Hola everyone! Thanks for visiting! Here you'll find lesson ideas and reflections on teaching elementary Spanish. I hope you find something useful!
Tuesday, August 19, 2014
First Day Ideas
Kindergarten: After a couple rules and introductions, I start off the first day with the book, Say Hola to Spanish by Susan Middleton Elya. This book is not all in the TL, but it introduces some basic Spanish words that students can often figure out by the pictures. I have students say what the new words mean or have them point to objects. It also includes a few words that English speakers have borrowed. My kindergarteners the last two years have been surprised that they already know a few Spanish words. This book has really hooked them the last two years. After the story, I pass out the name tags from the book, Music that Teaches Spanish! by Patti Lozano. I fill in their names and they draw themselves on the blank person. We use these all year. While the students are completing their name tags, I am going to move around the room and complete their pre-test. I will have a mat with pictures. I'll say a list of words and have the students point to each one. I'll check off every correct choice. I am hoping to finish these within two class periods. Cross your fingers for me, please! I got this per-test idea from Leslie Davison at the NTPRS conference this summer. After name tags are finished, we'll play a name game from Music that Teaches Spanish! I say a rhyme in Spanish that asks the child's name. The child taking his/her turn gets to hold the big blue microphone. To keep it interesting, I have them do different motions during the rhyme and have them use different voices for the rhyme or when they say their names.
First and Second Grade: I am going to start both classes by playing a name game. This will be my second of third year with most of these students, but I'm still working on all of the names. I'm going to pre-test them using the same words as kindergarten, but I will have them write what they think each word means. Some first graders might use pictures. After they finish the pretest, they will make a name tag similar to what third thru fifth will make, but I'll have them draw or write three of their favorite things on the back. After name tags, I will do some TPR practice in their teams. They heard some of these verbs last year. I am splitting each class into two teams, Barcelona and Madrid. I got this idea from Jason Fritze at the NTPRS conferences. If there is time, I'll turn it into a competition, maybe Simon Says, so I can start to encourage the students to work together in their teams.
Third-Fifth Grade: On the first day of school, I'll introduce some rules and procedures. I'm trying to split these up through out the week; introducing them as needed. I don't want to put the class to sleep day one. I will also get my pre-assessment out of the way. This will be a three question vocabulary quiz. The students will write the English translation of the three structures we'll practice for the first two months. After I give my pre-assessment, I am going to have the students create two name tags. One will just include the student's first name. They will hold onto this during class so I can practice names. The second is for me to use when planning for PQA and stories. On the front, they will write first and last name in their favorite color. This saves me space on the back of the card. On the back, I will have them split the card into six boxes. They can draw or write these six items on the back:
1. Age
2. A like
3. A dislike
4.A want
5. Something he/she has (pet, sibling, favorite toy, etc.)
6. Interesting fact
While students are working, I am going to pass around the iPads and have students take "selfies" for a a game we are playing to practice se llama. All of the pictures will be put on a PowerPoint for the game. We'll be using it to play Ten Ball. After making name tags, they will practice some TPR verbs in teams.
There isn't a lot of TL used for the first day, but we're starting from scratch. That will changer very soon!
If you have any questions or suggestions, please let me know! I hope you found something useful here :-)
What do you do for the first day of school?
Friday, July 25, 2014
Committing to TPRS/CI
I have posted before about how I want to increase my target language use and how I think TPRS would be such a useful tool in the classroom. I tried it a couple times, and in my opinion it did not go well, so I stopped using it. Big mistake! I went back to doing what I was doing before: list of vocabulary, games to memorize the list, and maybe teach a phrase or two. I was bored and frustrated in my classroom and I know my students were too. I had a lot of behavior issues, and I don't really blame my students. If they had been engaged, class would not have been such a fight. The last day of school could not come fast enough. I was in survival mode.
¡Ayúdame!
After NTPRS, I feel ready to start tackling my plans for next year. I am setting 3 goals for next year.
1. Be clear and consistent with my rules and procedures.
I feel like classroom management is an area where I struggle. I'm still trying to find a system that works for me. I think part of the problem is that I do not spend enough time on procedures. I was explaining something on the first day, and then I was shocked when the students did not remember or did not choose to do what was expected. I rushed through these procedures because I have such a short time with my students, I felt like spending too much time on management was a waste. It was the wrong choice because instead of spending a little extra time in the beginning, I was dealing with issues all year. This is also a goal because it was very clear in all of the example lessons this week that TPRS will only work in a well managed classroom.
2. Focus more time getting to know my students.
Community is important in any classroom, but it is crucial in a foreign language classroom for students to feel comfortable to take risks with the language. I am very embarrassed to say this is another area rushed through. I think this played a roll in my classroom management issues. I never built a mutual respect and my students probably didn't feel like I was interested in them. I think PQA will be very helpful in establishing these relationships. I am looking forward to thinking of my students by their likes and hobbies instead of their behavior in my classroom.
