never was- long story!)

Superlatives numbers trivia (two more things you can never go wrong with- numbers practice and trivia- this time tied in with superlatives)

Possessive S Simon says (very fun TPR game for young learners, though you are welcome to try it with your Market Leader Pre-Intermediate group if you like)

Possessive S pictionary (ditto)

This that these those pictionary (and again, although this one I have used a variation on with Elem adults to good effect)

Spelling code game (ditto- meaning ditto the last one, not ditto the ones it was dittoing)

Idioms of success and failure (an easy intro, but still more one for Market Leader than young learners, although again…)

List of phrasal verbs using for telephoning (not ready for class, but took me a while to put together so might save you that while some time)

Technology find things in common (also more of a list than a worksheet, but just enough effor put in to make it the latter)

Chrimbo and NuYear worksheets coming up in December. Just the same ones as last year, but will try to arrange them more conveniently.

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New photocopiable handouts November 2009 Part One


It has come to my attention (that great school teach phrase which I swore never to use mysel) that whatever link I put top gets clicked on more than the others. Unless by some lucky chance everyone coming here wants to do a past tense review on Monday morning with adults but two weeks ago wanted to do some silly practice of prepositions with 7 year olds, I really can’t see the sense of that. Might I suggest using your skimming and scanning skills before you click!

Weekends Past Perfect and Past Continuous (great for Monday mornings!)

Weekend questions auxiliary verbs (ditto, though not quite as fun if truth be told)

Telephone Email or Face to face boardgame (in which the ways in which people really communicate are brought into class)

Types of communication weekend guessing game (combining the two topics above and adding plenty of input in an easy way)

Real or pretend functions (in which functional language becomes personalised, communicative and fun!)

Strange body positions pictionary (also fun for body parts and prepositions of position, but to be honest this was a lot easier to do than for functions!)

Present Perfect Simple and Continuous Personality quizzes

Prepositions and school vocabulary Normal or strange (much more fun than it sounds!)

Present Perfect Continuous and jobs Guess the changes

Present Simple and Continuous 100 places to see before you die

Questions in different situations

Twins seperated at birth Alibi game (in which I stretch the classic Alibi Game almost to its limits)

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New TEFLtastic worksheets October 2009 Part Two


Have to try and get this done before the baby wakes up, so here it is, no messing:

Mr Bean narrative tenses (with which my students truly got Past Continuous and Past Perfect for the first time, and all while I was out of the classroom doing student counselling!)

Narrative tenses storytelling game (a great personalised follow up on the same grammar)

Body part positions Normal or Strange? (an attempt at motivation by bizarrisms for body part vocab and prepositions of position)

Body parts prepositions brainstorming (same language, totally different activity)

Our topsy turvy school project (another attempt to get kids using their naturally quirky humour in English class, for the same language as the game below)

Ghosts prepositions of position and classroom language game

Functions language reported speech storytelling game (at least 3 for the price of one!)

A person I admire extended speaking

Ideal personality guessing game (character adjectives and jobs vocab)

Classroom questions auxiliary verbs

Korean festivals, ceremonies and life events speaking

Have a click above, who knows what surprises may await you? Now, I’m off to change a nappy. Who knows what surprises…

New worksheets of the month Part One is here.

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Bertie’s Car


Download the audio to your computer (right click, save as)

Bertie's carWhen Bertie was a prince, he won a prize for being the Kingdom’s Most Courteous Driver. The Wicked Queen thought that he looked ridiculous waiting at the lights in his ordinary car. She was more furious than ever that her daughter wanted to marry such a pathetic prince. She thought that the best way to un-impress Princess Beatrice with Bertie was to arranged a driving holiday.

Read by Natasha. Story by Bertie. Duration 19.01a

Bertie’s Car
As you probably know, there is a tadpole who lives in the palace pond with Bertie, and his name is Tim. All day long, he likes to swim around asking no end of questions. And if nobody answers his question, he asks it again, and again, and again. He’s always got some question on his mind. For example, this morning, when Bertie was sitting on a stone, Tim popped his pin-sized head out of the water and asked:

“Bertie, can you drive a car?”

As sometimes happens, Colin the Carp was eavesdropping, and he could not resist butting in with:

“Oh yes, little Tim, it’s every frog that can drive a car. In fact, some frogs are taxi drivers. In fact, before tadpoles can grow up to be frogs, they have to pass a driving test, in fact….” But Colin couldn’t think of another ‘”in fact” so Tim said:

“Oh really. That’s jolly interesting…” Then he thought for a bit while he swam once around the pond. Nobody was surprised when his swam back with another question:

“Bertie, when you were a prince, what sort of car did you drive?”

And this time Bertie answered for himself saying: “I bet that you can’t guess.”

“Oh oh, I like the Guessing Game. Um Um, a red Ferrari…?”

“No.”

“Ah, I know a really good car. Ah Ah a Porche.”

