Easter
activities
Easter Egg Drawing Game
Instructions:
The aim of the game is to decorate an Easter egg. You will need a dice for each group of students and a counter for each student
(a coin, paperclip, eraser or another small object). Students need some coloured pencils.
1. Pre-teach the following vocabulary: draw, bunny, lamb, flower, catkin, chick, circle, stripe.
2. Revise colours.
3. Make sure students understand the instruction: Draw & on your egg. You can ask individual students to come
to the blackboard, give them instructions and ask them to draw some stripes, circles, chicks, etc.
4. Divide the class into groups of three or four students.
5. Copy one Easter Drawing Game sheet per group and one Egg sheet per each student.
6. Students throw the dice and decorate their eggs according to the instruction. They continue the game until
everyone has finished.
7. Everyone who decorated their egg is the winner!
8. After all the groups have finished the game, you can put up all the drawings on the wall and the students
choose the most beautiful egg.
Małgorzata Warmińska
2 Easter activities Oxford university press
Easter Egg Drawing Game
NAME: __________________________
Oxford university press Easter activities 3
crossword
Across Down
1. One of the symbols of Easter. 8. The 4th month of the year.
2. The 3rd month of the year. 9. The return to life of Jesus Christ.
3. One of the symbols of Easter the symbol of 10. We wish you & & at this time of the year.
a new life.
11. A type of very thin, round cakes that is made
4. The week before Easter Sunday. by frying a mixture of flour, milk and eggs;
eaten on Shore Tuesday.
5. The day after Easter Sunday.
12. The Friday before Easter when Christians
6. The Sunday before Easter.
remember the death of Christ.
7. One of the seasons of the year; between
13. Shrove &
winter and summer.
14. The most popular Easter game; played in parks
or gardens on Easter Sunday.
8 Agata Stopa
9 10
1 11
2 3 12
13
4
14
7
5
6
Across 1. Easter rabbit 2. March 3. dyed egg 4. Holy Week 5. Easter Monday 6. Palm Sunday 7. spring
Down 8. April 9. resurrection 10. Happy Easter 11. pancakes 12. Good Friday 13. Tuesday 14. Egg hunt
Hidden words
1. H S A D S A W N E D Y E
2. Y M U A N D S U T Y A R H D
3. T E N L
4. O C X I U F R I N C I
5. T O H S O C S R S B U N
Agata Stopa
1. Ash Wednesday 2. Maundy Thursday 3. Lent 4. Crucifixion 5. Hot cross buns
4 Easter activities Oxford university press
Easter HANGMAN
Name the pictures. Write the marked letters below in the same order as the pictures to answer the question.
What do you eat on Shrove Tuesday in Britain and the USA?
A
Paulina Bałdyga
Oxford university press Easter activities 5
EASTER BINGO
EASTER EASTER
FLOWERS
EGG BUNNY
EASTER EASTER
CATKIN
CAKES BASKET
HOT
EASTER
LAMB CROSS
CHICK
BUNS
PROCEDURE:
Version 1: Explain vocabulary doubts if necessary and play EASTER BINGO with your learners.
Use one or two parts of the handout at a time to make the game more difficult. Read the words
aloud in any order you wish. Learners have to mark the mentioned words. The first one to have
three words in vertical, horizontal lines or across has to shout BINGO! The winner can take over
your role and read the vocabulary on his/her own.
Version 2: Cut two handouts into squares, mix them together and play a memory game. Solve
vocabulary doubts and tell your learners they are going to work in pairs. They put all the cards face
down. Learners pick up two cards from the table at a time. If the picture matches the name, the
person takes his/her cards and has another go. If two vocabulary items do not match, he/she puts
them back and the other person from a pair continues playing. The person with more pairs wins.
Paulina Bałdyga
6 Easter activities Oxford university press
HOT CROSS BUNS RECIPE
(C-test)
1 Cup of milk
2 Tablespoons of yeast
1/2 Cup of sugar
2 Teaspoons of salt
1/3 Cup of butter, melted and cooled
1 Teaspoon of cinnamon
Glaze:
1/2 Teaspoon of nutmeg
1 1/3 Cup confectioner s sugar
4 eggs
1 1/2 Teaspoon of finely chopped lemon
5 Cups of flour
zest
1 1/3 Cup of currants or raisins
1/2 Teaspoon of lemon extract
1 egg white
1- 2 Teaspoons of milk
Heat milk to very warm, but not hot in a small saucepan. Po_ _ warm mi_ _ in the bo_ _ of a mix_ _
and spri_ _ _ _ yeast over. Mix and le_ _ _ to gr_ _ for five minu _ _ _ . With mix _ _ run_ _ _ _ at low
spe_ _ add salt, but_ _ _, sug _ _ , eg_ _ and cinn_ _ _ . Slo _ _ _ add flo_ _ and cont_ _ _ _ mixing.
