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Using Photos With English-Language Learners
Though the origin of this popular adage is unclear, one thing is clear: using photos with English-Language Learners (ELLs) can be enormously effective in helping them learn far more than a thousand words -- and how to use them.
Usable images for lessons can be found online or teachers and students can take and use their own.
The activities presented below connect to multiple Common Core Standards including the following ELA Standards:
- Integrate and evaluate information presented in diverse media and formats, including visually, quantitatively, and orally.
- Develop the topic with relevant, well-chosen facts, definitions, concrete details, quotations, or other information and examples.
- Use precise language and domain-specific vocabulary to inform about or explain the topic.
Picture Word Inductive Model
The Picture Word Inductive Model (PWIM) is one of our favorites. In it, students first brainstorm twenty words related to a picture, then put those words into categories and add new ones that fit those categories. Next they complete a "cloze" (or fill-in-the-blank) activity with sentences about the picture which they then put into categories of their own. They convert those sentence categories into paragraphs, and, finally, arrange the paragraphs into essays. Lastly, a title is chosen.
The PWIM uses an inductive process (in which students seek patterns and use them to identify their broader meanings and significance), as opposed to a deductive process (where meanings or rules are given, and students have to then apply them). It takes advantage of student prior knowledge and visual clues and builds on the key strength of inductive learning—the brain's natural desire to seek out and remember patterns.
Research has shown that it is an effective way for students to learn to develop vocabulary and to read. You can find a more detailed description and timeline on how we use it in this transcript of a recent podcast I produced.
The best pictures to use in this activity contain one scene with many different objects. A recent study has found that the most memorable photos have a little "strangeness" about them, and include people and a sense of movement. Those attributes might be helpful to keep in mind when choosing a photo.
For example, this New York Times photo fits most of those criteria and could be used when teaching the themes of family or food.
Students can choose and label pictures online using this strategy with many newly unveiled online tools like Thinglink and Szoter . You can see examples of annotated photos using both of these free site here .
Thought Bubbles
Students can create "thought bubbles" for characters in photos. What might the people in this picture be thinking, or what about this dog ? Bubblr and ImgOps are super-easy tools for students to create these kinds of "bubbles" with online photos.
Picture Dictation
In picture dictation, the teacher can pick an image and, without showing it to the class, describe it while students draw. It can also be a partner activity where half of the class is given one picture and the other half a different one. Students with different pictures are made partners and stand up a book or folder between them. One student describes her picture while the other draws. When it's complete and the student is given feedback, the roles can be reversed. Students can also be asked to write sentences describing the picture.
Bloom's Taxonomy
For more advanced English-Language Learners, using photos can be a good way to help them learn about Bloom's Taxonomy. In an exercise borrowed from Learn North Carolina, following an introduction to the different levels of Bloom's, students can apply their new knowledge towards developing leveled questions about a photo.
For example, a teacher could use this photo and model asking questions for each category:
- Knowledge: What items or people can you name with the vocabulary you know?
- Comprehension: What is happening in the photo?
- Application: What one sentence caption would you write?
- Analysis: Where do you think they are?
- Synthesis: What might they be thinking?
- Evaluation: Are they too young to play soccer? Why or why not?
The teacher could have one or more other photos to distribute, along with a sheet of "question starters" (you can find several here) categorized by the Bloom's level to help scaffold the activity. Students could work in partners to develop their own sequence of questions to share.
Compare and Contrast
Students can identify the similarities and differences between two different images. This can lead to practice with the academic vocabulary needed when making comparisons. For example, students could view two different images such as two photos from this slideshow , which features pictures of expectant parents standing in their babies' nurseries and "empty nesters" standing in their children's old rooms. They could use a Venn Diagram to record similarities and differences. After sharing with a partner and as a class, students could generate sentences and even paragraphs about the images. For beginning students, the teacher could supply sentence frames such as:
- "Both pictures have _________."
- "One difference is _____________."
- "In the first picture there is ____________, but in the second picture there is ___________."
You can see two more example photos and read more about how to use this strategy here.
