Activities to Teach Weather in Spanish | Speaking Routines

Hands-on routines help learners name daily conditions in Spanish and respond with short, usable phrases.

Weather talk shows up all over: morning meetings, travel plans, sports, even small talk at the door. Students hear it in clips, captions, and songs too. When they can ask ¿Qué tiempo hace? and answer smoothly, confidence jumps fast.

This post gives classroom-ready activities that push real speaking, not worksheet-only recall. You’ll get routines for five minutes a day, bigger games for longer blocks, and quick ways to check progress without piling on grading.

What To Teach First So Students Speak Fast

Start with language students can use on day one. Keep it tight, then grow it.

Core question and answer frames

Teach one question and three answer patterns before you add lots of new words:

  • ¿Qué tiempo hace?
  • Hace + frío / calor / viento.
  • Está + nublado / soleado.
  • Hay + lluvia / nieve / niebla.

That set lets students describe today, yesterday, and tomorrow with a tiny tweak: Hoy, Ayer, Mañana.

High-use weather words

Pick words that match your season and your learners’ lives. A starter set that fits most classes:

  • soleado, nublado, lluvioso, nevado
  • frío, fresco, templado, caluroso
  • viento, tormenta, niebla

One quick meaning check

Ask for a gesture, not a translation. Students point up for sun, wiggle fingers for rain, hug arms for cold, fan face for heat. You get instant feedback and keep Spanish flowing.

Activities To Teach Weather In Spanish For Daily Practice

This section is built for routines. Once the routine runs itself, you stop “teaching weather” and start using weather as class language.

Activity 1: The 90-second weather opener

Put a simple weather icon on the board as students walk in. When the bell rings, you say the question once. Then students answer to a partner using one of the three frames.

  • Round 1: speak only
  • Round 2: add a reason: porque… (bajo, alto, húmedo, seco)
  • Round 3: add a plan: Voy a… (llevar una chaqueta, tomar agua)

Activity 2: Weather chain talk

Students stand in a circle. One student says a weather line for a place: En Madrid, está nublado. Next student repeats it and adds a new place. The chain keeps going. If a student breaks the chain, they sit, listen, then rejoin on the next round.

Activity 3: The classroom forecast board

Assign two students as forecasters for the week. They update a small board each day: icon, temperature word, wind word. Their job is to report it at the start of class in two sentences. Keep the script visible at first, then fade it out.

Activity 4: “Swap the card” speed pairs

Make a deck of weather cards: icons plus a Spanish phrase under each icon. Students pair up. Partner A reads the phrase. Partner B acts it out and answers with a full sentence. Then they swap cards and rotate partners after one minute.

Speaking Games That Get Past Single Words

Once students can label conditions, push them into choices, opinions, and plans. That’s where fluency starts to show.

Activity 5: Four-corner weather choices

Label corners: soleado, nublado, lluvioso, nevado. You say a scenario: “School trip,” “Soccer game,” “Beach day.” Students move to the corner they want and give one sentence that matches the choice: Prefiero… porque…

Activity 6: The “wrong forecast” challenge

Show a photo with clear weather. Then read a forecast that does not match it. Students must fix it using a full sentence. This keeps listening sharp and rewards quick repair.

Activity 7: Mini role cards for real talk

Give pairs a role card with a simple goal:

  • Friend A wants to go out; Friend B wants to stay home.
  • One student packed wrong clothes; the other gives advice.
  • A parent texts a child about what to wear.

Students must use at least two weather lines and one clothing or plan line. You circulate and tally target forms on a clipboard.

Vocabulary Accuracy Without Killing The Flow

Students mix up tiempo, clima, and meteorología. Fix it early with plain language and quick checks.

In Spanish class, ¿Qué tiempo hace? points to what’s happening right now. Clima is the typical pattern over time. The Real Academia Española warns not to use “meteorología” as a synonym for “tiempo atmosférico.”
Diccionario panhispánico de dudas: “meteorología” is a handy citation when you want a clear rule.

For formal weather words, you can borrow from official glossaries. The U.S. National Weather Service keeps an
English–Spanish weather dictionary with technical terms. Spain’s national weather agency also posts a maritime
glossary of weather terms with definitions written for the public.

Use those sources as your “teacher notes.” In class, stick to student-friendly words, then add one official term when students are ready.

Activity Planning Table For Weather Practice

Use this table to pick an activity that matches your time and your class energy.