Let the dough rest fo_ thi_ _ _ - forty fi_ _ minu_ _ _. Mix for abo _ _ thr_ _ minutes. Shape dou_ _ in
a bal_ , cover wi_ _ plastic wrap and put in the fri_ _ _ for a nig_ _. Let dough sta_ _ in room temper_
_ _ _ _ for ha_ _ an ho_ _ . Div_ _ _ dough into twe_ _ _ four pie_ _ _ , sha_ _ each in_ _ a ba_ _ and
place on bak_ _ _ sheet. Leave for abo_ _ one and a ha_ _ hours. Take a sharp kni_ _ and caref_ _ _
_ slash buns with a cro_ _. Cover with eg_ _ white and put in ov_ _. Ba_ _ for ten minutes, reduce the
heat an_ bake unt_ _ they are gol_ _ _ brown, about fift_ _ _ minutes mo_ _. Mix toge_ _ _ _ glaze
ingred_ _ _ _ _ and put on bu_ _ in a cro_ _ pattern. Serve warm if it is possible.
PROCEDURE:
Learners can work in pairs or on their own. Distribute the handouts. Learners have to fill in the
missing parts of words on the basis of their knowledge, as well as the ingredients given above.
KEY:
Heat milk to very warm, but not hot in a small saucepan. Pour warm milk in the bowl of a mixer and
sprinkle yeast over. Mix and leave to grow for five minutes . With mixer running at low speed add
salt, butter, sugar, eggs and cinnamon. Slowly add flour and continue mixing. Let the dough rest for
thirty - forty five minutes . Mix for about three minutes. Shape dough in a ball, cover with plastic wrap
and put in the fridge for a night. Let dough stand in room temperature for half an hour . Divide dough
into twenty four pieces, shape each into a ball and place on baking sheet. Leave for about one and a half
hours. Take a sharp knife and carefully slash buns with a cross. Cover with eggs white and put in oven.
Bake for ten minutes, reduce the heat and bake until they are golden brown, about fifteen minutes
more. Mix together glaze ingredients and put on buns in a cross pattern. Serve warm if it is possible.
Paulina Bałdyga
Oxford university press Easter activities 7
EASTER FACTS
Aims: To practice reading and vocabulary
Age: 15 and above
Level: Intermediate
I. Warm-up
Do the crosswords puzzle.
1 2
3
4
5 6 7 8
9
10
(definitions taken from Oxford Wordpower Dictionary)
Piotr Czerwiński
II. Read the text and fill the gaps in the sentences below
Easter is a holiday in late March or early April. Many people spend it with their family or have a short
holiday/vacation. It is also an important Christian festival. Easter Sunday, the day of the Resurrection, is
the end of Lent and the most important date in the Christian year. Many people who do not go to church
at other times go on Easter Sunday. It was once common for people to wear new clothes to church on this
day. Women wore new hats, called Easter bonnets. Today, people sometimes make elaborately decorated
Easter bonnets for fun. A few people send Easter cards with religious symbols on them or pictures of small
chickens, lambs and spring flowers, all traditionally associated with Easter.
The Friday before Easter Sunday is called Good Friday and is remembered as the day Christ was crucified
(= hanged on a cross to die). On Good Friday many people eat hot cross buns (= fruit buns decorated
with a simple cross). The Monday after Easter is called Easter Monday. In Britain, Good Friday and Easter
Monday are both bank holidays. In the US, each company decides for itself whether to close or remain
open on those days.
Children look forward to Easter Sunday because they are given chocolate Easter eggs. These are also
popular with adults and millions are sold in the weeks before Easter. Many are packed in coloured foil in
brightly-coloured boxes decorated with pictures of cartoon characters. Others are decorated with sugar
flowers and wrapped in clear paper tied with a ribbon. Some shops write the person s name on the egg
with icing (AmE frosting). Inside each egg are sweets or chocolates. Smaller eggs with a sweet cream inside
are also popular. Eggs represent new life and the start of spring, and children sometimes paint the shells
of real eggs at home. In some parts of Britain Easter is a time for traditional events such as egg-rolling.
When American children wake up on Easter morning, they hope that the Easter Bunny has been. The
8 Easter activities Oxford university press
EASTER FACTS
Easter Bunny is an imaginary rabbit, and parents tell their children that it goes from house to house while
they are sleeping. The Easter Bunny hides Easter eggs in each house, small plastic eggs filled with sweets
or little presents. When they wake up all the children run about trying to find the eggs. The Easter Bunny
also often brings chocolate in the shape of a rabbit. In Britain some families now organize an Easter egg
hunt, and people buy chocolate rabbits as well as eggs.
Easter also has historical connotations. Easter rising was the rebellion against British rule in Dublin,
which took place at Easter in 1916. A hundred British soldiers and 450 of the Irish were killed in the four
days of fighting. Several leaders of the rebellion were later executed.
