Mittwoch, 22. Oktober 2025

Picking Something Blindfolded from a Bag – So Many Possibilities! 🎲👜

Imagine the thrill of reaching your hand into a bag without knowing what’s inside. Is it soft, round, or something you can eat? This simple, playful activity is a goldmine for ESL learning, imagination, and creativity. Here’s how you can turn a humble bag and a few everyday objects into an exciting English lesson

Children reach blindly into a fabric bag full of small objects, guessing and describing them while learning English with adjectives, questions, and verbs.
Children reach blindly into a fabric bag full of small objects, guessing and describing them while learning English with adjectives, questions, and verbs. 

1. Mystery Bag – The Classic Game

Goal: Practice asking and answering questions using “Is it…?” and “Yes, it is!”

All you need is a fabric bag and some small items—spoons, balls, pencils, toy animals, socks… you name it. Children take turns blindly picking an item, while the others ask questions to guess what it is:

  • “Is it round?”

  • “Can I eat it?”

After guessing, kids can describe the object in 3–4 sentences:
It’s small. It’s soft. It’s a sock.

This activity is perfect for revising adjectives and simple sentence structures.

💡 Pro tip: Encourage children to bring their own items from home, so the game is full of surprises and personal stories!

2. Mystery Bag + Adjectives

Take it a step further by focusing on describing words. Kids can feel objects and say:

  • It’s soft.

  • It’s hard.

  • It’s cold.

  • It’s long.

Then, they can write the adjectives down or even draw the object and write a simple sentence:
It’s round and red.

As an extension, play “Find something soft/long/round!” where everyone searches the classroom for items matching the description.

3. Mystery Bag + Mime 🎭

Here, a child draws an object and acts out what you do with it:

  • 🪥 Toothbrush → brushing teeth

  • ✏️ Pencil → writing

  • 🥄 Spoon → eating

Other students guess using: Are you brushing your teeth?

This version encourages speaking and introduces simple verbs in the present continuous tense in a fun, playful way.

4. Sorting & Categories Game 🧩

Once items are guessed, sort them into categories:

  • 🏠 Things in the house

  • 🎒 Things for school

  • 🍎 Things you can eat

  • 🐾 Animals

This helps children organize vocabulary and boosts thinking skills. Later, these categories can become a mini-poster for classroom display.

5. Writing Extension: “What’s in my bag?” ✏️

For a quiet writing activity, kids secretly list items in a bag:
In my bag there is something red and ___, something that makes muh and likes to eat ____, and something kids like to play with.

Then they read their sentences aloud, and others guess the items. You can do this on paper or a whiteboard.

6. Craft Add-on: Make Your Own Mini Mystery Bag 🎨

Combine language practice with creativity. Give children small paper bags and cut-out pictures or drawings of objects. They fill their bag with 3–4 items and exchange bags with a partner. The partner describe what's inside and the other guesses what it is
. This activity strengthens vocabulary while letting kids express themselves artistically.


The possibilities are endless when you let children explore blindfolded, guess, describe, and act. From vocabulary practice to creative expression, a simple bag can turn into a world of discovery. So grab a bag, pick something blindfolded, and watch the magic unfold! ✨

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