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-   -   Outdoor Grammar Games (http://www.eslhq.com/forums/esl-forums/esl-games-activities/outdoor-grammar-games-11929/)

tomei Mar 27th, 2009 11:43 pm

Outdoor Grammar Games
 
Can anyone suggest any fun outdoor grammar games that involve some sort of physical activity? Does anyone know of any traditional sports i.e. football, soccer, baseball than can be manipulated to teach English?

English-coach Mar 28th, 2009 04:05 am

Re: Outdoor Grammar Games
 
Hmmm interesting concept...thinking.

You could teach ordinals (first point second point etc)
Tenses...What is bob going to do? He is going to throw the ball.
What is bob doing? Throwing the ball
What did bob do? Threw the ball. (You could just ask these questions as the kids play...baseball, basketball...anything.)

I'll have to think about this more. It is an interesting idea though. :)

Eric Mar 28th, 2009 11:08 am

Re: Outdoor Grammar Games
 
I've played grammar baseball (actually kickball but it's the same with a lot less equipment and skill required) before. It was fun.

Create A LOT of questions that you want your students to answer or practice. Or better yet, have them create their own questions.

Then 1 team "pitches" a question to the batter of the other team.

If the batter gets the question right, they go to first base. (if you rank the questions in terms of difficulty, you could have singles, doubles, triples and home runs).

If the batter gets the question wrong, they "strike out".

To make this more active and physical, if the batter gets the question right, the pitcher pitches the ball to the batter and the batter gets a chance to kick the ball and try to get to first base. If the batter gets the question wrong, they strike out.

There are a lot of variations you can do to this game. Different levels of questions. Fouls for answers that were close but not perfect. Balls for questions that were not asked properly or with good pronunciation, etc...

The only requirement is that your students have a decent understanding of baseball/kickball. If they don't, forget about it! Teaching the rules of baseball in a second language is harder than teaching English! Trust me...


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