3. Create lessons focused on input and stories.
No more vocabulary lists! No more out of context language! This goal I pretty self explanatory. Now that I am more comfortable with best practices, I am going to teach with TPRS, even if it doesn't go well in the beginning. I am armed with ¡Cuéntame! and Hola Niños as guides and ready to jump in! Hopefully my students will be more engaged and begin to enjoy learning a new language as much as I do.
I will be reflecting about my experiences through the year and posting what is working and what is not. Hopefully I will come up with some ideas that others will be interested in. Any suggestions are welcome! Thank you again to everyone at NTPRS 14. You really inspired me.
Sunday, November 10, 2013
90% in the Target Language? Help!
With my new goal in mind, I spent the second day of the conference trying to find activities or suggestions to use in my classroom. Most sessions were focusing on middle school and high school, but I was able to find activities that I can adapt to my young students.
Conversation Switchers: I learned about this activity from two teachers who work in L'Anse Creuse Public Schools. Students all receive a card. Some cards have a question, other cards have possible answers. Students walk around the room and have mini conversations. A student reads a question and the partner reads the answer on his card. Then, students trade cards and find other students to talk to. Question and answer cards are two different colors so students know who they can talk to.
Birthday Game: This activity is also from the LCPS teachers. There are two cards for each day of the year. For example, a card can say, "el 10 de octubre." There are two of each in case more than one student in a class has the same birthday. First, students find the card that matches their birthday. Once they find the correct cards, they hand them to the teacher. The teacher passes the cards out randomly. Students should not have their own birthday. When the game starts, students walk around telling other students their birthdays. If the person they are talking to has that date, they switch cards and the person who found his birthday is finished with the game.
Word Lists: This activity is from two teachers at a Country Day school in Michigan. Students receive a couple vocabulary words and they have to have a conversation and incorporate those words.
Dice and Pictures: This activaty is from the same two teachers. Questions are put into pocket dice. A picture is shown to the students. Students take turns rolling and they answer the question on the dice about the picture. Older students can create questions themselves.
These next suggestions are routines for the classroom. These are some suggestions on the checklist.
Celebrate: Use a variety of positive, celebratory phrases in the target language. Teach these phrases to the students and encourage them to praise each other.
Instructions in Target Language: Use written directions in English, but explain using the target language.
Language Sign: Display a sign in the room so students know which language is being used. Students cannot used the language that isn't displayed.
These are the activities I plan to add. I think they will work well with my third thru fifth graders. I'm still trying to think of how increase my language with kindergarten through second grade.I know TPRS would be one way to solve my problem. I have attended a workshop and still plan to use it, but I want to have some variety. Also, my students really enjoy playing games in class so I want to continue using a variety of activities which will eventually include TPRS.
How do you keep your elementary students 90% in the target language?
Sunday, September 15, 2013
A Look Inside
Bulletin Boards
This board shows the flags of the 21 Spanish speaking countries. Near each flag, I give the country's name, capital, population, a famous person from history, and a tourist attraction.
On this bulletin board, I'll hang Spanish students find outside the classroom. Food labels, directions, etc.

These bulletin boards show the vocabulary for our first unit. I'm going to change these for every rotation.
Classroom Management
I plan on using centers during most of my classes this year. Each student will know their group color and we will use this chart to keep track of the rotation. The name of the activity will be next to the group.
My elementary schools are adopting the Leader in Me philosophy. This is my leader board. I have nine jobs that I will rotate everyday.
The picture of the lemonade and the pumpkin is what I use as an attention grabber.
The star boarder underneath is where I will keep track of the classes' points. I'm using a bingo classroom management. I'll give points for good choices. At the end of class, a student will color in the matching number on a bingo board. When the class has a bingo, they choose a reward coupon. They can receive extra recess, a movie day, a piece of candy, or to sit by a friend.
Part of my class schedule is also in this location. The students always ask right away what we are doing that day so now they know where to look.
Friday, August 9, 2013
Making Changes
This summer, I'm spending a lot of time on
Pinterest and Twitter looking for ideas to use in my classroom. I have found
some amazing ideas that I can't wait to use. It has been a real motivator to
get back into school mode. Here are some ideas that I have. Unfortunately, I
don't have pictures at the moment but hopefully my explanations will be enough.
I just want to add a little note...many of these ideas are not mine. I found
most of them on Pinterest. I don't want to take credit for anyone else's hard
work and creativity.
•
Lesson Ideas
◦
Pulling sticks for TPRS: I came
up with this idea as I was attempting to put stories together for some TPRS
lessons. Since I teach elementary school, I'm worried that my students may
struggle to think of names or places for the characters. I plan on using
student names but young kids enjoy pretending and I want to give them that
chance. I have two cups of sticks: one with names and one with places. Many of
the places are Spanish speaking countries. I am hoping to tie in some pop-up
geography/culture along with the pop-up grammar. I'm not sure how this will
work, but I'm hoping it keeps the stories a little more interesting.
