Teaching with photos 
and pics 
By Lobanova Anastasia, “Unicorn” 2014
Warm-up 
• Picture Dictionary Activity: 
• Ss are asked to put down their name vertically so that each letter is on a 
separate line on the page (see the example on the next slide). 
• Ss draw a picture to illustrate each letter of their name. The picture 
represents the word beginning with the corresponding letter and is 
connected somehow with the personality of the student. You can ask the Ss 
to write key words instead of drawing ( A stands for Australia because it’s my 
dream to visit this country, S stands for summer when I was born, for 
example) 
• Ss swap the pictures and interpret the drawings by making guesses
A 
N 
A 
S 
T 
A 
S 
I 
A
‘’An elephant in the room’’ 
• If you say there is an elephant in the room, you 
mean that there is an obvious problem or 
difficult situation that people do not want to talk 
about. 
• “Cambridge dictionary”
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We can use pics or photos to 
teach these language areas 
• Question forms 
• Vocabulary on topic “Animals: farm,wild,pets” 
• Everyday English
A mysterious person 
• This is an activity for practising asking and answering questions 
• Show the picture of a person (choose mysterious and thought provoking ones) 
• Set up the model by asking the class questions like “Where is the person from? 
What kind of family does he/she have? What does he/she do in free time? What 
are his dreams in life etc”. 
• Ask the class to work individually and think of their questions to the person. Ss 
write them down. 
• Ask a volunteer to sit in front of the class and the picture. Tell him that he is now 
the “voice” of the person depicted and is going to answer the questions like that 
person. 
• The class asks the questions and after some minutes you can change the 
person to be the “voice”
Group picture 
activity
• This activity can be used for introducing and practising vocabulary 
• Ask children to draw pictures on a certain topic (ex. Animals) on the board. 
Each child draws one pic. 
• Label the pics with words, drill them with the class 
• Wipe off one item and say “ The dog has gone now” or “There isn’t a dog” 
(choose the grammar to practice). Make the children go to the board, wipe 
one item off and give the comment like in the example 
• Children then can imagine themselves as the animal they have drawn and 
ask each other questions like “What do you like eating?”, “Where do you live” 
etc. (to practice questions) 
• Children can also make a dialogue between 2 animals 
Think of your own variations of the tasks with a group picture!
Catch phrases
• This activity is great for practicing functional language 
• Choose a number of phrases you would like to practise and print them out on 
separate strips of paper (big enough to be read from the board). 
“Congratulations!” , “You’re joking!’, “That’s fantastic news” etc. 
• Choose a number of pictures with people on them (they can be all sorts of 
people including celebrities). Tell your Ss that each person from the picture has 
his catch phrases and always repeats it when talking. 
• Practise the phrases with the class, drill them properly. You can cover them at a 
certain stage and make your class say them from memory. 
• After that you ask the class to make groups of 3 and imagine themselves as the 
people on the pictures. Make them improvise and make up spontaneous 
dialogues. The important thing is for Ss to use the catch phrases as often as 
possible in their talk. After some period of time ask the class to choose another 
phrase and continue.

Teaching with pictures

  • 1.
    Teaching with photos and pics By Lobanova Anastasia, “Unicorn” 2014
  • 2.
    Warm-up • PictureDictionary Activity: • Ss are asked to put down their name vertically so that each letter is on a separate line on the page (see the example on the next slide). • Ss draw a picture to illustrate each letter of their name. The picture represents the word beginning with the corresponding letter and is connected somehow with the personality of the student. You can ask the Ss to write key words instead of drawing ( A stands for Australia because it’s my dream to visit this country, S stands for summer when I was born, for example) • Ss swap the pictures and interpret the drawings by making guesses
  • 3.
    A N A S T A S I A
  • 5.
    ‘’An elephant inthe room’’ • If you say there is an elephant in the room, you mean that there is an obvious problem or difficult situation that people do not want to talk about. • “Cambridge dictionary”
  • 9.
  • 11.
    We can usepics or photos to teach these language areas • Question forms • Vocabulary on topic “Animals: farm,wild,pets” • Everyday English
  • 12.
    A mysterious person • This is an activity for practising asking and answering questions • Show the picture of a person (choose mysterious and thought provoking ones) • Set up the model by asking the class questions like “Where is the person from? What kind of family does he/she have? What does he/she do in free time? What are his dreams in life etc”. • Ask the class to work individually and think of their questions to the person. Ss write them down. • Ask a volunteer to sit in front of the class and the picture. Tell him that he is now the “voice” of the person depicted and is going to answer the questions like that person. • The class asks the questions and after some minutes you can change the person to be the “voice”
  • 14.
  • 15.
    • This activitycan be used for introducing and practising vocabulary • Ask children to draw pictures on a certain topic (ex. Animals) on the board. Each child draws one pic. • Label the pics with words, drill them with the class • Wipe off one item and say “ The dog has gone now” or “There isn’t a dog” (choose the grammar to practice). Make the children go to the board, wipe one item off and give the comment like in the example • Children then can imagine themselves as the animal they have drawn and ask each other questions like “What do you like eating?”, “Where do you live” etc. (to practice questions) • Children can also make a dialogue between 2 animals Think of your own variations of the tasks with a group picture!
  • 16.
  • 17.
    • This activityis great for practicing functional language • Choose a number of phrases you would like to practise and print them out on separate strips of paper (big enough to be read from the board). “Congratulations!” , “You’re joking!’, “That’s fantastic news” etc. • Choose a number of pictures with people on them (they can be all sorts of people including celebrities). Tell your Ss that each person from the picture has his catch phrases and always repeats it when talking. • Practise the phrases with the class, drill them properly. You can cover them at a certain stage and make your class say them from memory. • After that you ask the class to make groups of 3 and imagine themselves as the people on the pictures. Make them improvise and make up spontaneous dialogues. The important thing is for Ss to use the catch phrases as often as possible in their talk. After some period of time ask the class to choose another phrase and continue.