It is a truth universally acknowledged, that a teacher in possession of a YL classroom, must always prepare beforehand. Or is it? Ask any YL teacher where most of their time goes and I’d bet that their answer has something to do with materials prep; cutting, sticking, photocopying, creating or drawing.
Giving kids that much control actually means more work in the classroom; more monitoring, more error correcting and (usually) more behavioural management. BUT after a particularly busy week (what with reports, exams and marking) I decided to risk it and leave the preparing up to my students; my A1 level, 7 – 9 year old students.
Incorporating collaboration, communication and LOTS OF SPEAKING, in pairs, my students made their own speaking and question form revision board games. With such a positive outcome, I thought I’d share it with you guys!
Below is a picture of my board during this lesson. As you read through the steps, use this picture to help make sense of the guide.

Step one
Thinking of question forms can be daunting for students as they encounter so many of them throughout the year. Providing question chunks can help them focus on the most important ones and not rely on simply the age old ‘do you like…’ question. Start by eliciting the most recently learnt question form but leave gaps where the students have the freedom to change and add words. Elicit all the other forms and put them on the board.
Step two
Drilling the questions through the preparation stage is really important. It makes sure that the students are comfortable and confident with the questions. It also helps to go through the gap fill possibilities and remind the students of their options.
Step three
Go through some board game shape options to give the students some creative freedom. Letting the students decide what board game shape they want to use lets them feel in control of their game, in addition to giving them something to discuss with their partner. Give them a piece of paper and give them a few minutes to discuss their options and draw their game.
*NB: It’s important to give the students a few minutes to talk or discuss options after each step.
Step four
It’s time to set the expectations. Tell the students how many questions you expect and in what order you expect them to write the questions. In my classroom, I told the students to go through the list of questions from 1 to 6 and then back through them again until they had 30 questions.
Step five
Now it’s writing time! The students have their board game template, they have their question chunks and they have their ideas. It’s now up to them to write their questions in their pairs on their board game. During this step, it’s the teachers job to keep the students on track, help them with their writing/spelling if necessary and prompt them with gap fill options if they start to run out of ideas by monitoring, monitoring, monitoring.
Step six
And finally! It’s time to play. Get the students to swap their board game and play each others games. All you’ll need is a die per pair and one of the board games. Good luck! 🙂
At first glance, it may look like the students aren’t really learning much in this lesson. However, it’s a great chance for them to practise their turn-taking skills, it gives them a lot of linguistic freedom and space to use their English in their own way and gives them lots of opportunities for speaking and communication.
I hope you find this as useful and as positive as I did. Although I used this lesson as an end of year revision class, it can easily be adapted and used at the start of the year as a way to get the students back into the English swing of things. Unfortunately, I don’t have any pictures of the finished products but I’d love to see some of yours! If you do try this out in your classroom, send me a message and let me know how it goes!