Image Detective
Image Detective is an online media literacy activity which could be adapted to use with any photo -- these , for example. First, the teacher or student poses a question about the photo. Next, the student identifies clues in the photo that help them answer the question. Then, the student investigates background information on the picture and/or topic it represents. Finally, the student makes his/her conclusion. The final project looks like this:
- My Question Is:
- Clues I've Identified:
- I am fairly confident that:
- My best reasons for thinking this are:
- A question this raised for me is:
Using Images to Generate Writing
Using images to prompt writing is a key strategy we use with our English-Language Learners. Pictures are immediately engaging and often less daunting for students than texts. We often use images to push language development and thinking skills within a thematic unit. For example, we ask students to look at an image posted on the wall, on a document camera, or overhead. We've used the following image of apartheid in South Africa during a unit on Nelson Mandela.
First, students describe in writing what they observe, trying to record as many details as possible. It helps if students have a copy of the image on which they can write. Then the teacher asks students to write as many questions they can think of about the image and the details they have listed. Once students have shared their questions with a classmate, the teacher asks them to use the inductive process (described above in the Picture Word Inductive Model) to organize these questions into categories (for example, questions about feelings/emotions or historical questions) and then to add more questions to each category. These questions could serve as writing entry points for students to develop longer writing pieces based on the image.
Research has shown that these types of inquiry activities—where students are asked to analyze a piece of concrete data such as a picture or an object in order to generate ideas for writing—are an effective instructional practice for improving the writing of adolescent learners.
Five Card Flickr Story is another photo tool for generating writing. It lets you pick five photos from a group of pre-selected images from Flickr and then write a story about them. It saves your selection and story, and provides you with a link to it. No registration is required.
Another tool, Pic-Lits , lets users pick an image from a selection and then "drag-and-drop" words onto the image. The user's creation can then be saved with a link posted, or it can be embedded. The words you can choose from are labeled by their parts of speech, and once you drop the word on the image you can see all the different verb conjugations and choose one. You can write a poem or describe the picture. You also have the option of writing whatever words you want if you don't want to be limited by the words available to drag-and-drop.
Using Images For Speaking Practice
Fotobabble is the most simple photo and audio recording tool we've found for online speaking practice. Students can choose a photo and record their description of it with Fotobabble. Students can listen to their recording at the beginning of the year, and then record it again later to see the progress that they have made. It can also be posted on a class or student blog, and others can leave comments.
We look forward to hearing the ways you use images with your students!
Larry Ferlazzo and Katie Hull Sypnieski are teachers at Luther Burbank High School in Sacramento, California. Portions of this column are excerpts from their new book, The ESL/ELL Teacher's Survival Guide: Ready-to-Use Strategies, Tools, and Activities for Teaching English-Language Learners of All Levels. Larry also writes a popular blog for educators and a teacher advice column for Education Week Teacher.
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How to Write an English Assignment
Last Updated: December 6, 2021
wikiHow is a “wiki,” similar to Wikipedia, which means that many of our articles are co-written by multiple authors. To create this article, 20 people, some anonymous, worked to edit and improve it over time. This article has been viewed 48,544 times.
Writing an English assignment can be troublesome at times. The students lack the proper information which is required to write an assignment. Apart from this there are many more things which are necessary for an assignment writing and such things are highlighted in this article.
- Take second advice from a close friend. Some mistakes you may not see or be used to seeing, and a second opinion can help catch some of the mistakes that you won't see the first time through.
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- ↑ https://www.openpolytechnic.ac.nz/current-students/study-tips-and-techniques/assignments/step-by-step-guide-to-assignment-writing/
- ↑ https://writingcenter.unc.edu/tips-and-tools/understanding-assignments/
- ↑ https://www.uq.edu.au/student-services/learning/structuring-your-assignment
- ↑ https://www.uts.edu.au/current-students/support/helps/self-help-resources/academic-writing
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73 ESL Writing Activities to Spark Your Students’ Creativity and Imagination
From a student’s point of view, writing assignments are something to dread.
But from an ESL teacher’s point of view, they should be a challenge worth accepting.
The challenge for you is to motivate your students enough to actually be excited about writing.
