How to Teach Prepositions of Time

These preposition worksheets are a great way to introduce new words and phrases to your students, as well as give them practice with reading, writing, and speaking. Experience level varies with each of these activities, but there is something for all grade levels! Feel free to download any of these worksheets or share with a fellow teacher, student, or parent who may find them useful.
If you plan to introduce prepositions of place to your students, you've got to download this lesson. It not only comes with a clear explanation of prepositions of place, but it maps out an entire lesson that highlights the most common prepositions of place like at, in, above, below, under, on, over, near/nearby/close to, and more. Each slide also contains multiple examples and "trainer's notes" for teachers to reference. These include common misuses of the prepositions that you can share with students. The PowerPoint makes for an excellent in class activity and will save you tons of time putting together your own presentation.
This colorful map will help elementary students practice describing where buildings are in relation to one another. The instructions introduce a fun and engaging storyline where a young boy needs to help an elderly woman figure out where she wants to go. Students will fill in nine blanks with prepositions by looking a the map to figure out where everything in the town is located. Once they've filled out all the blanks, they can answer where the woman wants to go at the top of the page. Teachers can use this as extra practice or as a test.
Prepositions of time are easy to mix up while students are still learning, but this activity will help elementary level children get a good grasp on phrases like at, in, and on to explain events and time. The first activity on the worksheet will prompt students to fill in the blanks with at, in, and on. Then, they will need to look at a word bank and place each term/phrase in the box with the corresponding preposition.
Before students begin writing prepositions, it's a good idea to show them the phrases in action or in an illustration so they have a visual representation to go off of. That is much easier to understand than simply describing what each phrase means with words. In this activity, students will match a phrase with the corresponding image. Each image shows a preposition of movement, such as around, up, or down. You can even have students stand up and act out each prepositional phrase for extra practice. For example, you could say "walk across the room" or "move onto the rug," and have students demonstrate what that means.
Elementary students will love interacting with this colorful image of a child in his room. They will be asked to describe where things are located in the bedroom with there is/there are prepositions of place. There is a word bank to choose the preposition so students do not have to come up with them on their own.
For more advanced students, this worksheet provides extra practice and can even serve as an exam. It consists of 20 fill in the blanks questions where students will be asked to fill in the most appropriate preposition for each sentence. The activity is best suited for pre-intermediate levels students and is also great for an in-class activity or homework assignment.
With this preposition worksheet, students will practice navigating a town map. The activity follows the story of a boy named James who asks a police officer for directions to the library, but he needs your help to find the restaurant he's going to after. After reviewing the story and the town map, students will move onto the first activity where they will fill in a conversation between James and the police officer with the appropriate directions and prepositions to get from school to the library. In part two, students will help give James directions from the libary to the restaurant.
Incorporating music and songs into a lesson is always a fun way to change things up and make any difficult, drab topic more exciting. This song worksheet is perfect for complete beginners or early elementary students who are just learning about prepositional phrases. Teachers will need to hand out the lyrics sheet to each student. While the song is playing, students will need to circle the preposition that is bolded on the sheet. You can play the song multiple times if necessary - it's just a fun way to get them to start recognizing these phrases and how they are used in sentences.