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      Impressum

Copyright: bel Verlag 2021, www.belverlag.de
eISBN: 978-3-947159-14-7
Spielideen: Beate Baylie & Karin Schweizer
Buchidee: Helen Tate-Worch
Bilder: Copyright Shutterstock

       Welcome to bel’s book of icebreaker games!

      So, how do you get a lesson started? bel has put together a collection of tried and tested games that can be used to get a class going.

      The games are all very flexible and can be adapted to class size and ability. Many of them can even be expanded to become more than a 5-minute warm-up game. On occasion, a lesson doesn’t go the way you planned, so if an icebreaker develops into a full-on fun and engaging exercise, run with it!

      The games are a colourful mix of icebreakers that can be adjusted to accommodate specific vocabulary or grammar topics. Some require next to no preparation, some require a bit more of your time, and some can be prepared by your students. The spectrum of preparation ranges from only needing a few ideas to preparing simple worksheets or cards.

      The most important thing with these icebreakers is to have fun.

      It is easy to forget how much repetition learners need. Be patient, be understanding, and help your students to enjoy the learning process. And of course, make sure that you enjoy yourself, too!

      Have fun and break some ice!

      Beate Baylie, Karin Schweizer

      and everyone at bel

      Inhalt

       Yakety-yak

       Word association

       What did you say?

       Alphabet soup

       Rain, rain…

       Ranking

       Vocab ping-pong

       Sorted

       Mind map

       Dialogue

       Picture memory

       What’s next?

       Picasso

       Card collection

       Truth or lies?

       Conversion

       FizzBuzz

       Sentence building

       Cartography

       Quo vadis?

       Students’ choice

       Take, catch, go

       Gestures

       Déjà vu

       Animal, mineral, vegetable

       What are you doing?

       Memory XL

       Labels

       Yakety-yak

Aim: Speaking under pressure
Format: One student
Preparation: Find topics to talk on

       Instructions

      1. Think of topics for students to talk about.

      2. Put 30 seconds on the clock.

      3. Give the first student a topic and say, “Go!”

      4. Let the students talk for 30 seconds.

       Variations

      1. Keep a tally of how often the student says, “Um…” or “Er…”

      2. Give the next student the same topic and disallow repetition.

      3. Ask the student to stop when they think the 30 seconds are up.

      4. Ask the student to pick the topic.

       Follow-up

      1. Repeat the icebreaker a few weeks later (same student, same topic).

      2. Use the 30 seconds as a starting point for a wider discussion with the whole group.

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