“No.”

“Oh, Oh, Don’t tell me yes, Ah Ah…” But Tim had to give up, because he couldn’t remember the names of any more cars. And so Bertie told him that that the car he used to drive when he was a prince was a …. Ford.

And Tim was awfully impressed. But nobody else was. Because although Fords are fine cars in many ways, they are cars that, well, ordinary people drive, not princes. Not usually anyway.

But Tim could hardly contain himself with excitement now that he had learned the name of a new car. The only way that Bertie could stop his flood of questions was to tell a story. And this what he told.

As soon as Prince Bertie was old enough to drive, he asked his father, the King, for a car. The King did not really approve of cars, or any type of machine really, apart from Steam Trains, which he liked a lot. But Bertie kept on asking and asking until eventually the King agreed that he could have one of the cars that were parked in the palace garage. He didn’t really mind which car Bertie took. But the Wicked Queen did. Because, you see, she loved cars, and the faster and the more expensive, the better. And so she told the garage man to give Bertie the slowest and the oldest.

Now Bertie and the Garage man had known each other for a long, long time. When Bertie was just a small princeling, he often used to come down to the garage to watch his friend mend the cars.

When the Bertie came to collect his car, the Garage man scratched his head and said: “It doesn’t really seem right that a royal prince should have an old car like this. I’ll tell you what. I’ll soop it up a bit. ”

And over the next month, whenever the he had a little spare time, he worked on Bertie’s car and added some special features – like an extra super fast engine, and a frame to make it stronger in case it rolled over in a rally race, and bullet proof glass just in a case anybody tried to assassinate Prince Bertie.

“Wow,” thought Bertie as he drove without an instructor for first time. He pushed his foot down on the accelerator pedal, “This car doesn’t look like much on the outside, but inside there’s a lean,mea racing machine trying to get out.”

And VROOOMMM ! he went speeding down the road, weaving in and out of traffic, and jumping through lights just as they turned red.

“This is terr—if- ific,” he said. But that was just before a dog ran across the road in front of him. Bertie liked dogs, and certainly did not want to run it over, but there was no time to break and so he swerved to the left. The tyre hit the curb and he went bouncing back out into the road, and only just missed the dog. He had totally lost control now, and the car was just driving itself. A mother was pushing her pram along the other side of the pavement towards him. The car was skidding diagonally towards them. It mounted the pavement, and just went past the pram. It carried on ploughing through two or three front gardens and ended up in a hedge. As the car crashed to a halt, Bertie lurched forward but his seatbelt stopped him going too far. An airbag blew up in front of his nose.

The fist thing he heard was the mother of the baby that he had almost killed saying,

“Are you alright? Shall I call an ambulance?’

Bertie managed to get out of the car and stand up, but his legs were so wobbly he he had to sit on the grass for a few minutes. Then he said to the mother:

“Madam, I promise you, that from now on I am always going to be a good driver.”

And Prince Bertie kept his promise. He even won an award for being the Kingdom’s most courteous driver.

But the wicked queen was anything but a courteous driver. If anyone dared to cut in front of her, or worse, give her a speeding ticket or a parking fine, she turned them into a beetle. As she sped through the red traffic lights, she thought that Prince Bertie looked quite silly as he waited at the white line. She hated the fact that her daughter, the Lovely Princess Beatrice, wanted to marry such a namby-pamby, handbreak-on, geer-in-neutral, nincompoop.

And so she decided that the best way to un-impress Beatrice with Bertie was to go on a driving holiday. At the start of summer the The Wicked Queen sat at the wheel of her low slung, pointy-nosed, sleek black speed machine. Bertie opened the door of his Ford and helped Princess Beatrice with her seat belt.

They took the road to the next-door kingdom, and once they were across the border, they headed for the mountains. The queen had arranged for them to stop for the night with her cousin who lived in a castle on a high mountain pass. She would have a arrived hours before Bertie and Beatrice, only the police pulled her over her for speeding.

“Do you want me to turn you into a cockroach?” she asked the police officer. But she was in a foreign land now, and the officials were not afraid of her. She thought she had better not do anything too wicked, incase she started a war between the two countries.

They arrived at the castle towards nightfall. Its white towers and pointy red roofs guarded the valley from the top of a wall of rock. Prince Dracula would not have been ashamed to live there.

But its current owner, Prince Vlad, did not look at all like a vampire. He was a small man with a little blond mustache. It was hard to see any family resemblance to his cousin the Wicked Queen. And Bertie thought: “He’s obviously sweet like Beatrice, and not at all wicked like her mother.”

As it was late, they soon sat down to dinner in the great hall of the castle. The first course was wild boar pate. Unfortunately, Beatrice could not eat it because was a vegetarian.

“Oh dear, I’m so hungry” she whispered to Bertie.

