☕ 3 No-Prep Speaking Activities for Present Simple


Hey Teacher Friend πŸ‘‹

Let’s be real — grammar lessons can sometimes feel like watching paint dry.
But the truth is, your students need Present Simple. Without it, they’re stuck at square one.

The good news? You don’t need fancy props, weeks of planning, or a magic wand.
Just three super-easy activities you can grab right now and drop into class.

So, grab a coffee, lean back, and let me walk you through my 3 no-prep speaking lifesavers for the Present Simple.


🎯 Activity 1: Yes, I do / No, I don’t

This one’s quick, lively, and always gets students talking:

  1. Pair students up.

  2. Student A asks a Present Simple question (“Do you spend money on coffee?”).

  3. Student B answers and explains.

  4. Switch roles and keep the pace snappy.

It feels like a mini-game show, and trust me — even shy students can’t help but join in.


🎯 Activity 2: Question Me

This one flips the usual routine:

  1. Teacher stands at the front.

  2. Students fire Present Simple questions at you (and yes, some will get cheeky).

  3. Keep it playful, correct mistakes on the fly, and show them how flexible the tense is.

Students love “turning the tables” on you — and secretly, they’re drilling the tense without realising it.


🎯 Activity 3: The Questionnaire

This one’s gold for fluency practice:

  1. Hand each student a blank sheet.

  2. They write 5 simple Present Simple questions (“Do you play football?”).

  3. They stand up, mingle, and ask classmates their questions.

  4. Collect answers, compare results, and finish with a quick reflection.

Boom. Instant speaking practice, tons of repetition, and students actually moving around.


πŸš€ Why This Works

No-prep means no excuses. You can walk into class tired, under-caffeinated, or even missing your USB with materials… and these still save the day.

Grammar turns from “ugh” into “hey, this is fun.” And more importantly — students start actually using the language, not just staring at rules on the board.


✅ Try one (or all three!) in your next lesson and watch how fast your students warm up to Present Simple.





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