(taken from Oxford Guide to British and American Culture)
1. The Irish fought bravely during the _________ ____________.
2. Local bakery prepared a big number of ___________ __________ to celebrate Easter.
3. Each year the Royal Mail earns a lot of money because people send a big number of _________
_________ .
4. _________ _________ are a very important part of women s Easter outfits.
5. If your egg doesn t get broken during a/an_________-________, you will have a lot of luck in
your life.
6. For children, the point of a/an _________ - _________ is to find as many sweets as possible.
7. Millions of British people travel long distances to rest during their __________ ___________.
8. Easter is the most important festival in the __________ __________.
9. In England children s most favourite symbol of Easter is __________ __________.
10. Christians tend not to eat meat and avoid drinking alcoholic drinks during __________.
I. Down: 1. basket 2. holiday 4. cross 5. egg 6. spring 8. lamb Across: 3. festival 5. Easter 7. April 9. mass 10. bunny
II. 1.Easter rising 2.cross buns 3. Easter cards 4. Easter bonnet 5. egg-rolling 6. egg-hunt 7. bank holidays 8. Christian year 9. Easter bunny 10. Lent
Piotr Czerwiński
Oxford university press Easter activities 9
1. Read the sentences that have been translated by a very bad translator. Underline the expressions which
you think are idiomatic in English.
1. Ten facet to mierdz ce jajo. Nie powiniene mu ufa !
2. Podjajczy mnie, ebym zainwestowa wszystkie pieni dze w fabryk krasnali ogrodowych.
3. Na pocz tku powiedzia em: Id sma y jajka! .
4. Nie dawa mi spokoju, mówi c, e nie powinienem zabija g si, która znosi z ote jaja.
5. Powtarza ci gle: Jak jajka jajkami krasnale ogrodowe b d wielkim hitem .
6 .Moi przyjaciele ostrzegali mnie, mówi c: Nie mo esz wk ada wszystkich swoich jajek do jednego
koszyka
7. Wiedzia em, e chodz po jajkach, ale mo liwo zarobienia milionów zupe nie mnie za lepi a.
8. Studiowa em ekonomi i my la em, e znam wszystkie odpowiedzi, wi c mówi em do swoich kumpli:
Nie uczcie babci wysysa jajek! .
9. Niestety nikt nie chcia kupi naszych krasnali i teraz mam jajko na twarzy.
10. Prosz , b d dobrym jajkiem i pomó mi.
2. Read the original sentences. Match the idioms with their meanings A-H.
A. to proceed very cautiously; to be very careful.
B. to try to tell or show someone more knowledgeable or experienced than oneself how to do
something.
C. a bad or despised person; an evil influence.
D. to make everything dependent on only one thing; to place all one's resources in one place,
account, etc.
E. to destroy something that is profitable to you.
F. to be embarrassed by something one has done. (As if one went out in public with a dirty face.)
G. go away and stop bothering me!
H. to encourage, urge, or dare someone to continue doing something, usually something unwise.
I. a good and dependable person.
J. absolutely certain.
3. Can you make the necessary changes in the sentences in exercise 1 so that they sound good in
Polish?
10 Easter activities Oxford university press
Answers
Ex. 1
1. Ten facet to śmierdzące jajo. Nie powinieneś mu ufać!
2. Podjajczył mnie, żebym zainwestował wszystkie moje pieniądze w fabrykę krasnali ogrodowych.
3. Na początku powiedziałem: Idz smażyć jajka! .
4. Nie dawał mi spokoju mówiąc, że nie powinienem zabijać gęsi, która znosi złote jaja.
5. Powtarzał ciągle: Jak jajka jajkami krasnale ogrodowe będą wielkim hitem .
6 .Moi przyjaciele ostrzegali mnie, mówiąc: Nie możesz wkładać wszystkich swoich jajek do jednego koszyka
7. Wiedziałem, że chodzę po jajkach, ale możliwość zarobienia milionów zupełnie mnie zaślepiła.
8. Studiowałem ekonomię i myślałem, że znam wszystkie odpowiedzi, więc mówiłem do swoich kumpli: Nie uczcie babci
wysysać jajek! .
9. Niestety nikt nie chciał kupić naszych krasnali i teraz mam jajko na twarzy.
10. Proszę, bądz dobrym jajkiem i pomóż mi.
Ex.2
1. C
2. H
3. G
4. E
5. J
6. D
7. A
8. B
9. F
10. I
Ex. 3 (propozycje tłumaczeń)
1. śmierdziel
2. namówił mnie
3. spadaj!; zjeżdżaj!; zrywaj się!
4. zbijać kurę która znosi złote jajka
5. jasne jak Słońce; pewne jak dwa razy dwa to cztery.
6. nie możesz stawiać wszystkiego na jedną kartę
7. postępować ostrożnie
8. uczyć księdza pacierza; uczyć ojca dzieci robić.
9. kompromitować się; wyjść na idiotę
10. miej dobre serce, bądz dobrym człowiekiem
Małgorzata Warmińska
Oxford university press Easter activities 11
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