Filter by
Subjects
Subject categories
- (-) All subject categories (408)
- Various topics (47)
- Seasonal resources (40)
- Health and science (34)
- Holidays and travel (22)
- Pronunciation and spelling (21)
- Jobs, work and business (17)
- Stories and experiences (16)
- Books and the arts (14)
- Adjectives and adverbs (12)
- Food and drink (12)
- Modals (12)
- House and home, town and country (9)
- Negatives and questions (9)
- Animals (8)
- Environmental issues (8)
- Film and TV (8)
- Shopping (8)
- Society (8)
- Synonyms, opposites, collocations, idioms (8)
- Family, friends and relationships (7)
- Past tenses (7)
- Future (6)
- Prepositions (6)
- School and education (6)
- Conditionals (5)
- Determiners (5)
- Passive (5)
- Present tenses (5)
- Sports and games (5)
- Punctuation (4)
- Economics and finance (3)
- Functional language and non-verbal communication (3)
- Language basics (3)
- Leisure activities (3)
- Natural world and built environment (3)
- Present perfect (3)
- Gerunds and infinitives (2)
- Grammar overview (2)
- Imperative (2)
- Law, crime and punishment (2)
- Music and songs (2)
- Connectors (1)
- History (1)
- Internet, engineering and technology (1)
- Multi-word verbs (1)
- Parts of speech (1)
- Politics (1)
Key stage
Global tag
Resource type
- Complete lesson (181)
- Student activity (77)
- Worksheet (75)
- Teaching ideas (34)
- Game/quiz (32)
- Role play/debate/discussion (13)
- Lesson plan (10)
- First lesson (9)
- Exam preparation (8)
- Revision (7)
- Starter/Plenary (7)
- Icebreaker (5)
- Presentation (5)
- Teaching tools and tips (4)
- Homework (2)
- Scheme of work (1)
Exam board
Modals
Worksheets, role-plays and student activities for teaching English language learners of all ages about the use of modals for expressing possibility, probability and permission. They include:
- everyday rules for young learners and students of General English (can, can't, must, mustn't, have to, don't have to)
- modals of deduction
- recommendations about cross-cultural etiquette for business people (should, shouldn't)
- hedging expressions for EAP students (might, could).