Battleship
Have your ESL students practice their writing, spelling, and problem solving skills by playing Battleship!
Skill Level: Intermediate, Advanced
Materials: Battleship playing board (available to download here). The Battleship board I’ve created has a small grid (better for intermediate classes) and a large grid (better for advanced classes).
Instructions: Rules for Battleship can be found here.
In ESL Battleship students hide words rather than ships on their grid, and working in pairs they try to be the first to find and sink all of their partner’s words. If a student thinks she knows her partner’s word rather than guessing coordinates she may guess the entire word (”Is the word at C5 ‘apple’?”), sinking it if it is guessed correctly.
My experience has been that it’s important to give the game a “theme”–types of things (fruit, vehicles, feelings), parts of speech, word beginning with a certain letter, and so on. Also, depending on the skill level of your students it can be a good idea to make some rules about what words they can use–require the words to have at least (or no more than) x letters or require students to use different letters of the alphabet to start words.
Sample requirements for an advanced class could be: Write six words, one three letters long, two four letters long, two five letters long, and one six letters long. Use each of the following letters once as the first letters of your words: A, C, N, E, D, G.
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