Here I have a list of 25 Easter printable activities for preschoolers that are mostly in English! Lastly, if Easter printable activities in Spanish ISN’T what you are looking for, no fear. In addition, you can check out this awesome list of Easter picture books in Spanish, and even better, these entertaining Easter YouTube videos in Spanish! You can even practice your Easter vocabulary by going on a fun Easter Scavenger hunt. Parents raising bilingual kiddos in Spanish, these free activities in Spanish will be the perfect interactive activity to reinforce the minority language at home! Teachers and homeschooling mamas, these four worksheets and bilingual flashcards will be useful for your classroom, virtual learning, and at home. Then you have landed on the right page because today, I have FREE Easter printable activities in Spanish to share with you! Which of these do you plan to use in your Spanish class? Do you have any other low prep games that you use in Spanish class? Leave a comment and let us know.Looking to teach your kids a little Spanish this Easter? Vocabulary words, verbs or sentences could be on the game board and then student play just as they would with a traditional tic-tac-toe board. For example: If you roll a 1 you will name the characters of the story if you roll a two you will…. Similar to playing with cards, assign what you want students to with each roll of the dice. It could be based on the cards numbers or suit (hearts, diamonds, etc.). You can either assign an action or task to each cards. Having a few spare decks of cards around can lead to an easy “game” set up. The first to guess correctly gets a point. Spilt your class into teams, have one member from each team draw something on the white board while everyone else guesses what their teammate is drawing. It’s a fun class opener, closer or to do when you have a few extra minutes. This is a fun game to get people up and moving in the classroom. Caller calls out one of the four words and everyone that is in that corner is out. You can write high-frequency words or math problems on each block for immersion students and have them read the word or solve the problem on their turn.Įach corner or wall is assigned a vocabulary word or phrase. You can do several things with these you can write numbers on the blocks and then have a related activity on a sheet of paper for students to follow. You can buy colored tower block games on Amazon, you can also sometimes find mini tower games at the Dollar Store. This is a fun game for Fridays or as a review. They swat the correct word with the flyswatter. Lay them on the floor and say the vocabulary word in Spanish or English or read a sentence a verb would fit into. Put vocabulary words or pictures on (index) cards. This can be down with English/Spanish, word/picture, sentence with a blank/answer, etc. Traditional memory game make cards, turn them upside down, try to find a pair. To play: Instruct kids what words to write on the boards, this could be used for vocab review, verbs, or even math problems. I always have copies of blank Lotería boards in my classroom ready to use. Lotería is a great game to play for vocabulary review, on a Friday or when you have a substitute in Spanish class. If the student gets a ‘boom’ card they have to put all of their cards back in the center. Some of the cards need the word ‘boom’ or ‘kaboom’ on the cards. To play: Write the words, questions, verbs, etc. This game or activity is essentially the same as ‘Devuelvelo’ but with paper cards instead of sticks. If the student pulls out the stick with the word ‘Devuélvelo’ they have to put all of their sticks back in the cup. They keep their stick if they read/think of an example. More advanced Spanish students could use the word in a sentence or use it in an example. You could have them do a variety of tasks. To play: Students take turns pulling one stick out of the cup at a time. On each stick I write a vocabulary word (or you could do math equations) and on about 10-20% of the sticks write the word ‘Devuélvelo’. This is a game where you need some popsicle sticks (I prefer the wide ones) and a cup to put them in. Some of them also work great as games or activities to use when you have a substitute in your Spanish class. These are great ideas to add to your “Spanish teacher’s toolbox,” have copies of on hand or use when you are need something low prep to do in your Spanish or immersion class. Students love games! Teachers love low prep and inexpensive game ideas that can be used on multiple occasions and topics.
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