The second course was a fondue. A fondue is a mountain dish which you cook yourself at the table. Beatrice was pleased because when she saw the servant set up the fondue set and light the flame below it. She loved fondus. At home, they would prong bits of bread with a skewer, and dip them in a cheese sauce which was melted over the heat. If you lost your bread, you had to do a forfeit – like sing a song or say something silly about yourself.

“This will be fun,” she said to Bertie. The servant lifted the lid of the silver serving dish. But oh no. This wasn’t a cheese fondue. It was raw meat. The queen quickly pronged a piece with her skewer and popped it into her mouth without cooking it.

Beatrice was so disappointed. “Excuse me,” she said to Prince Vlad. “Could you ask them to bring me some cheese and perhaps some celery? You see, I’m a vegetarian. ”

Prince Vlad looked quite astonished. He clearly did not expect to entertain a vegetarian in his castle.

“I know,” said the queen to her cousin. “Pathetic isn’t it?”

And Prince Vlad said:

“Well she looks like a horse, so it’s hardly surprising that she eats grass.”

“Hey,” said Bertie. “How dare you say that about Beatrice? She’s the most lovely, charming, and beautiful princess in the whole wide world.”

“How dare I?” said Prince Vlad. “This is my castle, and I can say what I want to.”

“Well I jolly well think you should say you’re sorry,” said Bertie.

At the word “sorry”. Prince Vlad’s little mustache twitched, and his ears went red. His eyes swiveled this way and that. It was clearly a word that he didn’t like very much.

“Sorry?” he said under his breath. And then he said louder. “I shall give you my apologies with a bullet at dawn. I challenge you to a duel!”

“Alright”, said Bertie.

“Oh no! Stop it. Stop it!” exclaimed Beatrice.

“Oh Goodie!” said the Queen. Because she loved duels, and she thought her cousin Vlad was bound to win and shoot Bertie, and that would be the end of her problem.

Beatrice could hold back her tears no longer. She ran out of the room sobbing. Bertie caught up with her down the corridor.

“This is too too silly,” said Beatrice. I absolutely forbid you to take part in this duel. You know he’ll cheat. Your pistol probably won’t even be loaded. In fact, I won’t marry you if you fight this duel, even if he doesn’t kill you.”

And even though Bertie thought his honour was at stake, Beatrice made him promise that they would get up before dawn and leave.

In the middle of the night, Bertie and Beatrice quietly drove down the star-lit road away from Price Vlad’s castle. They were heading for the border with the next Kingdom, and then the sea. At first, it was quite scary driving along the windy road in the dark. But then the sun began to rise above the mountains, and Bertie felt glad to be alive and by the side of his lovely and sensible princess.

But not too long after dawn, two policemen on motor cycle drove along side the car and waved at Bertie to pull over. Bertie stopped the car and wound down the window.

“What have I done?” he asked.

“You were driving too slowly,” said the policeman.

Bertie laughed. Beatrice leaned over and told the policeman: “No he wasn’t. He was driving normally.”

Then the policeman said:

“You are under arrest for running away from a duel. You must return to castle of Prince Vladimir.”

“You were right,” said Bertie to Beatrice, “It’s all a trick. Prince Vlad just wants to kill me. The wicked queen put him up to this to stop me marrying you.”

“What shall we do?” asked Beatrice.

“This” said Bertie, and he pulled the car out and accelerated down the narrow mountain road.

The policemen jumped onto their motor cycles and started to give chase. Beatrice covered her face with terror because she was certain that Bertie would shoot off the road at the first bend and they would go hurtling thousands of feet to their deaths- but he took it perfectly. And he rounded the second corner like a rally driver.

You see, what Bertie hadn’t told anyone, was that every weekend he took his car to the racing track and practiced driving it fast.

But by time they were on a straight piece of road, the motor cycles were catching up with them. Bertie pressed a button on the dash board and the car shot forward even faster than before. Still the motor cycles were Keeping up. By the next bend one of them was trying to overtake.

But it was still early morning, and the road was slippery with dew. Bertie’s car went into a spin. He steered into the skid as he had been taught and managed to take it round in a perfect circle and carry on driving. But the policemen had to drive off the road to avoid him – fortunately for them, it wasn’t too steep here and they both went speeding over the green pastures, unable to stop until they were nearly at the bottom of the valley.

It wasn’t far to the border now. When they reached the barrier, Bertie just went crashing straight through it. The border guards opened fire, and it was a good thing that the windows of Bertie’s car were bullet proof. He sped through no-man’s land and slowed down just before the crossing into the next country. Beatrice and Bertie weaved their royal passports at the two guards and they reached safety.

Bertie and Beatrice drove calmly on to their destination: the summer palace of Princess Leone which overlooked the sparkling blue sea. The wicked queen arrived three days later. You see, first she lost the way, and then her car broke down. But what annoyed her more than anything was that she soon saw that Bertie and Beatrice were more in love than ever.

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