
Teaching French to students who don’t speak it at home is an exciting challenge — but it requires well-adapted teaching strategies. Whether you’re a primary school teacher, a middle school teacher, or in charge of an FFL (French as a Foreign Language) program at your institution, the activities you offer in class make all the difference in your students’ motivation and progress.
In this article, you’ll find 10 concrete, tested, and effective activities for teaching French as a foreign language (FFL) to students at levels A1 to B1. Each activity comes with practical tips for easy implementation.
The label game is ideal for A1-level students (complete beginners). The concept is simple: stick adhesive labels on classroom objects with their name in French. Chair, board, window, door, pencil…
How to set it up:
This activity anchors vocabulary in the real context of the classroom. It is particularly effective for visual learners.
Bingo is a universal activity that can easily be adapted for learning French. It works very well for reviewing a vocabulary field (animals, colors, professions, foods…).
Effective variation:
Bingo creates a fun atmosphere while working on listening comprehension, which is essential in FFL.
Role-plays are one of the most effective activities for developing oral communication in French. They allow students to simulate everyday life situations in a safe environment.
Example situations:
Provide students with a vocabulary sheet and key phrases before the role-play. Let them first prepare their dialogue in pairs, then perform it in front of the class.
Traditional dictation can be anxiety-inducing for FFL students. Picture dictation is a kinder and effective version: you describe a scene out loud, and students draw it and then label it in French.
Example: “In the kitchen, there is a large round table. On the table, there are three red apples and a glass of water. To the right of the table, there is a blue chair.”
Students draw the scene, then write the words beneath each element. This activity works on listening comprehension, vocabulary, and spelling all at once.
Songs are a powerful teaching tool for FFL learners. They help memorize grammatical structures, work on pronunciation, and absorb the natural rhythm of French.
How to use them effectively:
Setting up a reading corner with illustrated books suited to students’ level is an excellent way to gently develop reading comprehension. French picture books are perfect for A1–A2 levels.
Activity ideas:
Keeping a class journal is a regular activity that progressively develops written expression. Each day or week, a different student writes a few sentences about what happened in class.
Adaptation by level:
The class journal also creates a lovely memento of the school year, which motivates students to take care with their writing.
For A2–B1 students, the picture debate is a stimulating activity. Show two contrasting images (city vs. countryside, seaside holidays vs. mountain holidays) and ask students to choose their preference and justify it.
This activity works on oral expression, opinion structures (“I prefer… because…”, “In my opinion…”) and enriches vocabulary while personally engaging students.
Ask students to create their own illustrated memo cards for new concepts learned (verb tenses, vocabulary, prepositions…). The act of creating their own learning material reinforces learning through action.
Suggested format:
These cards can then be used for in-class revision as flashcards or a memory game.
Learning a language is inseparable from its culture. Incorporate mini cultural projects into your program: creating a French restaurant menu, presenting a region of France, preparing a presentation on a French-speaking country.
Benefits:
The key to successful FFL teaching lies in variety and consistency. By alternating between fun, creative, and communicative activities, you maintain your students’ motivation while covering all language skills (speaking, writing, comprehension, production).
These 10 activities are a starting point. Feel free to adapt them to your context, your students’ level, and the resources available at your institution.
Looking for more resources to teach French? Explore our website myfluentfrench.com to discover interactive exercises, teaching materials, and tools adapted to each CEFR level — designed specifically for students learning French as a foreign language in schools.
What activities are best for complete beginners in French? For A1 students, the most effective activities are those that link the word to the object or image: the label game, illustrated bingo, picture dictation. The goal is to build a base vocabulary in a concrete and reassuring context.
How do you motivate students who resist learning French? Play is the best motivational lever. Activities such as bingo, role-plays, and cultural projects give concrete meaning to learning. It’s also important to acknowledge every step of progress, no matter how small.
How much time should be devoted to these activities per week? Ideally, 20 to 30 minutes per session, two to three times a week, is enough for visible progress. Consistency matters more than the length of individual sessions.
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