41 Fun Activities with Flashcards
The purpose of flashcards is rather simple and mundane; we use flashcards to introduce and review vocabulary or concepts. My first language teacher said, “The only way to learn a foreign language is repetition, repetition, repetition.” Can’t argue with that. Unfortunately, it can be really… repetitious and boring. But, if you watch children playing, they’ll show you how to make it fun.
This post was written by our TEFL certification graduate Thuy N. Please note that this blog post might not necessarily represent the beliefs or opinions of ITTT.
Here is my list of 41 Flash Card Activities. If you have an activity, not on this list, leave me a comment below! I’d love to hear how you use flashcards in your classes!
Images
When putting together flashcard sets, use the clearest, simplest images you can find. As my students range in age from PreK through 6th grade, I don’t want to make flashcards for different age groups. For that reason, many of my cards are age-neutral in design and can be used with any class, including adults.
Double-sided or single-sided cards?
You have to decide which is going to be more useful. If you have single-sided cards and you want words and images, you’ll have double the number of cards, double the weight, and need more storage space. If you use double-sided cards, you won’t be able to play some games, like Pairs, Old Maid, or guessing games requiring a blank backside. Large cards that I use for big groups of kids are usually double-sided, just for convenience. Because I like to divide kids up into groups and play a variety of games, I create small single-sided cards, some no bigger than a business card.
Also Read: How does the combined TEFL course work?
Multiple Sets
Creating multiple sets of cards is a lot of work, but you’ll appreciate the flexibility it gives you in class. I always have 4-5 sets of flashcards, piled in baskets, ready for any number of activities.
Punch holes in small flashcards and bundle them with metal rings. Rubber bands will rot. And, above all, laminate your cards! Kids bite, fold, and spill on them. The last thing you want to do is have to remake cards every year.
3 Types of Flash Card Activities
Matching
Matching is the most fundamental activity you can do with cards. This type of activity is most recognizable as flipping through vocabulary decks as you try to associate a word with a picture or translation.
Ordering and Sorting
Ordering and sorting are basic activities teachers most often do with cards. Ordering can be with an established order, such as the ABCs and numbers, or a directed ordering, like sorting according to color, pattern, big, small, etc.
Guessing
Discovery, or guessing, is the premise of many games you can play with flashcards. The more you can keep kids guessing, the better you will keep their attention. If you play with a sense of fun, children will WANT to remember vocabulary to keep the game going.
Watching children play, you will see them employing one, two or all three of these models in just about any activity or game they play. Keeping this in mind, you’ll have an endless number of activities you can use with flashcards.
Remember, cards don’t have to be the primary focus of activity, as long as they are being employed in one way or another. Use animal cards for team names, numbers, colors and shapes for ordering, or stacks of cards for board games. Importantly, find ways to use the vocabulary you’ve taught!
Also Read: How much can I earn teaching English in China?
Other Ideas
I call these activities, as opposed to games, as they don’t involve dice or rules of play.
- Name Cards Make and laminate name cards for your kids. Allow the kids to have these in their possession that they display on their desk. Occasionally, you can make the name cards part of the lesson! Working on verbs or animals? Use their name cards and pair them with various cards! Pull names from a hat or spell students’ names out loud to determine game order or line order. By putting their birthday on their name cards, you’ve successfully transferred months- of-the-year flashcards into their hands!
- Ordering students for a game can be just as much fun as the game itself! Challenge students to order themselves according to birthdays, the alphabet, age or grade! Hand out verb cards, animal cards or ABC cards, and have the students line up in alphabetical order. Or have students sound off in order using numbers or ABCs. Then, put a stack of the same cards in a hat and have students line up in the order the cards are drawn.
- Word of The Day Put learned flashcards into a hat and allow a student to choose one from the hat each school day. This is great for a review of past vocabulary you don’t want kids to forget! Did you teach patterns and shapes? Take a moment to see who is wearing stripes or all the objects in the room that are square. Try to find a way to repeat the ‘word of the day’ a few times in class. A special action, such as clapping or snapping their fingers can be done if they hear the word.
