Sign In

Lesson plans and ideas

Whether you are looking for an idea on explaining the topic for your entire class better or just looking for a different explanation for a single student, you are at the right place with our comprehensive, teacher-prepared lesson plans we got you covered.

We offer motivational one-topic lessons for Kindergarten to high school students prepared by professional teachers in collaboration with designers.

Life hacks, topic-related practical jokes, anecdotes, and interesting facts make our learning materials useful for teachers, involved parents, and students alike. Got your own lesson plan? Share it now.

Clear all filters

It is an introductory lesson about inflectional endings for six and seven-year-olds or 1st and 2nd graders. Students will learn how to read and recognize common inflectional endings such as “s,” “es,” “ed,” “ing.” Through fun games and creative hints, kids will explore this topic enjoyably.

If your kids need a little extra help getting relative pronouns, then this lesson is for you. Our creative hints and tips will help four-graders deepen their knowledge of this language concept with fun. The set of engaging games and vibrant illustrations will help young learners differentiate relative pronouns easily and use them every day.

Here is a lesson for sixth graders to master recognizing and controlling shifts in verb tenses. We have carefully selected a bundle of examples and engaging tips to help young learners hone their skills enjoyably. By exploring this topic, children will be ready to recognize and fix inappropriate shifts in verb tenses and will become more proficient speakers and writers in no time! The provided activities will make learning a breeze for students, and they will yearn more.

This lesson will help 10-11 years-olds, or five graders, become shining stars using common idioms, adages, and proverbs. The inspirational lesson plan offers a bundle of fun activities to explore this essential language concept and apply received knowledge daily. We have carefully selected the most frequently used phrases to make children’s speech more fluent. Fun games will help catch kids’ attention and make them more involved in the learning process. Check these activities out, and have fun learning with us!

This lesson will help second-graders learn to use collective nouns correctly. These words are so tricky, so sometimes it can be a struggle for kids to identify them! We have carefully selected various daily life examples of their use and have prepared a bundle of exciting activities. It will make the learning process more enjoyable for your kids.

Educators are welcome!

We are looking for the best educators who can bring different approaches and strategies to explain school subjects and critical thinking training.
Professional teacher, education experts, community tutor, linguists, homeschool involved parents - a mix of talent is what works best for our project.

Add a lesson

Learning with Practithink is fun!

Do you know a better or different explanation? We can't wait to hear from you. If it is just a small but helpful addition to any of our lesson plans, please leave in the comment. Or, if you have a completely different strategy for explaining the same topic, please publish it with us on Practithik.

You'll be surprised how easy it is, don't worry about your drawing skills or finding out stock images for your lesson plan - our professional designers take care of this part. Are you better in math (science, biology, chemistry, etc.) than in English? Don't worry; our experienced copywriters will proofread your lesson plan and fix it if needed.

And best of all, you'll have full credit for your job, and if your lesson plan gets enough votes by the end of the year, we'll thank you on behalf of students, parents and teachers with a check up to $300*

cart