If they are wrong they fall all the way down the ladder and have to start over from the first card. This forces students to see multiple forms over and over again which helps retention. Students lay out cards in a square on their desks with the root word facing up. They turn over one card to see its affixes. They then have to choose another card which shares one of the same affixes. If they are correct, they keep the cards as points. If they are wrong, they turn them back over in the same place and play passes to the next student.
This can be good to use with words that your students might not know yet as it teaches them the affixes also. Do you have any other games you like to play with flash cards to practise word formation? Let us know in the comments! Word formation board games can be found all over the internet, including on this website.
Here are the links to my word formation board games which include a make-your-own version. This is a good one for those of you who like zero planning minimal materials activities. They should try to do so just with the split words first, then use the whole sentence to check their answers. There are several ways of organising this.
The easiest is to give pairs of students Student A and Student B worksheets with the sentence halves in mixed up order, asking them to match sentence starter 1 with sentence ending J etc. It can also be organised as a mingling activity with single cut up sentence halves, with students coming up to the teacher for more when they think they have found matches. This is like an extended version of the task above.
Cut up a whole text before suffixes and after prefixes, e. It might also be possible to design this as an oral task. Students find examples of real word formation in a dictionary and make up two or three wrong alternatives, e.
They read them out to another group, seeing if they can fool them about which one is the real one. Something similar can also be done with written exercises such as FCE Use of English word formation ones. Students fill the gaps with a mix of the real and wrong answers and other groups see if they can spot which is which.
The key word sentence transformation exercises in FCE Use of English can also be used for word formation, e. Games with this include memory games like Grammar Reversi and challenging them to use as many different forms of the underlined word as they can to express exactly the same meaning as the original sentence. Word Work. G2 G3 Word study. Caterpillars - er, eer, ea, ee, Maze chase by Colette1. G1 English Word Study.
Word formation: Abstract nouns. Test part 1. Crossword by Elenanadtocheva. Negative adjectives Quiz by Alnikat. Noun Spinning Wheel Random wheel by Lsfedorczyk.
G1 Word Work. Pink Heart Words Matching pairs by Ritzm. K G1 English Reading Word recognition. Purple Heart Words Matching pairs by Ritzm. R-blends Group sort by Nancy G1 word study. The exam covers all the major language skills, grammar and vocabulary. There are four papers each for reading and use of language, writing, listening and speaking. You answer different types of questions like open cloze, multiple choices, key word transformation, word formation, multiple matching, gapped texts and more.
To prepare well for the FCE exam, you need enough practice for these areas of the language. In this post, we discuss some of the best games and activities that help practice these skills covered in the exam and help you prepare in a fun and interesting way. The Cambridge B2 First is an assessment that tests four major language skills in the form of four papers.
These papers contain different types of questions which can be prepared easily with some practice. One can practice writing, speaking and listening skills with the help of exercises, fun games and activities. Fun games and activities can be used to revise the topics covered in the FCE exam. You can also introduce activities that target the use of words in the right context like creation of a dialogue, exercises asked in the exam, use of words in sentences and asking questions containing the words.
Bingo An old game for a new task! This game is great at revising parts of speech. You can select the words you want the students to revise and prepare the bingo cards. You can speak out parts of speech like verb, noun and adjective and participants can cross out words, one at a time.
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