niedziela, 31 sierpnia 2025

AUTONOMY IN ACTION: TEAR-OFF FLYERS

 

What It Is

Tear-off flyers are classroom posters with small strips (tabs) at the bottom. Each strip contains a question, word, or task. Students rip off a strip and use it to speak, write, or complete a mini-challenge.

This activity is interactive, flexible, and motivating because it combines movement, choice, and surprise. Learners don’t just get “given a task” — they choose their own tab, which provides a sense of autonomy and ownership over learning. This makes them more engaged, less anxious, and more willing to speak.


Why It Works

  • Autonomy & Choice → students select their own question/topic.

  • Personalization → topics are varied, surprising, and easy to connect with.

  • Movement & Energy → students move around the room, adding fun and novelty.

  • Flexibility → one set of flyers can be used for warmers, fluency practice, pair work, or homework.

  • Reusability → once created, flyers can be reused with different groups.


What’s Included in the pack?

🔹 Tear-Off Flyers – B2 Level

  • 6 Topics × 9 Questions each (54 questions total)
    Examples: Travel, Food, School

  • Students speak for 1–2 minutes, using examples and extended answers.

🔹 Tear-Off Flyers – A2 Level

  • 6 Topics × 9 Questions each (54 questions total)
    Examples: Travel, Food,  Daily Life

  • Students answer in at least 2 sentences (answer + reason/explanation).

🔹 Story Chain Strips

  • 27 strips with random words/phrases.

  • Students continue one big class story, each time including their strip.

  • Great for fluency and creativity.

🔹 Find Someone Who Strips

  • 27 surprising/funny prompts (e.g., Find someone who has sung in the shower).

  • Students mingle, ask questions, and collect mini-stories.

  • Fun icebreaker or energizer.

🔹 Homework Extension Strips

  • 27 creative homework ideas (e.g., make a comic, record a 1-minute podcast, teach a new word at home).

  • Students choose one to extend their learning after class.

  • Promotes autonomy and different learning styles.

🔹 Blank Flyers

  • Editable, ready-to-print templates with empty tear-off strips.

  • Teachers or students can create their own sets of questions, vocabulary, or challenges.



 

         



How to Use in Class

  1. Preparation

    • Print flyers by topic (e.g., Food, Travel, Hobbies).

    • Each flyer has 6–12 tear-off tabs with different prompts.

    • Stick the flyers on the classroom walls.

  2. Activity

    • Students walk around the classroom, choose the flyer/topic they like, and tear off one question.

    • They speak individually, in pairs, or in groups.

    • Peers or the teacher can ask follow-up questions to extend speaking.

  3. Correction / Feedback

    • Teacher listens and gives quick feedback on grammar, vocabulary, or pronunciation.

    • Peers can also give supportive feedback (e.g., “I liked your example,” “You used new words well”).



With this pack, you can:

  • Energize your speaking lessons.

  • Differentiate tasks easily across levels (A2 vs. B2).

  • Reuse flyers as warmers, fluency tasks, or homework.

  • Give students choice and make learning feel less like “schoolwork” and more like play.

It can be yours for 25PLN.

czwartek, 28 sierpnia 2025

FIRST WEEK MAGIC

The beginning of the school year is always stressful – new classes, students full of energy after the holidays, and a long list of organizational tasks on the teacher’s shoulders. On top of that, coming up with creative activities to break the ice and build classroom atmosphere can feel overwhelming.

That’s why I created the eBook “First Week Magic – 15 Creative Activities for the Start of the School Year” 



Inside you’ll find ready-to-use ideas not only for the very first lesson but also for the first few classes – so you can start the year calmly, with tried-and-true activities at your fingertips.

It includes, for example:
Human Bingo – a great way to get everyone talking
Speed Dating – Summer Edition – quick and fun introductions
Puzzle of Us – a visual activity to build group identity
Class Recipe and Island Survival Contract – creative ways to make a class contract together



Many activities come with printable materials – in both a colorful and a black-and-white version, so you can choose what works best.


Why is this eBook worth the investment?

✔️ Save time – no need to search for or prepare activities yourself.
✔️ Get 15 tried and tested activities that engage students and create a positive classroom atmosphere.
✔️ Clear step-by-step instructions – no stress, just results.
✔️ Use the ideas not only in the first week, but also later in the year for integration, substitute lessons, or energy breaks.
✔️ The ideas stay with you forever.


Special launch price: 49 PLN until September 12th!
After that, the price will rise to 69 PLN – so don’t miss the chance to get it cheaper now.


Let your first lessons be full of conversations, laughter, and energy – not stress and last-minute searching for ideas. 

piątek, 15 sierpnia 2025

Summer Bingo Chart

 

The first days back at school are a mix of excitement, nerves, and endless stories to share. One of the easiest (and most fun) ways to break the ice and get your students talking is with a Summer Bingo Chart. I got the idea from some website (Polish version), I just changed the content abit and the design.



What Is a Summer Bingo Chart?
It’s exactly what it sounds like—a bingo-style grid filled with prompts about summer activities. Instead of numbers, each square has a lighthearted statement such as:

  • “Went swimming in a pool or lake”

  • “Ate ice cream for breakfast”

  • “Read a book just for fun”

  • “Traveled to another city or country”

  • “Watched a movie more than once”

The goal? Get students up, moving, and talking as they find classmates who match each square.

How to Use It in Your Classroom

  1. Hand Out the Bingo Cards
    Give each student a Summer Bingo sheet and a pen or pencil.

  2. Set the Rules
    Students walk around and talk to each other, asking questions to see if someone fits a square. When they find a match, that person writes their name in the box. (You can decide if they can sign their own square!)

  3. Encourage Conversation
    The magic isn’t in shouting “Bingo!”—it’s in the chatter that happens along the way. Students will share fun facts, swap summer stories, and make new connections.

  4. Wrap Up with Sharing
    Once the activity winds down, gather everyone together and invite them to share the most surprising, funny, or unique things they learned about their classmates.

Why It Works

  • Breaks the ice naturally—no forced “stand up and introduce yourself” moments.

  • Encourages movement—students mingle, which eases first-day jitters.

  • Fosters community—kids find common ground they didn’t know they had.

Whether your students spent the summer traveling the globe or just perfecting the art of the perfect popsicle, the Summer Bingo Chart gives everyone a reason to smile and connect from day one.

Help yourself to the chart: Summer Bingo Chart

Scaffolding the comparatives with adults

 I created these comparison cards (I know, nothing revolutionary!) for my adult group at A2+ level. They’re designed to practice comparative...