You might want to have different Bingo cards to create more variety. Students will then mingle as a whole class and ask each other questions to try to fill the grid up. Standard Bingo rules apply about winning the game. (Creating a row or column etc. With answered questions) You can of course adapt this for many different language points.
Bingo Card Categories
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- ESL Vocab Game for Older Kids, Teens and Adults Bingo is a classic gambling game where players mark off numbers on cards as the numbers are drawn randomly by a caller, the winner being the first person to mark off all their numbers on their Bingo card.
- Title: C: Documents and Settings Julie Vickery My Documents Telling Time Bingo.wpd Author: Julie Vickery Created Date: 4/16/2005 12:53:03 AM.
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Printable Bingo Cards
Bingo Baker allows you to print as many bingo cards as you want! If you need 10 cards or 1,000 bingo cards, Bingo Baker is the only app that can handle it. And you don't have to worry about getting duplicate cards. Bingo Baker allows you to print 1, 2 or 4 cards per page. Your printable bingo cards include a random call list you can use to conduct your bingo game.
One card per page
Four cards per page
Play Bingo Online
Bingo Baker has the simplest online bingo experience. You just need to send your players a link to the game. That's it! Players can generate their own unique bingo card in one click, and they're ready to play. Bingo Baker shows no branding, and you can customize the game/card instructions.
Additionally, you can prompt your players to enter their name before starting the game, or Bingo Baker can email a card to each player. Bingo Baker will keep track of each player's card, and you can see all of the cards in your game control panel. Bingo Baker lets you clear and scramble each player's card when you're ready to play a new game.
Bingo Baker generates a call list for you, which you can use for your online game. It keeps track of where you are in the list so you can play over multiple days. You can scramble the list at any time to play another round.
This is where you'll find all the play online features of Bingo Baker
Esl Bingo Template
You can read items off the provided call list. You can scamble it, print it, and make it full screen (great for playing bingo at conferences)
You can send players a link to join your game, or Bingo Baker can email their cards to them directly simply by entering a list of email addresses.
The options menu allows you to customize your game, and perform global management actions (like clear and scamble).
You can see the cards of all your players to help you conduct the game.
Players get a full-screen view of their card and click a cell to mark it. No Bingo Baker branding is visible on the page.
Bingo is a classic gambling game where players mark off numbers on cards as the numbers are drawn randomly by a caller, the winner being the first person to mark off all their numbers on their Bingo card. However, this game can easily altered to be used to teach ESL vocab in your classroom to older kids, teens and adults.
How to Play Bingo?
To play Bingo for ESL, you'll need at least 15-25 words which you've been studying recently in your English classes. Next, you'll need to make your Bingo cards. You can see a normal bingo card with numbers below:
This is a normal Bingo card with numbers. The caller at the front slowly calls out random numbers from 1-90. If a player has a number on their card, then they scribble out the number. The first player to scribble out all their numbers is the winner. Each Bingo card is different, so there can only be one winner.
Making your ESL Bingo cards
Esl Bingo
In this ESL Bingo version, you'll need to create Bingo cards for each student in your class, but instead of using numbers, they'll have recently studied vocabulary on their cards.
Making Bingo cards for each ESL student sounds like too much hassle, but there is a website which will randomly generate ESL Bingo cards…all you need to do is to type in your 15-25 words, hit ‘Enter', and the website will instantly generate all your Bingo cards…easy!
You can generate your ESL Bingo cards to practice vocabulary here.
Playing Bingo in ESL Classes
Hand out one Bingo card to each student. Each Bingo card should have nine or so words from your full list of words. Each Bingo card will be different.
Explain to your class that you'll be calling out words from your list and that the students need to listen carefully. If they have a word on their Bingo card which you call out, then they need to cross out the word.
How to win ESL Bingo
Keep calling out ESL vocabulary from your list and you'll see students crossing off the words on their cards as they hear them. Eventually, one student will have crossed out all of their words and should shout out ‘Bingo!' to show that they've finished. The teacher should then check the student's card to see that they have all the words you've said.
This is a super easy and enjoyable game for students and you can be sure that they'll want to play Bingo for learning vocabulary again. If students use pencils, then they can rub out their pencil on their bingo cards and you can all play Bingo again.
How To Play Bingo Esl
Instead of just using words, why not give definitions?
Bingo is a classic gambling game where players mark off numbers on cards as the numbers are drawn randomly by a caller, the winner being the first person to mark off all their numbers on their Bingo card. However, this game can easily altered to be used to teach ESL vocab in your classroom to older kids, teens and adults.
How to Play Bingo?
To play Bingo for ESL, you'll need at least 15-25 words which you've been studying recently in your English classes. Next, you'll need to make your Bingo cards. You can see a normal bingo card with numbers below:
This is a normal Bingo card with numbers. The caller at the front slowly calls out random numbers from 1-90. If a player has a number on their card, then they scribble out the number. The first player to scribble out all their numbers is the winner. Each Bingo card is different, so there can only be one winner.
Making your ESL Bingo cards
Esl Bingo
In this ESL Bingo version, you'll need to create Bingo cards for each student in your class, but instead of using numbers, they'll have recently studied vocabulary on their cards.
Making Bingo cards for each ESL student sounds like too much hassle, but there is a website which will randomly generate ESL Bingo cards…all you need to do is to type in your 15-25 words, hit ‘Enter', and the website will instantly generate all your Bingo cards…easy!
You can generate your ESL Bingo cards to practice vocabulary here.
Playing Bingo in ESL Classes
Hand out one Bingo card to each student. Each Bingo card should have nine or so words from your full list of words. Each Bingo card will be different.
Explain to your class that you'll be calling out words from your list and that the students need to listen carefully. If they have a word on their Bingo card which you call out, then they need to cross out the word.
How to win ESL Bingo
Keep calling out ESL vocabulary from your list and you'll see students crossing off the words on their cards as they hear them. Eventually, one student will have crossed out all of their words and should shout out ‘Bingo!' to show that they've finished. The teacher should then check the student's card to see that they have all the words you've said.
This is a super easy and enjoyable game for students and you can be sure that they'll want to play Bingo for learning vocabulary again. If students use pencils, then they can rub out their pencil on their bingo cards and you can all play Bingo again.
How To Play Bingo Esl
Instead of just using words, why not give definitions?
For older students, or those with better English, instead of calling out the word, you can call out the definition, so students need to listen more carefully and think about the meaning of the words on your card. Playing Bingo to practice vocabulary and lexis is a great activity for your students and you can be sure that they'll want to play often.
To switch things up, why not have a student come to the front to call out the vocabulary or to give the definitions?
Have fun!
Want to find other good ESL activities?
Rare pennies 1943. Swatter Stories pits two teams of teen or adult students against each other and is fantastic listening practice and a whole lotta fun! Students form two lines and each person at the front has a fly swatter and must listen to your story very carefully and be super fast!
Ring of Fire brings a classic pub drinking game to the classroom for language learning…except no beer, of course!