This fantastic presentation is a great way to help students understand how their daily decisions can be the key to a happy and healthy life. Factual information alongside engaging photographs explain the impact that diet, exercise and bad habits have on our health. Inspirational quotes can also be used as part of the whole-class discussion about healthy lifestyles.
This fun PowerPoint is great for teaching children about the typical rooms you may find in a home. The children will learn the names of the rooms and will sort some household objects to ensure that they are in the right place.
Use this informative PowerPoint to learn about the Past Simple tense. It allows children to practise building sentences with regular and irregular verbs as well as asking open and closed questions in Past Simple.
This United Kingdom Information PowerPoint teaches children essential information about the sovereign country, including geography, culture, religion, and more. It also features colourful images and illustrations to support the information and to promote visual learning.
Use this fantastic PowerPoint to learn how and when use the Simple Present tense. It also contains a number of activities to practise building positive sentences and general question in Present Simple.
This weather-themed PowerPoint focuses on modal verbs of probability – may, might and could. It also introduces the children to adverbs of probability (definitely, perhaps, probably) and provides plenty of opportunities to practise them in sentences.
This engaging presentation aims at revising vocabulary related to means of transport as well as analyses the pros and cons of using them.
With this fantastic PowerPoint, you can help children to build initial sound and letter recognition. Colourful illustrations make it easier for the children to link the sound to the letter and begin to recognise it in words.
This informative presentation introduces children to the modal verb ‘must’, which is used to give orders, warnings and advice. The slides focus on things we must and mustn’t do to look after the environment.
We can use reported speech to express orders, requests and advice. This engaging presentation clearly explains how to transform direct speech sentences into reported speech. It also provides plenty of sentence building exercises to practise new skills.
