Warm-up games and activities
for ESL kids lessons

Games and activities for the “Warm-up” section of your ESL kids lesson

March

Attention

Good at the beginning of class to wake everyone up! Call out commands such as: Attention, salute, march in place – stop, sit down, stand up, walk in a circle, clap your hands, stop, run in place – stop, jumping jacks – stop, swim in place – stop, etc. At first students will copy you but later they should be able to do the commands without you. (Submitted by Tania Bibbo)

Star Jump

Exercises

This one is great for over excited students who need to burn off a bit of energy. It’s also good for classroom commands and numbers. Stand the students in a line and call out instructions: “Jump 10 times”, “Turn around 4 times” etc. Other good ones to use are: run (on the spot), hop, hands up & down, touch your (body part), stand up & sit down and star jump.

Knock knock

Knock-knock

This can be used at the beginning of each class. Teach the students to knock on the door before entering the classroom. There are 2 variations for the next step:

  1. When the student knocks, teacher says, “Who’s there?”. The student replies, “It’s (Koji)” and then the teacher says, “Come in (Koji)”.
  2. When the student knocks the teacher must guess who it is, “Is that (Koji)?”. The student replies yes or no – if no, the teacher continues guessing.

Having your students develop their own knocking styles makes this even more fun.

Sit down

Name game

Good for a first class. Sit the students in a circle. Point to yourself and say your name “I’m Jason”. Then students say their names around the circle. You can use a ball to pass around the circle as each student says his/her name. After going around the circle a few times get each student to throw the ball to another student. The student that catches the ball has to say the name of the student who threw it – this will really test if they were listening!

Memorize

Name memorizing game

Have children sit in a circle. Start by saying “my name is..” and then answer a question about yourself, for example “My name is Jo and I like the [hide_on_uk]color[/hide_on_uk][hide_on_us]colour[/hide_on_us] purple.”

The student next to you then says, “This is (Joe) and he likes the [hide_on_uk]color[/hide_on_uk][hide_on_us]colour[/hide_on_us] purple and my name is Rose and I am 8 years old.” The next person says, “That is Joe he likes purple, this is Rose and she is 8 and I am Jeremy and I like the [hide_on_uk]color[/hide_on_uk][hide_on_us]colour[/hide_on_us] blue.” It’s a chain and the kids have to repeat what the last people have said about themselves. It’s really hard to be the last person in the circle! (Submitted by Danielle)

Puppet

Puppet conversation

Hand puppets really liven up a classroom, especially for young learners who are shy when talking to the teacher. You’ll probably find that some prefer talking to the puppet than to you! Fun puppet characters (such as Sesame Street’s ‘Cookie Monster’) that talk to students can produce unexpected results. I always use Cookie Monster at the beginning of my young classes. Here’s what I do:

  1. Cookie Monster is sleeping in a bag. Each student has to shout, “Wake up Cookie Monster!” into the bag. Cookie Monster only wakes up when the whole class shout together into the bag.
  2. Cookie Monster says hello to each student and asks them questions (their names, how they are, how old they are, etc.). Students reply and ask Cookie Monster the same questions.
  3. Students and Cookie Monster sing the ‘Hello Song’ together.
  4. Cookie Monster says goodbye to each student individually and then goes back to sleep in the bag. The actual lesson can now start.
Bottle

Spin the bottle

Sit in a circle with a bottle in the middle. Teacher spins the bottle. When it stops spinning the student it is pointing to has to answer a question. If the answer is correct then that student can spin the bottle.

This is a good class warm up activity (e.g. What did you do last weekend? Did it rain yesterday? What did you have for breakfast this morning?).

ESL Kids Songs

Warm up songs

It’s fun to sing a familiar song at the beginning of class. The warm-up section is a good time to review as songs from a previous lesson, or to sing “The hello song“.

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