Activity Main skill Teacher setup
90-second weather opener Partner speaking Icon slide
Weather chain talk Memory + speaking Place list
Forecast board job Short presentation Board space
Swap the card speed pairs Pronunciation Card deck
Four-corner choices Opinion sentences Corner labels
Wrong forecast challenge Listening repair Photo set
Mini role cards Real dialogue Role slips
Weather story dice Creative speaking Dice grid
Forecast hotline recording Speaking clarity Phone/record app

Writing And Reading Tasks That Still Feel Like Real Life

Reading and writing work best after students have spoken the language. Keep tasks short and tied to a purpose.

Activity 8: Weather text message threads

Give students a short chat template with blanks. They fill in weather lines, clothing, and a plan. Then they read the thread with a partner and act it out. Start with one thread, then let them write their own.

Activity 9: Micro forecasts with real maps

Show a simple map with icons and temperatures. Students write three lines: one for their city, one for a city in a Spanish-speaking country, and one for a city a classmate picks.

If you want a bank of official terms for forecast wording, the National Weather Service has a master
weather glossary that defines common words used in alerts and public products.

Activity 10: Weather poems in four lines

Students write a four-line poem with a pattern:

  • Line 1: Hoy… (weather)
  • Line 2: Yo… (feeling)
  • Line 3: Voy a… (action)
  • Line 4: Porque… (reason)

They read it aloud in small groups. You listen for verb forms and weather frames.

Hands-on Visuals And Props Students Actually Use

Props help in mixed-level classes. They also lower the fear of speaking, since students can point while they talk.

Weather icon magnets

Put sun, clouds, rain, snow, wind icons on magnets. A student builds today’s weather on the board, then reports it. Next student changes one icon and reports tomorrow’s weather.

Clothing grab bag

Bring a small bag with a scarf, hat, sunglasses, mini umbrella, and a light jacket. A student pulls an item and must say what weather fits it: Uso la bufanda cuando hace frío. Then the class asks a follow-up: ¿Y cuando llueve?

Weather story dice

Create dice faces with icons: sun, rain, wind, storm, fog, snow. Students roll twice and link the results with one connector word: y, pero. The goal is a full sentence, not a list.

Assessment That Feels Like Part Of Class

You can check growth in under five minutes. Keep the data simple, then move on.

One-minute speaking checks

Call students one by one while others do a quick warm-up. Ask three prompts: today, tomorrow, and a city of choice. Score with a 0–2 scale: missing, partial, solid.

Partner listening tally

Give each student three checkboxes: Hace, Está, Hay. During partner talk, they listen for each frame once and tick it. Then partners switch roles. This keeps all students active and gives you a quick scan of class output.

Exit slips with one sentence

Students write one sentence and one reason. You glance at them as students leave. Save only a few that show common errors, then use them for a quick board fix next class.

Progress Check Table For Weather Spanish Skills

This table helps you match a skill to a quick check, so you can spot gaps early.

Skill Quick check What to watch
Question form Call-and-response Rising intonation, word order
Frame choice Partner tally Hace vs está vs hay
Pronunciation Speed pairs ll, r, stress
Listening Wrong forecast fix Fast repair, full sentence
Writing Exit slip Accent marks, agreement
Fluency One-minute talk Few pauses, complete ideas
Transfer Map micro forecast New city, same frames

Common Sticking Points And Quick Fixes

These are the errors you’ll hear again and again. A small fix routine keeps them from becoming habits.

Mixing “hace” and “está”

Teach a simple rule: use hace with temperature and wind words, use está with sky conditions. Then drill with “either-or” cards: students hold up A for hace, B for está, and say the full line.

Overusing “es”

Students want to say es frío. Give them a chant: No es, hace. Two rounds, then return to normal class talk.

Agreement errors

When students write está nublado for a feminine noun, pause and point to the noun. Students repeat with agreement: La mañana está nublada. Keep it brief and move on.

A Classroom Checklist You Can Print

Use this list to keep weather Spanish alive across the term:

  • Run a 90-second opener three days a week.
  • Keep the three frames visible until students stop reaching for them.
  • Rotate a forecaster job so students speak to the room.
  • Use one photo “wrong forecast” each week for listening repair.
  • Save three real student sentences each week for a fast board fix.
  • Cycle places: your town, a Spanish-speaking city, a student’s pick.

References & Sources