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6 Comments

  1. Love your ideas and will definitely use them in the fall! We often spend more time on the answers than the questions. I’m glad you shared this post as it is a good reminder that the kids should be the ones asking!!!

    Take care.

  2. Thanks for the great ideas, Eva! It’s always nice to refresh tired activities that you do over & over again – I’ll definitely be putting a new spin on some of mine having read your post!

  3. Hey Eva – the sub-title of the communication I submitted to TESOL FR this year is “Why should the teacher always ask the questions”
    (in academic reading) but all the same! You know what they say about great minds 🙂

  4. Hi! I also started teaching at the time when “Find the questions for the underlined answers” was all the rage. However, there is another activity from that distant past that I still love: “teapotting”, don’t you remember “teapotting”?
    It is played in small groups or pairs and within each group students think of an activity like brushing your teeth or feeding the dog, the other groups take in turns to ask questions in order to find out what the activity is substituting the mystery word with “teapot”, so the questions will be like:
    – Do you teapot everyday?
    – How often do you teapot?
    – Have you teapotted today?
    – Do you teapot indoors or outdoors?
    I’ve used it with many generations and it still works!

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