1. Sentence-Frame Fill
3 frames with the target structure; students complete with their own content.
Three-minute, scaffolded grammar bell ringers for multilingual learners in grades 6–12. Sentence frames, simplified vocabulary, speaking-first warm-ups, and ELD-aligned retrieval.
The bell ringer most secondary English teachers run was designed for native English speakers. Five identification items, three minutes, no scaffold. Drop a newcomer into that routine and they either freeze, copy a neighbor, or fake it — and they get zero retrieval reps on a target they are actually building. Grammar bell ringers for ELLs deliver the same daily retrieval engine, but redesigned for multilingual learner acquisition.
The redesign is small but decisive. Add a sentence frame. Add a one-sentence oral rehearsal step. Simplify the vocabulary. Tag the target structure to the student’s WIDA proficiency level rather than the grade level. Same three minutes, same daily cadence, dramatically different acquisition outcomes. For the underlying framework, see how to teach grammar to ELL students; for general bell-ringer design, see grammar bell ringers.
Project a bell ringer slide. (1) 30-second oral rehearsal — students read the model sentence to a partner. (2) 90-second written practice — three sentence-frame items. (3) 30-second pair-check — partners compare answers. (4) 30-second whole-class share. Three minutes total. Repeated five days a week, this routine alone produces measurable WIDA growth in a quarter.
3 frames with the target structure; students complete with their own content.
Show an image; students write one sentence using the target structure (frame provided).
Three present-tense sentences; students rewrite in past or future. Frame provided.
Three sentences, two correct, one with the target structure broken. Students identify and fix.
Three statements; students transform each into a question using the target structure.
Three scrambled sentences; students reorder. Builds syntactic intuition fast.
A 60-second Grammar Spy speed round with simplified vocabulary.
DigitalCopy a model sentence; underline the target structure; write one of your own with the same pattern.
Students write 3 sentences using the target tense (2 true, 1 false). Partner guesses.
Translate one short sentence from L1 to English using the target structure. Honors linguistic background.
One target structure runs through the entire week. Each day rotates the bell-ringer format so the same structure gets five different angles of retrieval. Multilingual learners need this kind of varied repetition far more than native speakers; the format shift is what keeps the daily practice from sliding into boredom.
Pair the weekly cycle with mini-lessons from grammar mini lessons on Mondays and writing transfer tasks from writing support for ELL students on Fridays.
The same bell ringer should run with three scaffold tiers. Newcomers get a full sentence frame plus a picture cue plus a buddy. Intermediates get the frame only. Advanced students get no frame. Rotate buddy pairings weekly so newcomers hear varied input and intermediates get to function as language models. Build a wall bank of 20 reusable frames at the start of the year and refresh it quarterly.
Helpful next steps for your classroom.
Even 30 seconds of reading aloud doubles output volume across the week.
The target is the grammar, not the lexis. Simplified vocabulary is a feature, not a deficit.
Five varied formats on one structure beats five different structures across one week.
Strategic translation tasks validate linguistic background and accelerate noticing.
Three-minute daily warm-up routines redesigned for multilingual learners. They include sentence frames, simplified vocabulary, an oral rehearsal step, and proficiency-level scaffolds so ELLs get meaningful retrieval reps on the target structure.
They add sentence frames, simplify vocabulary, build in oral rehearsal, and tag content to WIDA proficiency rather than grade level. The format is the same length; the scaffolds are different.
Daily. The acquisition science is unambiguous: short, frequent retrieval beats long infrequent practice for multilingual learners every time.
For newcomers: present simple, present continuous, to be, basic question formation. For intermediates: past simple, modal verbs, comparatives, subordinating conjunctions. For advanced ELLs: perfect tenses, conditionals, passive voice, relative clauses.
No. Use recasts (modeling the correct form) during the oral and pair-check steps; reserve explicit correction for the whole-class share at the end.
Yes. The scaffolds (frames, simplified vocabulary, oral rehearsal) raise outcomes for every student in the room, not only multilingual learners.
Collect five bell-ringer responses per student per quarter and score them against the WIDA descriptor for the target structure. That is enough data for ACCESS-aligned planning.
Run the same bell ringer with three scaffold tiers: frame + picture + buddy for newcomers, frame only for intermediates, no frame for advanced. Build a 20-frame wall bank to reuse across the year.
Grammar Spy Membership ships daily mission templates with sentence frames, simplified vocabulary, audio support, and proficiency tags — designed to function as ELL bell ringers out of the box.
Scaffolded, three-minute warm-ups built for multilingual classrooms.
Explore more grammar lessons, worksheets, and classroom activities from Grammar Spy.