As language teachers, one of our biggest goals is to help students feel confident communicating in the target language. Whether you teach Spanish, French, German, or American Sign Language, students need repeated, structured opportunities to practice vocabulary and grammar in meaningful ways. Communication cards (or “prompt cards”) are one of my favorite low-prep tools for encouraging scaffolded communication.
These cards provide students with specific prompts that focus on vocabulary themes, sentence structures, or grammar concepts. With a simple deck of cards, you can spark conversation, practice vocabulary, review concepts, and give students the confidence to produce language on their own.
Here are some creative ways to use speaking cards in your classroom:
1. Exit Ticket
Instead of a traditional written exit slip, hand students a speaking card as they leave class. They sign (ASL) or say (spoken languages) their response to you before heading out the door. Quick, informal, and highly effective for checking comprehension.
2. Warm-Up
Start class by passing out a few cards. Students can pair up or form small groups to answer their prompts. This is a great way to get students signing or speaking right away and sets the tone for a communicative class period.
3. Review Game
Turn the cards into a fun review. Split the class into teams, draw a card, and have each student or team respond. Award points for correct grammar use, creative vocabulary, or complete sentences. This turns a simple review into a lively competition.
4. Station Activity
At a language station, place a stack of speaking cards with specific themes (food, family, school, etc.). Students rotate through and sign or say their responses. Stations keep students moving and engaged, and the cards provide clear expectations for each stop.
5. Focused Grammar Practice
If your students are working on a grammar concept—like classifiers in ASL, verb tense in Spanish, or adjective agreement in French—design cards that target those structures. For example:
- “Describe what happened yesterday using at least two transition signs.”
- “Tell your partner three things you are planning to do next weekend.”
Prompts help students practice grammar in context rather than in isolation.
Download these FREE conversation cards focusing on the word HAVE. These work great with upper-level ASL students for a quick pop-up grammar review of the use of the English word HAVE.
6. Partner Interviews
Give each student a card and have them interview a classmate using the prompts on the card. Then, they switch cards and repeat with a new partner. This keeps the activity fresh and gives students lots of conversational practice. This would work like Quiz, Quiz, Pass.
7. Independent Work or Sub Plans
Speaking cards are perfect for self-directed practice. Students can record themselves signing or speaking responses on Flip, Seesaw, or a quick video log. This makes them an excellent option for sub days or independent work time.
8. Creative Writing Connection
After responding to a card orally, have students expand their response into a written piece—short story, dialogue, or personal reflection. This bridges speaking/signing practice with writing and reinforces the vocabulary or grammar point.
Why Communication Cards Work
- Low prep, high impact: A single set can be reused in countless ways.
- Student-centered: Prompts encourage authentic communication rather than memorized lines.
- Adaptable: You can target vocabulary, grammar, or cultural themes.
- Flexible: Works in whole group, small group, or independent settings.
- Easy: Cards are quick and easy to create and can be added to any lesson.
Communication cards are a simple but powerful way to maximize student communication in the classroom. Whether you teach ASL or another world language, they give your students the structure they need to build fluency while keeping activities engaging and interactive.
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