When is your birthday esl




















It is hilarious to see what these kids do and do not know about their own culture. I print my Month flash cards with the plain numbers and names on the front and the numbers, names, and pictures on the front. The cards go up on the board with just names and numbers at first, and then when the kids identify the corresponding picture, I turn it over to reveal the answer. The picture here depicts the displays of oranges and mochi that are put out in honor of New Years.

Stores sell the roasted soy beans along with paper oni masks each year and my school lunch usually has roasted soy beans in a little packet that day. Families put up a display of dolls fashioned like a royal family and their court in honor of their daughters.

Most schools in Japan start their semesters in the first week or two of April. Families put up displays of miniature samurai armor and fly fish kites, one kite per family member, from their balconies. June sucks. June is just spring rains. The pictured flowers are hydrangea, aka ajisai, that bloom in the middle of the rainy season. The picture shows a Tanabata display. Celebrants will write wishes or thanks on strips of paper and hang those strips of paper from a branch of bamboo.

Summer festivals tend to be clustered in August around the week of Obon. Sometimes kids will reply that the event is hanabi alone. Oh, kids. Tsukimi was traditionally an early harvest holiday at the end of the growing season.

The picture shows the moon, dango, and ornamental susuki grass. Pretty much no group of kids guesses why the old people are in the picture. I always give them shit for not knowing this one. The three pictured foods are kaki persimmions , nashi pears , and kuri chestnuts. Kids have trouble placing this picture within the timeline. This holiday is about milestones in childhood.

The picture represents the photoshoots that often happen at temples in honor of Shichigosan. The woman in the bath is bathing with the citrus fruit yuzu on the Winter Solstace Touji.

I sing it all together in one go, then have the kids join me. I bust out a chair. Or steal one. I make a big show of sitting on the edge of my seat to get ready and then go into it. By the end some shy kids stop fully participating and some of the hams go wild. This lesson finishes up with the book quiz about holidays. Read out the statements regarding the special events in each given country and when they each happen and have the kids draw a line from the picture representing that event to the month.

They fall in April, March, and December respectively. Go through one at a time with the call and repeat drilling, then sing it together once for review. This game can be kinda hard to explain to the kids. The idea is to bring a handful of kids to the front of the room and on the count of three say their birth month at the same time like speakers on a stereo.

The kids acting as an audience for this then have to pick out who shouted what month, determining whose birthday is when. Two rounds of four or five kids each gets the job done. Much like the numbers to back in the first chapter, I do this vocab set a little differently.

Rather than just have the kids repeat after me 31 times and hope they intuit the differences in ordinal numbers compared to plain numbers, I put up a chart. First, Second, and Third all appear as katakana words in baseball. Kids have heard them. Fifth is also irregular so I lump it in with the other irregular baseball words. These are represented in blue on the chart.

Black numbers are regular numbers. This is just my way of explaining the pronunciation exceptions in ordinal numbers. Then, we do the same challenge as before! One player, one number.

First second third fourth…. Good job. But, one miss…. First second third fourth… five? Oh, no! One more time, from the start. First second third fourth fifth…. This is just to check that they get what the pattern is. I encourage them to help each other to make it go as smoothly and quickly as possible. Lastly, we put months and dates together in a quiz about holidays.

I start there. Page eight, please. Quiz number one: When is New Years? January First Yes! One point. Sometimes I give out a point for the month and another point for the day. Depends on how the class is going. I also hold up photos with Japanese captions to correspond with each question.

Once I get through the seven book quizzes, I start throwing out different holidays. There are a lot to choose from. Some of my favorites:. There are also several holidays whose dates change each year. Four of them are the Happy Monday holidays that fall on, like, the third Monday of the month or whatnot. Make interactive workbooks Video tutorial.

Students access. When is your birthday? Background opacity: 0. Apply to the whole worksheet. More Months of the year interactive worksheets. I teach ESL in Korea and this worksheet will be very useful for my students. Thank you! Terms of use Privacy policy Cookies configuration Report copyright infringement Contact. This website uses cookies We and our advertising partners use cookies and other tracking technologies to improve your browsing experience on our website, to show you personalized content and targeted ads, to analyze our website traffic, and to understand where our visitors are coming from.

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