More Fun Activities For Clothes Vocabulary
Alex Case1. Chain stories (=Consequences)
This is an amusing activity about combining clothes. Each person is given a blank piece of paper and should write a description of the hat that someone is wearing, e.g. āHe was wearing a big red hat with a flower in itā. They then fold the paper so their sentence canāt be seen, and pass it to the next person clockwise around the class so that that person can describe the next item of clothing down, e.g. āHe was wearing a thick gold chainā or āHe was wearing a blue and green striped old school tieā. When the whole outfit has been described by people writing, folding and passing seven to ten times, the next person unfolds the paper, reads the whole description, and tells the class whether the outfit makes sense and would look good (usually not!)
2. Clothes cultural and historical bluff
Students read descriptions of clothes that they are probably not familiar with, e.g. āMen wore tights in Europe in the sixteenth centuryā, āScottish men wear a kind of skirt called a kilt, with no pants underneathā and āJapanese women usually wear a full Western outfit under their kimonosā. They have to guess which ones are false, e.g. the example about kimonos. They can also write similar true and false sentences to test other groups or the teacher with.
3. Jigsaws
Cut up a picture and get students to match up the different parts without showing them to each other. For example, you could cut up five or six pictures of different people by cutting them across their necks, waists and ankles. Students try to find someone who has another part of the same person by describing the clothes and seeing which ones seem to match, e.g. a suit jacket with a smart skirt. A similar activity is to take a group scene and cut it vertically so that some people are cut in half. They should then be able to put the whole picture in order without seeing other peopleās segments by describing what people are wearing, e.g. āThe woman on the right on my strip of paper is wearing a really big hat and a long dressā āShe same woman is on the left of mine, so my slip of paper must be next. On the right of my piece of paper there is a school boy wearing a uniform with shorts and a satchel. Does anyone have the other half of him?ā etc.
4. Fashion show
Students walk up and down the middle of the classroom as if it is a catwalk while other people take turns describing what is being worn in a stereotypically fashion show style, e.g. āSharon is wearing a medium ālength skirt from Woolworths and a T-shirt with a strange English phrase on it from Tokyoā. Students can describe what people are really wearing, or make everyone use their imaginations more by describing completely different outfits that they have designed and drawn but are not really wearing. Students who are watching and listening could listen out for inaccuracies, or decide on which imaginary outfit they like best.
5. Advice
Students ask for clothes-related advice and decide on whose advice is best. The problems can be their own ideas, based on particularly vocabulary that you want them to practice (e.g. āI have to wear a skirt at work but I hate my legsā for āskirtā), or just given to them as sentences (e.g. āI need to go to a job interview but I canāt afford to buy any new clothesā).
6. Shopping problem roleplays
Clothes shopping roleplays can be a bit dull, so it is nice to introduce a problem element such as the shop not having anything in stock for the bottom half of your body but not wanting to tell you.
7. Drawing games for clothes
The simplest drawing game is Pictionary, in which one student draws an item of clothing (perhaps from a card they have been given) and the others guess what it is. You can add language and challenge to this by giving longer descriptions of the clothes, e.g. āflat-soled shoesā or āknee-length socksā. You can also add a drawing element to roleplays, with the shopper describing the clothes they want (perhaps from a picture) and the shop assistant drawing the item of clothes that they are going to offer them, changing any details which are not acceptable until they get a sale.
8. The definitions game
Students are given a card with an item of clothing drawn and/or written on it, and must explain what it is without saying any part of its name until their partners guess what it is. For example, ātrousersā can be explained by saying āYou wear it on your legs. Men and women both use these. Jeans is a kind of this thingā.
9. Stock a shop
Students decide on and write down exactly what clothes that they are going to stock their shop with, up to the limit that the teacher has set, e.g. 20 items. Other people then going shopping in those shops and see if what they want is matched by what is in stock, and if not if the shopkeeper can persuade them to take the items that are in stock instead.
10. Alibi game
The Alibi Game is a TEFL classic in which suspects and their alibis are questioned separately to try and find differences in their stories about what they were doing at the time of the crime. You can emphasise the clothes language in this game by telling them to make their alibis about being together in a crowded place and/or giving the āpolicemenā suggested questions like āWhat were the people at the table next to you wearing?ā and āWhat colour were his shoe laces?ā Students have to answer all the questions that they are asked, i.e. cannot say āI canāt remember (because I was drunk)ā or āI didnāt noticeā.