- Spell it out! Hand out flashcards to students. The teacher vocally spells out a word. The student with that card hands it back to the teacher. This activity can be used to line kids up or divide kids for games. Variations on this could be spelling out student names, writing the big letter on the board and the student with the small letter brings her card forward. Giving students word cards while the teacher shows the picture cards works just as well.
- Circle Passes The students and the teacher sit in a circle. The teacher starts by passing a picture card to the student on his left, saying, “This is a horse.” The student takes the card and passes it to the next student, saying, “This is a horse.” The card is passed around the circle. When the card returns to the teacher, the teacher puts that card aside and introduces a new card in the same manner. To up the challenge: a) wait until a card has reached the halfway mark, then introduce a second card going in the same direction; b) introduce cards at the same time going in opposite directions, or c) send 3-4 cards around the circle in the same directions with little pause between each.
- Discovery Slowly uncovering a picture or letter for students to guess what you have is a classic activity. You can uncover the picture from different sides or even have an envelope with a hole in which students see only a part of it. Try this game with words, slowly uncovering the front, back or both sides of the word.
- Match! The teacher shows a flashcard and calls out a word. If the spoken word and the card match, students must say the word.
Also Read: How to save money while teaching English abroad?
- Story Time! Distribute one card per student and tell them that you will tell a story. Each time they hear their word they have to clap. Make sure you have a list of the words or that you write the story beforehand to make sure that each word is said several times.
- Hide n’ Seek Have one student go out of the room and hide flashcards in various locations. Have the student come back into the room and look for the cards. As she finds each one, she must tell you the name of the card.
- Missing Cards Place three cards face up in a row. Turn around or close your eyes and ask the students to turn one card over. You then try to guess the ‘missing’ card. Up the challenge by adding another card and repeat. Then, turn two cards over. If you’re working with ABC cards, you can keep the order or mix the cards up. If you play this with 10 or more cards other than alphabet cards, put the cards in alphabetical order. Students have to think of the missing card about the ABCs. This game works well as a whole class activity or in small groups.
- Guess! Put three picture cards on the board, and label them A, B, & C or 1, 2, & 3. Give hints as the students try to guess the card you are describing. Try this by acting out a verb or an animal. Use color cards and call out things in the room that are all the same color.
- Q&A A student chooses a card and places it on the board behind the teacher. In a ‘20 Questions’ fashion, the teacher asks the students questions like, ‘Is it blue?’ or ‘Is it big? This works well with clothing, food, and animals. If working with words, ask questions like, “Is there an ‘a’ or a ‘z’ in the word?
- Stacked Adjectives Start early teaching kids by example about stacked adjectives by combining several sets of different cards. Make phrases like ‘one black cat’ or ‘two happy elephants.’ As kids become familiar with this activity, you can slowly add adjectives, like ‘three angry striped black cats.’ Once kids start learning to put words together to create larger concepts or sentences, keep words and pictures on a board so that students can play and arrange the cards themselves.
- Alphabetize This seems rudimentary, but it works well for early finishers, or when you have time after a lesson. Simply have kids put a set of flashcards in alphabetical order. Later on, dictionary practice is a vital part of my older kids’ work. Start getting them ready as soon as they understand the ABCs and order. Write Around The Room Put cards around the room, give students a blank piece of paper on a clipboard, and have them search around the room for cards to write on their boards. Once all the words are ‘found’, students then have to write the words again in alphabetical order. This is a classic ‘Write Around The Room’ activity and good for getting kids out of their seats.
- Write about it! Laminated flashcards can be used to write directly on the cards with a whiteboard marker. Hand out markers and stacks of cards to practice writing unusually.
- Notebooks Give students stacks of cards to write the words and draw pictures in their notebooks, creating their Pictionary or to add to their interactive notebooks.
- Silly Fun, show a picture like ‘apple.’ Then, every sentence that you say has to contain the word apple! You say: “How apple are you?”, the other person says “I’m apple fine.” Small children especially love these kinds of word games.
Also Read: What is the Teach and Learn with Georgia Program for teaching English in Georgia?
More Games
- Relay Play a relay game to match the upper and lower ABCs. Place upper ABC cards on the board and students must write the lower case letter below each card. Place images on the board and students must write the words below the cards.