Sounds impossible? It’s actually quite simple.
The key is a strong pre-writing activity that boosts their confidence and adds to their vocabulary at the same time.
So, how do you get your students’ writing off to a great start?
In this post, we’ll look at some different ESL writing activities that will transform your students from hesitant writers to confident wordsmiths in their own right.
Writing Assignments Based on Stories
Writing activities prompted by music, writing practice exercises based on images or pictures, writing assignments based on food, writing activities based on mysteries, exercises to practice writing emails, activities to practice writing advertisements, assignments to practice writing reports, creative writing activity: class newsletter/newspaper.
Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)
People of all ages love a well-told story, and using stories to teach ESL is a sure winner.
A story for a pre-writing activity could be in the form of:
- A movie . It could be a biography, sci-fi film, thriller, action-packed adventure, fairy tale or even a cartoon.
- A story read aloud from a book. If you’re using this, read in a way that brings the characters’ voices to life (including the narrator’s), hold the book up to show any pictures within or scan them and project onto a screen as you read. You can also search YouTube videos of famous authors or celebrities reading a book aloud, and show these in class.
- A story from the news . It could be from the TV, radio, newspaper or an online news site .
- A story read by your students. In this case, you could let them read a story silently or with a partner, and take as long as they like to think about the important parts.
No matter what you choose, it’ll be a great lead-in to the ESL writing exercises below.
1. Re-tell the story as is, or summarize it. (This works best for beginners, who are still getting their feet wet in the waters of English comprehension.)
2. After watching “Finding Nemo” : Tell the story from the point of view of the whale, the dentist’s daughter or Bruce the shark.
3. Explain to Marlin how he should take care of Nemo better.
4. Make up a story about a farm animal/zoo animal/jungle animal. What if a baby ___ was lost? What if a child was lost in the city? What if you found a lost child?
5. After the story of “Goldilocks” : Tell the story from the baby bear’s point of view.
6. What if the baby bear and Goldilocks became best buds? What would happen?
7. After discussing “The Gingerbread Man” : Tell the story from the fox’s or gingerbread man’s point of view.
8. What did the old woman do wrong that made the gingerbread man run away?
9. How do you make a gingerbread man? What other shapes could be made instead?
10. After “Little Red Riding Hood” : Write the story in the first person—from the point of view of either Red Riding Hood or the wolf.
11. What should Red Riding Hood have done when she met the wolf?
12. After watching a “Lord of the Rings” movie: What would you do if you had the One Ring? Write about a magical quest you and several friends would have if you could.
13. After watching a “Pirates of the Caribbean” movie: What if you were a pirate? What adventures would you have if you were a pirate?
14. After watching “Titanic” : Write about what you discover when you dive onto the wreck. Or imagine you were on the ship when it sank, and talk about how you escaped.
15. Whose fault was it that so many people drowned on the Titanic? What should they have done?
16. After watching a “Star Wars” movie: Imagine you’re a space explorer and write about what happens when you meet some characters from “Star Wars.”
17. After watching a “Terminator” movie: Imagine your teacher is a robot that has come back from the future. Or imagine you have come back from the future—what would it be like?
18. After watching a “Harry Potter” movie: Make up some magic spells and explain how you’d use them.
Everybody loves music! Watch your students’ faces light up as soon as they realize that they’re about to be treated to some songs rather than chalk-and-talk. Music stirs the emotions, after all, and can get your students excited about writing.
Here are some ideas for music you can incorporate into ESL writing activities:
- Classical music. There are some pieces of well-known classical music that specifically tell a story , and many of these are available on YouTube.
- “Fantasia 2000,” particularly “Rhapsody in Blue.” This wonderful, wordless animated story can kick off so much great writing!
- Movie music. The music that goes with a movie tells watchers how they should be feeling, and could be a good jumping-off point for some writing.
- Popular songs and music. Self-explanatory. Check out the most popular or trending artists on YouTube or Spotify for ideas.
- Kids’ songs . There’s something about singing a catchy little tune that makes the words stick in your mind more than just saying them. These can lead to some interesting writing, too.
