Games to Practise Want/Want To
25th July 2013 by Alex CaseThe verb âwantâ is often presented with the kind of low-level or young-learner classes that need and want the sorts of competitive games shown below.
I want mimes
Although it can take a while to guess the exact sentence being acted out, it is possible to mime sentences like âI want to sit downâ and âI want to turn on the air conditioningâ.
Want sentence completion games
Give students sentence stems including âwantâ/ âwant toâ which they should be able to complete at least half of truthfully, e.g. âI have __________ but I want moreâ and âI wanted __________ but I donât anymoreâ.
There are two games which you can play with these sentences. One is bluff, in which you get students to fill in some sentences with false information and see if their classmates can guess which ones arenât true. The other is the Sentence Completion Guessing Game, in which students read out just the part they have written from one sentence and their partners see if they can guess which sentence that was written in.
We want to make chains
This is a variation on the well-known ice breaker game in which people try to remember what everyone before them said and add their own statement, as in âJane likes bananas, Steve lives next to a bank and I hate the smell of milkâ. In this variation each person says âI wantâŠâ sentences but they only make their own sentences if they donât feel the same way as any of the people who have spoken so far, instead saying â⊠wants⊠and I do tooâ if that is the case. This leads to more actual communication, better bonding of the people in the classroom (by finding things in common), and sentences like âJuly and Fernando want to see the fireworks tomorrow and I do too. Keith, July and Frances want to learn how to speak Frenchâ.
Make me say Yes I do
Students ask each other âDo you wantâŠ?â questions which they expect a positive answer to, getting one point for each âYes, I doâ answer but no points for âNo, I donâtâ. To make the game more realistic communication, they will need to put time clauses in the sentences to avoid exchanges like âDo you want to eat cheese?â âNow? In class??â
Only I want to
Students walk around the class asking each other questions to try to find something that only they want to do, e.g. âDo you want to get a tattoo?â If anyone says âYes, I doâ, they should try to think of something else and start asking everyone again. People can sit down whenever they think they have found something that only they want to do.
Because thatâs what I want
One student says what they are going to do to achieve something they want until the people listening guess that âI want to be a vetâ, âI want to be richâ etc with clues like âIâm going to study business at universityâ and âIâm going to set up as many new technologies companies as I can and sell them as soon as possibleâ.
Maybe I do want to
A big problem with most of the activities above is that they demand clear statements about desires that are often not so clear in real life, and this activity exploits that. Students try to ask questions to which their partnerâs answer is âIâm not sureâ, e.g. âDo you want to go to Costa Rica on holiday?â If they answer âYes, I doâ or âNo, I donâtâ, they must explain how come they have such a strong opinion, e.g. that someone told them Costa Rica is overrated or they have a friend living there that they want to visit.