- Relay II Write 5-6 letters on five large cards in random order. Set the cards in a spaced row with a basket in front of each card. Put stacks of ABC cards in front of two teams of students for a relay race. At the start, students must take a card and put it in the basket that matches their card. The first team to finish all their cards wins.
- Race Place two cards on the floor at the front of the classroom. Divide the class into two teams and have them line up. Give the two students at the front of the lines one eraser each. When the teacher calls out one of the cards, the two students race to put their erasers on the correct card. The first student to do so wins a point for his team. Repeat several times, and then add a third card. Play with three cards for several turns, and then add a fourth card, a fifth card, and so on.
- Pairs/Concentration This is a game that will work with any type of card. With two sets of the same cards, lay them face down in a grid. Depending on the age and skill of the students, you can work with 4-12 pairs. Students take turns flipping over two cards looking for a match. The student must say the word before taking the cards. This game can also be used to match two cards, e.g., big and small letter, opposites, or a picture and word cards.
- Go Fish or Old Maid This is another pairing game where students are looking to match two of the same cards. Use language like, “Do you have a….?”
- Bean Bag Toss Place cards face down on the floor. Students toss bean bags on a card and must be able to say the word or letter to keep the card. If she can’t say the word, it gets turned over and another student gets a try.
- Point to it! Place 6-9 cards on the board. Using a pointer or long stick, a student points to each card as it is said by the teacher. This same activity can be played in pairs amongst students. This is also a great warm-up to the next game.
- Slap Game/ Karuta Spread cards out on a table face up. The teacher or designated student says a word and students try to be the first to grab or slap the card. Try this game using fly swatters! To be sure there is no random slapping of cards, make the rule that if students make a mistake, they lose a turn.
Also Read: Who will my students be when teaching English abroad?
- Fishing! Virtually any (small) flashcard can be made into a fishing game. Fix large paperclips to the flashcards and fashion a fishing pole with a magnet tied to the end of a piece of string. This works well in teams as the fishing pole is traded off and students try to ‘catch’ the most cards. Once all the cards are ‘caught,’ they must be able to say all the cards or give them up to the teacher or the other team.
- Hopscotch Arrange a hopscotch board on the floor. Students throw a beanbag on a card and then must hop to the card and say the word to pick it up.
- Race Track Set up a large oval-shaped ‘race track’ on the floor. Students roll a dice and go round the track with their favorite object just like a regular game board. Insert special cards for losing a turn or getting an extra turn.
- Crash This is a favorite amongst my students and great for repetition. Place 10-15 cards in a line on the floor. Two students start at either end of the line of cards. On start, the students say the names of the cards as they move toward each other. Upon meeting, they play ‘rock, paper, scissors.’ The winner stays in place and the loser goes back to his start position and the game begins again. The first student to reach the other student’s start position wins! This game will work equally well with small cards on a table where students point to their card as they say it.
- Tic-Tac-Toe You can create a tic-tac-toe game putting flashcards in a 3×3 square on the floor. Make two teams each with different colored bean bags, cards or another type of marker. On ‘Start,’ students race to win the game by getting three in a row.
- Bingo If you have a card set with at least 25 cards, arrange the cards in a 5×5 Bingo card. As cards are pulled from a hat or basket, students place a marker on their cards. Five in a row wins. This will work with even two students. It’s fun on the floor with big cards or on a table with smaller cards.
- Draw it! Divide the class into two teams. One student from team A comes to the board, picks a word flashcard, and draws the image on the board. The team has 30 seconds to guess the picture. If they can name it, they get a point. In the end, the team with the most points wins.
Do you want to teach English abroad? Take a TEFL course!
Apply now & get certified to teach english abroad!
Speak with an ITTT advisor today to put together your personal plan for teaching English abroad.
Send us an email or call us toll-free at 1-800-490-0531 to speak with an ITTT advisor today.
Related Articles:
- The How-To Guide to Prepare for Your Teaching Job Abroad
- The Top 5 TEFL Destinations for Adrenaline Junkies and Adventure Seekers
- 9 Small Details That Matter When Teaching EFL
- The Advantages and Disadvantages of Teaching English to Young Children
- 7 Teaching Skills in the Classroom You need To Incorporate into Your Lessons
- What TEFL course is most useful?