Japanese Teaching Topic - FEELINGS
Teaching ideas, art and craft, flashcards, games, lesson plans, songs, videos, useful websites, worksheets on the Japanese teaching topic FEELINGS kimochi 気持ち きもち.
Activities in class
Puppets - ogenki desu ka.
Students create a paper puppet to help them answer the question "How are you" in Japanese. ie. When asked "o genki desu ka", students can move their puppets and answer "hai, genki desu" (smile) or "maamaa genki desu" (straight line). How to: Students take 2 doll templates and on one put a smile as the mouth, and the other draw a straight line as the mouth. Colour the same, cut out. Attach a pop stick to the back of one, then glue the other on the back to make a double sided puppet. Donated by N Barber
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Games
How are you feeling?
http://learningplace.eq.edu.au/cx/resources/items/a4ef4adf-5cb0-9252-2303-f9c9cd97da84/1/ViewIMS.jsp?backto=close Are you hungry? Are you thirsty? Are you okay? Listen to a woman ask a girl how she is feeling. Listen to what the girl says, then click or drag the correct thought bubble. Restricted to The Learning Place members only. Access information here. |
Posters
Ogenki desu ka Poster
Teach students how to respond to: How are you? Created by I Foley
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Feelings Posters
A4 sized posters with feelings in Romaji, hiragana and English. Feelings include: とてもげんきです、げんきです、まあまあです、びょうきです、おなかがすいています、のどがかわいています、おこっています、うれしいです、かなしいです. Donated by C Weaver
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PowerPoints
Ogenki desu ka PPT
PowerPoint introducing vocabulary related to answering the question "How are you?" in Japanese. Created by I Foley
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Websites
Feelings kimochi
Board games, dice, worksheets on feelings. http://homepage3.nifty.com/daijinkyo/kyozai/download/page.htm |
Worksheets
Feelings list
List of common feelings in Japanese. Donated by S Buck.
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Kimochi
Learn how to say some basic feelings in Japanese. Created by I Foley
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Kimochi wakarimasuka
Worksheet where students listen to their teacher describe the feelings of various people. Students are also asked to match the smiley face characters to the appropriate feeling in Japanese. Donated by M Broso
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