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Lesson Library


Amazing People
This B1 lesson celebrates Amazing People who make a difference — friends, family members, or even famous faces who inspire others through their actions and personality. Students explore what it means to be creative, confident, caring, and positive, while sharing real examples from their own lives.


The Haunted House
Step into The Haunted House - a board game for your classroom! This spooky activity for English learners combines fun storytelling with educational questions. Each stop on the board brings you face-to-face with a new Halloween creature — from spiders to witches and zombies. Answer correctly to move forward, or risk being caught by the ghosts!
Perfect for A2–B1 learners, this interactive game helps students practise reading, speaking, and thinking skills in a playful, Hallowe


What I Eat in a Day
This B1 lesson plan helps learners talk about daily meals, healthy habits, and food preferences. The lesson introduces useful food-related vocabulary, cooking verbs, and phrases connected to healthy lifestyles. Students compare eating habits from different cultures, making it especially engaging if the teacher and student come from different backgrounds and can share examples of their own meals.


Harry Potter
Explore the magical world of Harry Potter while practicing reading, speaking, and vocabulary. B1 students explore characters, vocabulary, and key events through video, comprehension questions, and interactive activities. The lesson combines reading, listening, speaking, and creative writing tasks.


Feelings
Dive into this B1 lesson on emotions and feelings, designed to help learners build the vocabulary and grammar they need to talk about their own experiences and respond to others. Through discussions, songs, and interactive activities, students reflect on real-life situations, practice describing emotions, and learn strategies for coping with different feelings.


Colours & Meanings
In this B1 lesson, students explore the meanings of colours and how they are connected to emotions, traditions, and culture. They learn useful vocabulary to describe feelings and symbolism, and they practise understanding expressions such as “red with anger” and “green with envy.” The reading passage introduces the idea that colours can be warm, cool, or neutral, and highlights how different cultures use colours in meaningful ways.
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