Here children will have the opportunity to learn the basic verbs of English (to be, to have, to like..), recognize feelings, practice yes/no questions and more things.
Do you teach English to young learners? Do you have children at home who are learning English? In this section you can search our hundreds of free online English games, songs, stories and activities. You can also look through our downloadable sets of flashcards.
Educational games and exercises online to learn English for children of infant, primary and high school youth. English interactive FIND OUT books. ONLINE activities at all levels from primary to learn English (British Council, English for little children MEC, Little animals BBC Cbeebies BBC, learn English in the hands of an alien MEC, BBC School Beta BBC Primary and Secondary learning...)
Pipo games is a Webside where you can find diferents levels of games, where you can learn while playing. So itís a good resource.
This Webside is beginning with children of Primary School and older.
Sport rules can sometimes be complex and difficult to interpret. Following is a list of 16 sports whose rules have been simplified for teachers who deliver school sport programs. The use of simplified rules and modified games especially with children and young people will contribute to a more enjoyable and satisfactory sport experience.
This is a blog very useful to learn English at home parents and children toguether. You have very different kind of activities such as videos or games.
This page is very interesting because is made for learn parentsand children together. Both can learn at the same time and is very fun and it has a lot of easy games and songs for little children.
On this website, you can find a lot of reading activities for primary pupils. It includes different kind of readings: three Little Plays, Fiction and nonfiction, Comics Folk Tales Greek Myths, Chinese Fables.
Learn all the presidents of the United States from Washington to Bill Clinton in this funny song by the Animaniacs (1993, so no Obama). It has subtitles in English, so if you don't understand a word you can see how it's written and look it up on the dictionary!
NOTE: The video doesn't have a very good quality, but it's the best I found. There are better videos out there, but they have no subtitles and I thought they might be more difficult.
Practice Zone is an interesting site that contains twelve topic-based units and a good number of songs, rhymes, language games and stories for the youngest learners.