◦
Centers: Towards the end of the
year, I noticed my students worked better in small groups. My plans these year
include more small group/center days than whole group lessons. I'm going to run
one station so that I can see how students are progressing. Also, I'm going to
introduce TPRS in small groups. When they are comfortable, I am going to begin
using it in whole group lessons. I want to do more projects and I think this
make work time more productive because the students will know they have a
limited amount of time plus they'll already be in a group. ***I'm still looking
for center ideas if anyone has any. ***
•
Organization/Set-up
◦
Hanging File Folders (found
on Pinterest): At each school, I see 15-16 different classes. I always had
piles on my desk and I would set down a class list or seating chart and it
would instantly disappear. I'm hoping these folders will eliminate this
problem. I found the directions for this online. I glued eight file folders
together then duct-taped the edges (pretty tape of course (-:). I labeled each
folder with a teacher's name. I made two sets of hanging file folders for each
school. Hopefully I won't lose anymore important lists because they should all
be in these folders, hanging from the board.
◦
Copy Drawers
(Pinterest): I know many teachers have folders labeled Monday-Friday to keep
copies organized. I wanted to do that last year, but with so many classes, I
didn't have the space. I found someone who uses plastic drawers to do this. I
think they're pretty cheap at Sam's Club or Walmart. They have a lot more space
and keeps everything looking much more organized. I'm definitely trying that
this year.
◦
Theme Bulletin Boards: Last year,
I had a word wall in my room, but I didn't refer to it much and the kids never
used it. This year, I'm going to create a bulletin board to go with each unit
and I'll let the students use the vocabulary and pictures on the board for
games and projects. I might have to change this plan when I start teaching more
than two units and one time. I'm running out of wall space and that's a lot to
take apart and put together every month.
•
Classroom Management
◦
Bingo (Pinterest): Last year, I tried
a five point system. Every class could earn five points during Spanish if they
did five things that I had posted on a bulletin board. I'm not happy with the
results. I think part of the problem was if they lost a point in the beginning
of class, most of them didn't try to earn the rest because they knew there was
no reward. This bingo plan I found will hopefully work much better. The class
earns a point for doing something positive. The bingo board has numbers 1-100
(I think I'm going to change this because that is a lot of points for 35
minutes). At the end of class, we count the points and fill in the number. Once
the class has a bingo, they earn a reward. Hopefully this works better since it
gives them more opportunities.
◦
Jobs (Teachers Pay Teachers): I know
most teachers give students classroom jobs. I tried this at the end of the year
but I wasn't happy with how I organized it. I was giving cards to kids that had
the job printed on it. It was too hard to keep track of who had which job. This
year I'm actually making a board and assigning jobs based on student numbers. I
noticed jobs did improve behavior. Students lost their jobs for the day if I
had to talk to them too many times.
These are the main changes I'm working on for now. I would love to hear
what you do or if you have tried any of these.
Sunday, July 21, 2013
Inspired by TPRS
The benefit of TPRS that I'm very excited to see is the comfort level the students build with listening to and speaking in the target language. In my opinion, those are the most important parts of acquiring a new language. I was always the student that was terrified to speak in Spanish class. I was too afraid to make mistakes and I never trusted myself. I'm beginning to see this in some of my students. That just breaks my heart! I try as hard as I can to create a classroom environment where making mistakes is encouraged. It is even on of the rules on my wall. I tell them over and over again that it is very important to try and make a mistakes because it helps them learn. I'm hoping TPRS will decrease the fear and increase the language use. I think this will help because for a majority of questions students respond as a whole class. It is the teachers job to look for students who are confused and not responding. Also, the teacher allows the students to control the lessons. Students do hand signals to tell the teacher that they are confused, need something repeated, or need the teacher to slow down. The story doesn't continue until all students understand. Basically, the teacher is teaching the content, but the students are teaching the teacher how to teach it. Also, The teacher shows no expectation that the students already know something. No matter what the students need translated or explained, the teacher does it even if it a grammar rule or vocabulary word they have been working on for weeks. Students never feel like they should know something already or like they can't ask for help.
While I am very excited to teach using TPRS, I am a little nervous. This is a brand new method for me. I had never seen it before the conference. I was never taught that way. There is a lot to remember. I have to ask certain kinds of questions. I have to keep the story on track while taking suggestions from students. I have to speak at a pace that is easy for my students to follow. I have to monitor the room and make sure that each student is able to answer every question. The list goes on and on. That is a lot to do! A great example of multitasking. The part that worries me the most is teaching this way to kindergarten and first grade. They are still learning to read and part of TPRS is writing any unknown word on the board. I plan on using lots of pictures and visuals with them, but there isn't a picture for every single word. Eventually, I'll find a way that works with my students and I know that it will take some time to work all of the bugs out, even with my upper elementary students. I just have to take one step at a time.
I hope that I have inspired you to begin learning about TPRS and incorporating it into your classroom. If you use it already, I would LOVE to read about some of your experiences or suggestions.
Wednesday, July 3, 2013
Newbie
I'll be attending some professional development days this summer for technology as well as foreign language. I'm looking forward to sharing what I learn and hearing some experiences that you've had. I'll also be planning next year's units: school, colors, animals, weather/seasons, and clothing. I'll post ideas as I find them.