19. After Prokofiev’s “Peter and the Wolf” : Tell the story from Peter’s point of view.
20. After Saint-Saëns’ “The Carnival of the Animals” : Imagine walking through the scenes with the animals and interacting with them. Write a story from the point of view of one of the animals.
21. Describe the animals in “The Carnival of the Animals.”
22. After Tchaikovsky’s “Romeo and Juliet” : Re-tell this classic Shakespeare story, adding a twist.
23. After watching and listening to “Rhapsody in Blue” : Tell all/part of the story.
24. If you were the main character in “Rhapsody in Blue,” what would you do?
25. Listen to a piece of classical/instrumental music and tell the story that it might be a background to. Imagine that it’s the background music for a movie.
26. Tell the story (real or made up) behind some popular songs like Taylor Swift’s “Wildest Dreams.”
27. Describe meeting someone special like in the aforementioned Taylor Swift song.
28. What happens in your wildest dreams?
29. What if you were a famous pop star or musician? What would it be like? What would you do?
30. Give instructions on how to find your favorite song on the Internet, both music and lyrics.
31. If you play an instrument, or have a relative who plays one, write about some of the basics of how to play. (This could also work as a speaking and listening activity, and then the whole class could write about it.)
32. What is your favorite genre of music, and why? (Be sure to explain what “genre” means !)
33. Do you think young children should be allowed to freely watch music videos?
Some pictures you can use for ESL writing activities include:
- Pictures from social media. If you use social media at all, you doubtless have a barrage of amazing photos and videos on your feed, all of which make for excellent writing prompts.
- Pictures from Google Images . A quick Google search on any (classroom-safe) image will turn up plenty.
- Cartoons . If you have young students, they’ll definitely enjoy this one.
- Pictures selected by your students. Not sure what to choose? Have your students pick their own pictures to write about. You’ll be pleasantly surprised at how vibrant their writing can be when they’re writing about subjects they actually care about.
Regardless of the picture you (or your students) choose, here are some writing prompts you can consider.
34. Tell a story—real or imagined—of what is happening in the picture.
35. Write about what happens next from the pictured moment.
36. Write about what was happening just before the pictured incident.
37. What if that was you in the picture?
38. What if you were the person who took the picture?
39. What if you knew the people in the picture? What would you say to them?
40. Describe all of the elements in the picture. This is great for vocabulary practice.
41. Describe how someone in the picture might be feeling.
42. Explain how to get into a pictured predicament (for example, in the picture here , how did he get into the boat without the crocodile eating him?) as well as how to get out of it.
43. Express an opinion about the rights and wrongs of the pictured situation. For example, for the same picture above: Should crocodiles be hunted and killed? What should happen if a crocodile kills someone?
Many of your students likely enjoy thinking and talking about food. So why wouldn’t they be motivated to write about it?
How you integrate food into your ESL writing assignments depends on your classroom arrangements and the amount of time you’re willing to put into preparation.
In any case, here are some ideas:
- Start with the preparation and sharing of food before writing about it.
- Look at pictures of food, and talk about them before moving on to writing.
- Have students research food-related topics on the internet.
- Start with a story about food.
Here are the specific food writing prompts:
44. After the story of “The Gingerbread Man”: Think about food that develops a life of its own, and what would happen with it. (This can also open up a discussion about cultural foods.) For example, make up a similar story about another piece of food (e.g., spaghetti or rice that comes alive). What if you felt something moving in your mouth after you bit into your burger?
45. Write a story (real or imagined) about being very hungry and/or finding/buying/stealing food to meet a desperate need.
46. Write a story about trying a new, unfamiliar kind of food—maybe in a (relevant) cross-cultural setting.
47. Write a story about finding and eating a food that has magical properties. (Maybe read or watch some or all of “Alice in Wonderland” first.)
48. Describe interesting/disgusting/unusual/delicious/colorful foods, especially after a class tasting lesson. (Prepare students first with suitable taste vocabulary .)
49. Describe a food that’s unfamiliar to most students in the class. (This is particularly helpful for classes where there are students belonging to minority groups who hesitate to speak up.)
