A list and descriptions of some books I’ve recently found have really worked with two to twelve year olds, mostly titles I didn’t know when I made my original list of The Best Picture Books for EFL Young Learners and What to Do with Them, plus a couple that have gone up in my estimation. Comments on these and possible additions below please.
Where Does It Go by Margaret Miller (amusing wrong positions of things and the best picture book I’ve found for the slightly higher prepositions “in front of”, “behind” and “between”)
Baby’s Day by Karen Katz (fun moving the baby from activity to activity and turning over to show awake and asleep, tying in well with routines and action songs like Here We Go Round the Mulberry Bush)
Bye Bye Bear from Cartwheel Books (more of a puppet, but the pages on its stomach mean that it fits in well with story time, you just need to add related songs such as If You’re Happy and You Know It and Open Shut Them to make it last long enough)
You Choose Colouring Book by Nick Sharratt and Pippa Goodhart (students choose what clothes, pet, etc they want then can colour them in, good for just “want” or “would like”, or the original text has second conditional and related uses of “would” for hypothetical choices)
Once Upon a Time by Nick Sharratt (fun enough just to do for the vocabulary, or has Past Simple and Past Continuous for tweens who are studying those points)
Animal Alphabet by Alex Lluch (students guess the animal from the first letter and more and more of the picture as the door is slowly slid open, with the inevitable useless vocabulary to cover tricky letters like X, but you can easily speed past them)
No Biting by Karen Katz (fun for students to see the bad behaviour and try to guess the good versions, in my classes always changed to be with negative imperatives like “Don’t bite your friend”)
Do Cars Fly? from DK (the most fun book I’ve found for transport vocabulary, with the bonus of useful action words like “fly”)
Toes, Ears and Nose by Marion Dane Bauer and Karen Katz (a fun combination of body and clothes vocabulary, just need to simplify “elbow” to “arm”, etc)
Eat Your Peas by Kes Gray and Nick Sharratt (a real student favourite and can easily simplify the language, and the fact that the only language that links to my syllabuses is “I don’t like peas” at least makes that model sentence very memorable)
I’m the Biggest Thing in the Ocean by Kevin Sherry (very amusing comparative and superlative practice, with illustrations and a story that aren’t too childish and so should work with kids who are studying that level of language, plus sea life vocabulary)
Are Elephants Tiny? from DK (great interactive practice of opposites, but you probably want to simply vocabulary such as “huge” at this level and age)
Chicken Bedtime is Really Early (students studying times with “o’clock” can usually only find the hidden clocks in the pictures and say the names of the animals, but the text has a nice rhythm and is short enough that students can enjoy it without needing to understand very much, and the illustrations work at every age)
Honourable mentions
The Queen’s Hat by Steve Antony (wonderful story with fun spotting things challenge for the students, but for the very specific top of prepositions of movement)
The Gingerbread Man illustrated by Linda Jeffery (also for prepositions of movement, this time with a fun TPR activity of putting the gingerbread man through holes in the page)
Pass the Parcel by Annie Kubler and Sue Baker (a great way of making shapes fun and interactive and adding animals as another language point, but it would work better if your students know the original pass the parcel game and the idea that elephants are scared of mice. The later pages have tricky vocabulary like “octagon”, but students are usually ready to just open the flaps and turn the pages by that point anyway)
Small Smaller by Corina Fletcher and Natalie Marshall (making drilling comparative and superlative fun with sliding pages, but probably too childish for most students studying this language)
Big Bigger Biggest Adventure by Kate Banks and Paul Yalowitz (comparative and superlative in quite a fun story with a real ending and fairly easy to simplify, but a bit long for my classes)
Shark in the Park by Nick Sharratt (my students love it and it’s the book they most often start chanting along to, but difficult to link to any language point except it has a little bit of “There’s” and prepositions of movement)