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What is the ESL Video Project?

While there are plenty of ESL and ESOL videos for kids, many are primarily vocabulary-focused and nearly all of them are generic and dry. In other words, they might teach the kids something, but only if the kids can manage to pay attention.

Our idea is to create aesthetically pleasing, engaging videos that introduce young ESL students to grammar concepts (especially verb tenses) in a funny, exciting, or silly way.  The target age group is 8 to 13 and the skill levels range from pre-intermediate to upper-intermediate. But honestly, the courses nd videos are fun for learners of all ages!

Blueberry Pancakes

A little girl has some mishaps in the kitchen in this video highlighting the present perfect.

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The Wrong Study  Subject

A  creature from outer space sent to investigate humans gets a little mixed up. This video highlights the present perfect to talk about experience.

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​A Better World

.Barty Bartleby makes the world better not only by helping you master the past perfect. He also solves the eternal problem of socks gone missing! 

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The Great Race

A race between a tortoise and a hare--how classic! And while they're running, they'll help you learn the present perfect continuous!

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The Powers of Deduction

Detective Owl uses his powers of deduction to find out what suspects have really been doing. You can find out too and practice the present perfect continuous.

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.Just some balloons to fill the space

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Sára Jékely, animator

Sara Jekely was born and raised in Budapest, Hungary, In 2024, she graduated in animation from the  Rhode Island School of Design in Providence, RI. Her interests are in stop-motion animation, especially puppet design and set-making. In Budapest, she studied at the Secondary School of the Visual Arts, where she specialized in apparel design and leatherwork. Because of her diverse background, she takes a multidisciplinary approach not only to designing and fabricating puppets and sets but to her work in general, which includes quilting and weaving.  She is the perfect animator for this project because of the beautiful and captivating sets and endearing and intriguing characters she creates.

Her work can be seen here: https://vimeo.com/user201358109/ or https://sarajekely.com/.

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Dan Hur, animator

Dan Hur, born in 2000 in Seoul, is a filmmaker, animator, and sound designer. Dan graduated from the Rhode Island School of Design with a BFA in FAV (Film/Animation/Video). His creative journey reflects a quest for understanding the interplay between control and chaos, posing the question: in situations beyond our control, how do we respond? Initially drawn to medicine, he diverted to music and then to art, finally finding his niche in animation. Fueled by a relentless desire for control and a penchant for world-building, Dan’s work embodies a perpetual power struggle between creator and creation. Dan’s artistic process is characterized by spontaneity and emotion, where disparate elements blend to form a cohesive whole.

His work can be seen here:

Website: https://dhur.art/

Vimeo: https://vimeo.com/user71661278

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How to Use the Videos:
Example: "Blueberry Pancakes"

Every video includes information for teachers, worksheets, and ideas for follow-up exercises. Here is an example of the information accompanying "Blueberry Pancakes."
Scroll down for the video "Blueberry Pancakes."

Guidance for teachers

Target language: Present Perfect Simple for events in the recent past with the results still visible in the present

Level: Pre-intermediate

Age group: 7-13

Words and expressions to pre-teach: The words in this video are very simple, but it’s worthwhile checking the following: sugar, flour, eggs, baking powder, blueberries, mixer, spatula, griddle, knock over, tummy ache, batter, drop, spill, smash, squash

Ideas for follow-up exercises

1.      The teacher can show stills from the video in which the spilt milk, smashed eggs, etc. can be seen and ask the children to say in writing or speaking: what has happened/what has the girl done?

2.      The children mime an action and its results (for example, pretending to run and then lifting their hands in triumph: they have won the race.)

3.      The children draw their own sequences and then work in pairs or small groups discussing what has happened in their drawings.

4.      Students do something, such as pick up a pencil, or put a book on a shelf, and the other students say what they have done: “Bob has picked up a pencil,” “June has put a book on the shelf,” “Nora has untied her shoes,” etc.

Overview

The present perfect for recent past is another tense that is difficult to demonstrate in a classroom. Because in many languages no comparable tense exists, students have a hard time getting the feel for it and recognizing in their daily lives when it should be used. This video will help them deepen their understanding by seeing a girl making blueberry pancakes for her mother for Mother’s Day.

 

The girl has several mishaps with the results there for everyone to see: she drops the bags of flour and sugar and when she exclaims “Oh no, I’ve dropped the sugar and flour” we can all see the torn bags and heaps of flour and sugar on the floor. She continues to have mishaps with the most disastrous when the cat races across the table (after lapping up some spilt milk despite a tummy condition) and sends ingredients and equipment flying. The girls cries “What have you done! You naughty cat!”

 

She finally manages to make the pancakes when her mother enters. She is dismayed by the mess and lists every mishap the girls has had (“you’ve smashed the eggs, you’ve squashed the blueberries …”), but she calms down when the girls serves her a beautiful plate of blueberry pancakes for Mother's Day. And then the cat comes along, with her tummy troubles caused by the milk. She jumps on the table, approaches the plate of pancakes with great curiosity until she begins heaving, as cats so often do. Is it a fur ball? Is it the milk? It doesn’t matter because it’s too late. We hear the sound of vomit (yes, sorry) but fortunately the results are left to the imagination. All we hear is the little girl’s voice: “Oh no, the pancakes

Example Video: Blueberry Pancakes
The video still needs some tweaking and will have subtitles.

 

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