50. Describe an imaginary magical food.
51. Give instructions for preparing a particular recipe.
52. After a class activity or demonstration involving food: Write down what you have learned.
53. Give instructions for producing food—growing vegetables, keeping animals, etc.
54. Give instructions for buying the best food—what to look for, looking at labels, checking prices and the like.
55. Write about your opinion on food and health in First World and Third World countries. (Explain what makes a country “First,” “Second” or “Third World” first.)
56. Write about your opinion on the cost of food.
57. Write about your opinion on GMOs or genetically engineered foods .
There’s nothing quite like a good “whodunnit,” and students will always enjoy a good puzzle. You can base various pre-writing activities around the two games below to get the class warmed up for ESL writing practice.
- Conundrum. This is an example of a game that can be played as a speaking and listening activity, and can lead into some good writing. The game starts with a simple statement or description of a situation like the ones described in situation puzzles . Students ask questions and receive yes/no answers until they work out the explanation for the situation.
After Conundrum, here are some of the activities your students can do:
58. Write a story about the sequence of events involved in a situation brought up in the game.
59. Devise and describe your own situation puzzle.
- Putting their hands inside a cloth bag (or just feeling the outside) to guess what an object is.
- Smelling substances in opaque jars with perforated lids, and trying to guess what they are.
- Tasting mystery foods on plastic spoons (with blindfolds).
- Looking at pictures of mysterious objects from obscure angles.
- Listening to and guessing the origins of sound effects. (You can record your own, or use some from the Internet .)
(Important: Make sure that whatever you’re using for your guessing game is safe for your students, especially if they involve having to touch, taste or smell the object.)
After a guessing game, your students can:
60. Write about a possible mystery object and a magical quality it could possess.
61. Describe what you thought you saw, heard, felt, tasted or smelled.
For both games, here are some writing prompts you can do:
62. Give instructions for playing one of the games.
63. Give instructions for the perfect crime.
64. Give your opinion about a recent crime and the punishment for it.
Emailing can often be a scary task for your students, especially if they’re using a new, strange language like English. You can utilize an email writing activity to help your students build confidence and get more comfortable writing in English.
Email can also teach your students things like proper language (formal or informal), structure and format. Email-related writing activities for ESL students can offer ample opportunities to teach all of these three aspects.
Since emails involve two parties (the sender and the receiver), you’ll need to pair your students up for this activity. Here’s how to prepare for it:
- Create one set of worksheets explaining details relevant to the sender. For example, it could contain information about a sender’s upcoming birthday party that they want to invite the receiver to.
- Create another set of worksheets with the receiver’s details. The worksheets could contain questions about food dishes or gifts, or it could say that the receiver can’t make it for one reason or other.
Once the above has been done, give one set of worksheets to the “senders” and the other to the “receivers.” Then, here’s what your students will do:
65. Based on the senders’ worksheets, write an email inviting the receiver and explaining the key aspects of the event featured in the worksheet.
66. Based on the receivers’ worksheets, write an email explaining why you can or cannot make it to the party, and/or what other information you need about the event.
Advertisements are everywhere, and you can bet that your students have a few favorite ads of their own. Advertisement-related writing activities work across age groups and can be adapted to most students and their needs.
This great ESL writing assignment can help your students put the adjectives they’ve learned into good use, as well as showcase their creative writing and persuasion skills.
You can find advertisements everywhere, including:
- YouTube videos
- Newspapers and magazines
You can also bring an object (or handful of objects) to class that your students can write ads about.
67. After your students carefully examine the object(s) you brought into class: Write all the adjectives you can think of about it.
68. For a more challenging writing exercise: Write an ad about the object. How would you persuade someone who knows nothing about the object whatsoever to buy it? (Your students may or may not use the adjectives they wrote down earlier. Encourage them to be creative!)
Your students have likely already done some kind of report during the course of their studies. Also, writing reports is a skill that’ll be useful to them once they enter college or the corporate world (if they aren’t in it already). If you feel that they need a little more practice in this area, use this ESL writing assignment.
