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United States Department of State
American English
For English Language Teachers Around the World
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188 Results Match Your Criteria
  1. Board Game: What Do I Know About ...?

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games Format(s): Text
    This board game allows students to share their knowledge about a variety of subjects. For this board game, you will find the downloadable game, game instructions, and game variations.
  2. Board Game: Which One is Different? Why?

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games Format(s): Text
    The board game Which One Is Different? Why? gives students an opportunity to debate which idea is different from the rest. For this board game, you will find the downloadable game, game instructions, and game variations.
  3. Practicing Irregular Forms with the "Which One Would the World be Better Without? Why?" Board Game

    In: Teacher's Corner: Comparatives and Superlatives - Adjectives Format(s): Text
    This week’s Teacher’s Corner activity uses an Activate board game. The game creates opportunities for students to use the irregular comparative and superlative forms for ‘good’ and ‘bad.’
  4. Board Game: Which One Would the World Be Better Without? Why?

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games Format(s): Text
    This game allows students to talk about hypothetical situations in an authentic and engaging way. For this board game, you will find the downloadable game, game instructions, and game variations.
  5. Board Game: What You Might Find

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games Format(s): Text
    This board game provides students with prompts to discuss what they might find in specific locations. Download the game, instructions, and game variations.
  6. Board Game: What Someone Does

    In: Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games Format(s): Text
    This board game gives students a chance to talk about what people do in certain situations. Download the game, instructions, and game variations.
  7. Make a Vertical, Whole-Class Board Game

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Author Kevin McCaughey takes game-boarding to another dimension by showing how teachers and students can turn part of a classroom into a board game that the entire class can play. Step-by-step instructions ensure that teachers will know exactly how to apply the idea of vertical games in their own classrooms—and will be able to let students not only play the games, but help create them, too.
  8. Activate 21st Century Skills with Board Games in the Classroom

    In: American English Webinars Format(s): Text, Video
    This session, "Activate 21st Century Skills with Board Games in the Classroom", examines how playing board games can enable ELLs of all ages to develop authentic language skills while also practicing collaboration, communication, critical thinking, and creativity!
  9. Let Them Play: Board Games for Language Practice

    In: English Teaching Forum 2024, Volume 62, Number 1 Format(s): Text
    Authors Kevin McCaughey and Rick Rosenberg demonstrate techniques for using board games to stimulate student-centered language practice that is flexible, productive, engaging, and fun. The article includes tips for efficient game play and for using games with a variety of levels and class sizes. The authors show that playing board games for language practice can be educational AND entertaining.
  10. Activate Games for Learning American English: Board Games

    Format(s): Text
    Activate Games for Learning American English is a collection of games for the language classroom. The board games offer interactive English language practice in a learner-centered, low-stress environment.

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Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
Under Secretary for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs
For English Language Teachers Around the World

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