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Preschool games for english learners

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Preschool Games for English
Learners
Free ESL Story and Activities - Part One
Hello and welcome. You have signed up to receive Hetty and the Lion, a free story to use with
your preschool English language learners.
This story is a small sample from my resource kit for teachers needing fun ESL games, activities
and stories for children aged 3-5.
In this first email I give you:






The keywords and target language to pre-teach for Hetty and the
Lion.
A mini-lesson plan using games to give you fun ideas on
pre-teaching this vocabulary and language.
The flashcards you need to do it.

Your next emails over the coming days will contain the story and illustrations and games to play
after the story.
I would like you to know that over the next few days, while you have a chance to check out the
materials, I am offering you an early bird discount on the whole preschool English learner
package.
This teaching resource includes:




Over one hundred games and ideas to build vocabulary and language.


Ten beautifully illustrated stories especially written for children aged 3-5 learning English
as a second language.
Extra teaching resources such as bingo sets and flashcards.

You can see everything that is included on Games & Stories for Children 3-5
Scroll down and you will see the product is on sale there for 39.95 USD.

The target language for Hetty and the Lion
And now here is the mini-lesson plan to pre-teach the keywords and target vocabulary for Hetty
and the Lion. Here first is the main language that is used in this story.
Greeting: Hello, how are you? I'm fine thanks.
Nouns: lion, milk, orange, apple, banana, pear, ice cream
Verbs: drank, ate
Other: would you like some...? Oh yes please, little
Please note that the greeting, the nouns lion and milk, and the adjective little are actually
revision for children following the course of all ten stories. However you can also use this story in
isolation, it just means you have a little more vocabulary to pre-teach.
So let's get started. Depending on the ability of your children and how often they are exposed to
English you might take one to three half hour sessions to introduce all the above words using
games and other fun activities. You would also ideally include a song or two in the lesson and
perhaps a 5-minute colouring sheet or similar activity.


Remember that to read the story you only need the children to understand the vocabulary, and
not necessarily be able to say it. In later sessions you can play more and more speaking games
with the target language as the children become confident and familiar with the new words and
the sounds of the English language.

Pre-story activities
1. Listening games for the first three fruits

Introduce the first three fruits and play Run and Touch. First lay out the picture flashcards, or
the fruits themselves and tell the children to touch the fruit you name. After a few minutes
spread the pictures out over the room and tell the children to run over to the picture you name.
Next have the children make the shape of the fruit you name with their bodies.
If your children are doing well you can introduce the other three food words and play the above
games again either with the three new words or with all six words if you have children who are
fast learners. Only you can know exactly how fast to go.
Next play Show me, variation 3. In this game you hand out different picture cards to the children
who secretly look at their card and place is face down on the floor or hold the picture into their
chests. You can play some music for ten seconds or so and have the children move around the
room. When
you stop the music name one of the fruits and the children with that fruit must show the picture
to everyone. You can add an element where when the music stops everyone must freeze and
only those children with the picture you have called out can move. After you have called out all
the fruits and vocabulary swap the pictures around and play again, or move onto another game.
2. Greetings
Now you have given the children some practice understanding the first three fruits, introduce the
greetings. Seat the children in a circle and take a ball. Ask the whole group, "Hello, how are
you?" and have the group answer back with, "I'm fine thanks." Have the children repeat this
back to you three or
four times in unison. Now roll the ball to one child and say, "Hello, how are you?" Help the child
reply to you with, "I'm fine, thanks". The child rolls the ball back to you and you repeat with
each child. You can only do this with a group of 8 or it gets boring.
With a bigger group put the children into pairs in the circle. Seat the two in a pair close together
and have them hold hands, then leave a clear gap between the next pair. Now you can roll the
ball to a pair of children and they can reply together, which cuts down the whole exercise by half.
3. More listening games and the rest of the food words
Now introduce the remaining food words and play some more listening games. For a listening
game that also revises colours name the fruit and the children call out the colour of that fruit. For
example you say, "banana" and the children say, "yellow", etc. Children following the course of

ten stories will
know ten colours by now.
Musical fruits
Lay out the colours of the fruits, and the milk on the floor. With a large group you will want
several of each colour. Use the coloured feet or the Twister sheet, or whatever you have. Play
music while the children dance around. Then call out a question such as, "what colour is a
banana?" The children must jump on the colour yellow. This listening game allows the
children to hear the words named several times in preparation for saying them, and it also allows
for the revision of colours. Remember to include, "what colour is milk?" as well as the fruits.