First, discuss how research and structure matter to reports—and perhaps show them a few samples. Then, give them a few questions to base their reports on, like:
69. What can you say about (insert topic here) in terms of (insert specific angle here)? (For example, “What can you say about the government’s efforts to improve the local park in terms of its impact on the general public?” Of course, you should adapt this question to the level of your students.)
70. After talking about a YouTube video on bears eating salmon : What would happen to the bears if the salmon ran out?
This ESL writing activity is a bit more intensive and will allow your students to employ many different aspects of their ESL knowledge. Crafting a class newsletter will build collaboration, communication, listening, speaking and, of course, writing skills. If they’re not sure how to build a newsletter or newspaper from scratch, they can always swipe from premade templates like this one .
The newsletter/newspaper can follow a specific theme, or the articles can consist of a hodgepodge of random topics based on questions like:
71. What is the most interesting thing that happened in school this year? It can be the funniest/scariest/most heartwarming incident. Write a feature article about it. (Make sure to explain what a “feature article” is .)
72. Write a report highlighting the key events in some recent local festivals or concerts.
73. Going off of the last exercise, write an ad inviting the reader to buy a product or attend an event.
Once all of the articles are done, you can start putting them together. Make sure to walk your students through these newspaper layout tips . And when the newsletter/newspaper is finally published and circulated out there for the world to see, remember to congratulate your students for a job well done!
No matter what writing assignments you choose, make sure to keep the excitement level high so that your students are enthusiastic for your next writing session.
Whether they write by hand or type on a computer, remember to encourage them as much as you can by focusing on the good points rather than just running all over their mistakes with a red pen.
Lastly, find ways for them to share their efforts—whether online, on the classroom wall, bound together in a book to be passed around, etc.
They can also read aloud to each other, share with their parents and siblings and even share with other classes!
For more ESL assignment ideas, check out this post:
Great ESL homework ideas can be difficult to come up with. So check out these 13 great ideas for ESL homework assignments that your students will love. Not only are they…
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These are our available worksheets on different topics for higher-level students, like adults and teens. You can download, edit and print them all for free. When you open the worksheets, there is an option to download PDF and Word files.
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Esl reading comprehension worksheet: in the restaurant (beginner-elementary), esl reading comprehension worksheet: france (beginner-elementary), esl reading comprehension worksheet: zoo animals (beginner-elementary), esl reading comprehension worksheet: playing football (beginner-elementary), listening comprehension worksheet: the pet competition (elementary), esl vocabulary worksheet: sports activities, action words (elementary), esl reading comprehension worksheet: the world of dinosaurs (elementary), list: prepositions of place: at, in & on (elementary), elementary-intermediate level (a2-b1), esl vocabulary worksheet: weather report & forecast (elementary-intermediate), esl vocabulary worksheet: let’s go shopping (elementary-intermediate), esl grammar worksheet: using articles (elementary-intermediate), esl grammar worksheet: -ed & -ing adjectives: describing feelings & situations (elementary-intermediate), esl vocabulary worksheet: describing people (elementary-intermediate), ideas to create your own esl lesson plans.
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Welcome to the ESL Worksheets section of JIMMYESL, where you’ll find an extensive collection of high-quality, printable worksheets designed to enhance your English language teaching experience. Our worksheets cater for students of all levels, from beginners to advanced, and cover a wide range of topics and skills essential for language acquisition.
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At JIMMYESL, we understand the importance of targeted learning, which is why we’ve organized our worksheets into comprehensive categories. Whether you’re focusing on grammar, vocabulary, reading, writing, listening, or speaking, you’ll find a wealth of resources tailored to your specific needs. Our categories also include worksheets for different age groups, such as kids, teens, and adults, ensuring that you can find materials appropriate for your students’ developmental stages.
Engaging and Interactive Worksheets
Our worksheets are designed to be engaging and interactive, promoting active learning and fostering a love for the English language. From colorful illustrations and fun activities to thought-provoking exercises and real-life scenarios, our worksheets aim to capture your students’ attention and keep them motivated throughout their learning journey. We believe that learning should be enjoyable, and our worksheets reflect that philosophy.
