domingo, 25 de março de 2012

Telemóveis ocultos


Fonte: Busyteacher.org

Easter crafts







fonte: google images

Easter games

Easter Bunny Says
Simon Says is a classic Total Physical Response activity, and one that young students enjoy, so why not play it for Easter but with a twist? Or with a hop, rather? First, get your students outfitted with some bunny ears (teach them how to make some and stick them onto plastic headbands) and bunny tails (make some of out cotton and stick with double sided tape). Some of the instructions may be:
Easter Bunny says hop left/right!
Easter Bunny says touch your bunny ears (make sure they touch the right ones!)
Easter bunny says shake your cotton tail! etc
This is a great way to review the part of the body and introduce new Easter-related vocabulary.

Easter Egg and Spoon Race

A classic among relay races, you may choose to adapt this one to suit your students’ ages. You may use uncooked eggs, hard-boiled ones, plastic eggs, or even chocolate eggs. Divide students into two teams. Each team member races to the finish line. The winning team has to come up with ten Easter-related questions that the losing team has to answer.

Wordy Easter Egg Hunt
Do you feel that sometimes your students lack the words to say what they want to say? Here's your chance to provide some through an Easter egg hunt. First, write Easter related words in small slips of paper. Place each slip inside a plastic egg. Hide the eggs throughout the classroom or outside, if you can, and invite your students to participate in this exhilarating egg hunt. Once they’ve collected them all, they open their eggs and take out the slips of paper. Their task is to write a story using the words they found in their eggs.
Do you want to have a fun Easter less