Total: 1158 Digital Lessons
Card image cap

Iowa Agriculture

Explore Iowa's agricultural history!

Preview
Card image cap

Geometry

A lesson upon shapes

Preview
Card image cap

Teaching Prepositions Of Movement — Free ESL Lesson Plan

A preposition is a word that connects a noun phrase with another part of a sentence; it is usually said or written before a noun. This free ESL lesson plan covers how to use prepositions of movement and direction. Where are they going? Where are they coming from? Keep reading to find out how to help elementary level students grasp the usage of to, toward, from, and away from.

Preview
Card image cap

Teach The Future Continuous – Free ESL Lesson Plan

When should you teach the Future Continuous to ESL students? It’s important to teach this topic at the right time. If you start teaching the Future Continuous too early, students can feel overwhelmed or demotivated. This lesson is designed for pre-intermediate students (B1 Level on the CEFR framework). Before you start this lesson, check the following: Can your students use the present continuous for actions in progress at the time of speaking? Can your students use the simple future with will? Have your students had exposure to the past continuous, for actions in progress at a point in the past? If your students have done all of the above three points, then they are ready to learn the Future Continuous.

Preview
Card image cap

Shortening Relative Clauses: A Free ESL Lesson Plan

Shortening Relative Clauses: The Basics This lesson focuses on reducing subject relative clauses as well as shortening relative pronouns. An example of reducing a subject relative clause might be removing “who is” from the sentence, “the man who is standing over there.” In that example Relative pronouns include that, which, who, whom, what, and whose. An example might be “He doesn’t like the shirt that I bought.” In defining relative clauses, when the relative pronoun (that) is the object of the clause (I bought)we can drop the relative pronoun.

Preview
Card image cap

The Business Of Philanthropy – A Free ESL Lesson Plan

For upper intermediate language students looking for a new challenge, this ESL Lesson Plan on the Business of Philanthropy offers an excellent reading activity.

Preview
Card image cap

audition techniques

AUDITION TIPS and IDEAS

Preview
Card image cap

audition techniques

AUDITION TIPS and IDEAS

Preview
Card image cap

How To Teach Relative Clauses: An ESL Lesson Plan

How to Teach a Relative Clause Each teacher knows that first, students must master the construction of basic sentences. Basic sentences provide the building block for communication. For example, a student might write, “This is a dog.” A relative clause or adjective clause can be joined together to give more information about something. That is to say, it gives more information about the noun. As an example, the student might write, “This is a dog that is eating a bone.” To introduce a relative clause, include a relative pronoun (such as who, that, whose) or a relative adverb (when, where, why).

Preview
Lesson subject
  • Algebra
  • Archaeology
  • Art
  • Biology
  • Botany
  • Calculus
  • Chemistry
  • Computer science
  • Drama
  • Economics
  • English
  • French
  • Geography
  • Geology
  • Geometry
  • Health
  • History
  • Literature
  • Math
  • Physics
  • Psychology
  • Professional Development
  • Language Arts
  • Science
  • World Languages
  • Reading
Ideal grade
  • 1 grade
  • 2 grade
  • 3 grade
  • 4 grade
  • 5 grade
  • 6 grade
  • 7 grade
  • 8 grade
  • 9 grade
  • 10 grade
  • All Grades
  • Admin
  • 11 grade
  • 12 grade
  • Teacher
Language
  • Spanish
  • English
  • Russian
  • Japanese
  • French
  • German
  • Arabic
Subject focus area
  • Mixtures and Solutions
  • Greece
  • 6th grade
  • thinglink
  • design process
  • 4th
  • 5th
  • 6th
  • science
  • hyperdoc
  • egg drop
  • nasa
  • mars
  • fourth grade
  • simple machines
  • gafe
  • google apps for education
  • google slides
  • hyperdocs
  • ngss