If your children do not know the colours then play musical fruits by just naming the fruits and
food vocabulary in turn and letting the children jump on the correct pictures. You will need
several pictures of each so that you do not have the whole group converging on one small
picture. You want to be sure the children have enough space and pictures to move around and
play
without bumping into each other.
4. Speaking games
You may decide to leave these speaking games until after you have read the story or for another
lesson - it just depends on your group. If you feel your children are not ready for these games
then skip ahead to more listening games where you introduce the question, Would you like
some..?
Mystery box
When the children are ready for some speaking practice play some games such as mystery box
where you cut holes in a cardboard box, turn the box upside down and place real fruits inside.
The children have to feel inside the box and name what they can feel.
Cut several holes in the same box to give more than one child a go at a time, and if you have a
big group you will need more than one box. I suggest two to four children feeling in one box at
any one time so if you have eight children one box is enough as the children can wait one turn.
However if you have 12

children I recommend two boxes as you do not want half of the children sitting around doing
nothing for more than a minute or two or you may start to have discipline problems
You can play a variant of this where you place three objects in the box. Two are matching and
one is the odd one out. For example you place two oranges and one banana in the box. The
children feel inside and name the odd one out.
Hide and Guess game
Play a guessing game such as Hide and Guess where a child picks up a fruit while hiding behind a
blanket, and the other children have to guess which one the child picked. If you do not have a
blanket you can let the child pick out a picture card secretly and hold that card behind his or her
back while the other
children guess which item it is.
Listening games to introduce would you like some?
Moving on now from simple vocabulary words to the key phrase in the story, Would you like
some..? At this stage it is enough to play a few listening games so that the children understand
the meaning of this phrase so that they
can follow the events in the story. Explain the meaning of the question first and with the children
in a circle ask them each if they would like some ice cream, or some apples, etc. Let the
children answer yes or no and if they
answer yes hand them the fruit or a picture of the fruit and the children can pretend to eat it if
they like.
Play All Change
In this game, hand out the fruit and food words that the children have been practising in the
previous games. Hand out pairs of words so that at two children have the same item. You then
ask the question, would you like some
apples? The two children with an apple or a picture of an apple change places. Continue through
all the vocabulary.


Then you jazz the game up by putting one child in the middle. This time when the two children
change places the child in themiddle must try to jump into one of the spots in the circle, leaving a

different child to take the place in the middle. There are six food words in this story, which would
mean that you could play with thirteen children - one being in the middle.
If you have more than thirteen children and you have a helper consider forming two groups and
let the helper look after the second group. If that is not possible then you will have to have up to
three children holding the same cards. If the group gets too large this game can lead to chaos so
more than 15 children and you must have two groups and a helper.
If you have less than thirteen children then instead of handing out two bananas, two apples, etc,
hand out all the vocabulary and ask, would you like some apples and bananas? Then the child
with the apples changes places with the child with the bananas.
At any time during the lesson, when you want to calm the children down or give them a break,
you can hand out the black and white version of the vocabulary and allow the children to colour
them.

Link to the flashcards (not the story illustrations)
Here now is the link to your flashcards that you can use to pre-teach all the target language. You
will find a colour set to use in the games and a black and white set that you can give out for
colouring.
If you can use real fruits as well that is ideal for young children, but the flashcards can be helpful
if you cannot access real objects and for some of the games where flashcards are more practical.
Colour Flashcards for the Story
You should now be ready to read the story to the children, who, with the aid of the coloured
illustrations will be able to follow and understand the events.
You will be able to follow up with more games and activities to revise, reinforce and spend more
time practising speaking. Your next email will contain the story itself with the pictures as well as
ideas on what to do during the story.
I hope you like this approach and have fun with the games and ideas above as you prepare your
children for Hetty and the Lion.
The word lion is not included in the above games to keep everything to a food theme.
be able to introduce the lion just before you tell the story.


You will

If you like these ideas then you will like my e-book of over one hundred ideas and games which
you can use to teach any vocabulary and any language. There are so many different varieties of
game that you will have enough ideas to keep your preschoolers happy for several years. That
book of games accompanies the ten illustrated stories that are especially written for preschool
English language learners. The stories link to each other as
the same words come up again and again with new ones also being added, and this allows the
children to build on their vocabulary progressively while reviewing words they have already
discovered so that they do not forget them.



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