Flexible Formats for Easy Customization
We offer our worksheets in both PDF and Word formats, allowing you the flexibility to use them in a way that best suits your teaching style and your students’ needs. The PDF format allows you to print the worksheets as they are, ready to be distributed in your classroom. The Word format, on the other hand, enables you to customize the content, adapt it to your specific teaching context, and create personalized learning materials for your students.
Exclusive Lesson Packages for Young Learners
In addition to our regular worksheets, JIMMYESL offers exclusive lesson packages designed specifically for young learners. These packages include illustrated vocabulary worksheets, flashcards, and certificates of achievement, making it easier for you to create fun and engaging lessons that help children memorize new words and concepts. Our lesson packages are a great way to introduce young learners to the English language in a playful and supportive environment.
A Growing Library of Resources
At JIMMYESL, we are committed to continuously expanding our library of ESL worksheets to meet the evolving needs of our teachers and students. We regularly add new materials to our collection, ensuring that you always have access to fresh and relevant content. Our team of experienced educators and language experts works tirelessly to create worksheets that are not only academically sound but also visually appealing and user-friendly.
Explore our ESL Worksheets section today and discover a world of possibilities for your English language teaching. With JIMMYESL, you’ll have all the resources you need to create engaging, effective, and enjoyable lessons that help your students achieve their language learning goals.
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- Speaking exams
- Typical speaking tasks
Describe a photo or picture
In some speaking exams you have to talk about photos or pictures. The video and tips below will help you to do really well in this type of speaking exam.
Instructions
Watch the video of two students describing photos as part of a speaking exam. Then read the tips below.
Examiner : OK. You each have a picture. You’ve got one minute to look at your picture. Describe all that you can see in the picture and explain what you think is happening.
Melissa : In the picture there is a man lying in the middle of the road and there is a car and a motorbike there. I believe there is a car accident and that guy is almost dying. And people are trying to save his life and in the bottom-right of the picture there’s a reporter holding a camera. And there is a policewoman or policeman and he’s trying to tell his partner to come, I think.
Kelvin : So, in my picture there are three men. They’re holding water guns and shooting at each other. And they are laughing and I think they’re very excited about this. I think they could be celebrating some kind of festival because you know in Thailand they celebrate their New Year by splashing water on each other, so I think the two men in the photo are tourists. They have gone to Thailand to celebrate this festival. Yes.
Here are our top tips for describing a photo or a picture in an exam.
- Look at your picture carefully and take a few moments to think before you start talking.
- Talk for all the time you are given. If you have one minute to do the task, use every second.
- Practise the useful language below so you can explain which part of the picture you are talking about.
- Panic if you don’t know the words for all the things in the picture. You don’t need to know all the words for everything in the picture if you know what to say when you don't know an exact word.
- Get distracted and start talking about something else. Focus on the photo or picture.
- Panic if your mind goes blank. Take a deep breath, look at the picture and start again.
If you are asked to describe a photo or a picture in the exam, here is some language you can use:
What is in the picture?
In the picture I can see ... There ’ s / There are ... There isn’t a ... / There aren’t any ...
Say what is happening with the present continuous
The man is ...ing The people are ...ing It’s raining.
Where in the picture?
At the top/bottom of the picture ... In the middle of the picture ... On the left/right of the picture ... next to in front of behind near on top of under
If something isn’t clear
It looks like a ... It might be a ... He could be ...ing Maybe it’s a ...
Check your understanding: gap fill - prepositions
Check your understanding: multiple choice - describing the photo, worksheets and downloads.
You can practise this at home with any picture or family photo. Tell us if this advice was helpful to you.
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Writing Practice Exercises Based on Images or Pictures. Some pictures you can use for ESL writing activities include: Pictures from social media. If you use social media at all, you doubtless have a barrage of amazing photos and videos on your feed, all of which make for excellent writing prompts. Pictures from Google Images.
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Welcome to the ESL Worksheets section of JIMMYESL, where you'll find an extensive collection of high-quality, printable worksheets designed to enhance your English language teaching experience. Our worksheets cater for students of all levels, from beginners to advanced, and cover a wide range of topics and skills essential for language ...
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