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Restorative Summer – Three Steps for 90% Target Language and 100% CI in the New School Year

June 17, 2017 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

By June 15th, Facebook is popping with teachers planning on how to reach 90%TL with their level one classes.
By June 15th, Facebook is popping with teachers planning on how to reach 90%TL with their level one classes.

I wish taxpayers who begrudge our summer break could see all of the June posts popping up on Facebook  as World Language Teachers research and plan for the new school year.

Many posts ask how to make a level one class 100% comprehensible so that both teachers and students can stay in the target language.

I’ve always addressed this in pieces but it’s time to put it all three steps together as teachers recharge and envision the way they want their classes to run.

Incorporate these three steps and you will have your 90% Target Language class  . . . and superior classroom management.

  1. Make a daily tech guide – it can be in PPT, ActiveInspire, Classflow, SmartNotebook, GoogleSlides, whatever works for you.

Create a slide for each activity and use a remote presentation device or remote mouse so you can click through the slides from any spot in the room, say near the students who go off task most frequently.  Click here to download the first day and see videos of the first week to give you an idea.

Spanish First Day

ESL First Day

French First Day

Mandarin here.

My book describes it in more detail. 

Other bundles are also Spanish Lessons here..

French Lessons here.

2. Use transition videos before each slide to keep the students on task and in the target language.

See them here.   Spanish available here.

English here.

French here.

German here.

Italian here.

Latin here.

Mandarin here.

3. Use direct instruction to teach students 50 survival phrases set to music.  Include the matching posters and desk reference sheet – focusing on the student – to – student slides so that they know how to talk to one another in the target language.

 

See them here.  Available here.

French here.

Mandarin here.

 

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Classroom Management, Comprehensible Input, Reflective Teacher, Transition Videos, Visual Comprehensible Input Tagged With: 100% comprehensible input, 90% target language, Chinese, ci, French, German, Italian, Latin, Mandarin, OWL, Spanish, Spanish classroom management, Spanish music, Spanish song, Spanish Survival Vocabulary, Spanish Teacher, Spanish video, staying in the target language, tprs, transition videos, transitions, visual and musical comprehensible input, visual comprehensible input

Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!
Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!

Outstanding Spanish and French Teachers Go Beyond Fun Spanish Class and French Class Activities and Create Joy

October 16, 2016 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Students will remember you by how you made them feel. Become one of those amazing teachers that converts Spanish Class Fun Activities into a joyful classroom - - just add Transition Videos
Students will remember you by how you made them feel. Become one of those amazing teachers that converts Spanish Class Fun Activities into a joyful classroom – – just add Transition Videos

Only four entries in google for "Joy in Spanish Class"Something is afoot in my Spanish classroom this year.  For the first time in 30 years, students walk in sighing with relief that they are in room 363 because it is so “chill” in here.

Every fifty-minute period we go through about 8 activities on 100 slides with no gaps or down time.   One new student mistakenly thought he had stumbled into an Honors class because of all we do. We aim for 90% target language from day one –  past students confided their first month was stressful. Current students express their relief and joy at being in my class.  Joy!

There are over 20 million entries in Google for “Fun Spanish Class Activities” but there are only four for “Joy in the Spanish Class”

Only four entries in google for "Joy in Spanish Class"

Fun activities are the preterit tense with defined beginnings and endings.

Joy is the flowing imperfect tense with no defined ending.

Fun is external. Joy is internal

One fun activity for the past 20 years has been our “Song of the Week.”  Students love the five minutes of the class devoted to wonderful songs.  This year is different. To keep students in the target language and on task, I developed transition videos.  The unintended consequence is that they make students feel joyful!

Six to ten brief 30 to 60 second transition videos are sprinkled through out the 50 minute class period releasing a steady stream of endorphins as students sing along and imitate the announcer’s voice.

According to http://www.emedexpert.com/tips/music.shtml music is powerful.

Music enhances intelligence, learning, and IQ. 

Music fights fatigue.

Music calms and  relaxes.

Music improves memory performance.

Music reduces stress and aids relaxation.

Music improves mood and decreases depression.

Music is a great anti-anxiety remedy.

Transition videos are the glue in between fun Spanish class activities that create joy.  Other teachers using them report the same experience – one confided it was the first time she overheard students in the hall gushing about her class and the only difference is the transition videos.

 

 

Scroll to the end for videos in English, French, German, Italian, Latin and Mandarin.

As my students walk in each day they hear “the day song” and soon they are using the words to express their feelings.

1.  When I am ready to start, I play the class count down video – students know to be seated and quiet as they count down the 3 -2 – 1 ya!  French version below!

Students use this expression spontaneously before beginning anything.

2  I greet them, ask how they are, and tell them the objective of the day and the class activities of the day – all on 3 slides.   I play the “Take out the Homework” video and show the answers on the board while I quickly check for completion.  Since day two of the school year when I first played it, my students spontaneously tell me ‘la tengo’ or ‘no la tengo’ and if someone doesn’t have it everyone else asks, “¿en serio?”

 

3. Check for questions and play the musical slide to take attendance – we get nasty emails if we miss attendance for any class!  My students tell me” X está ausente” or “no está ausente, en el baño.”

4.  Play “The Daily Review”song and complete five minutes of review.  My Spanish 1 students can fluently say “cuando necesito gramática perfecta” and “¿Qué hago – repaso, repaso, repaso”

5.   Play “Take Out the Vocab List video and they can all mimic “Favor de sacar la lista del vocabulario.”

I also play the self- talk musical slide that reminds students if they don’t get it right to tell them selves – I don’t have it yet!  I introduce a chunk of vocabulary, practice comprehension with gestures and then show slides with visuals.  My Spanish 1 students use “lo acerté spontaneously in many situations” and even “no lo acerté – todavía.”

6.    Play the video about finding a random partner of the week or if we already did it play the musical slide to find this week’s partner.

My students can say ¿Quién sera? even though they won’t be taught this tense for three more years.

7. Practice with partner(s) usually some kind of spontaneous speech activity – there are videos that show the students how to play guessing games. If we have the computers then they will watch “The Take Out the Computer”  video, “Practice QuizletLive” video, students practice on their own, play the quizlet live video and finally I play the  “Put Away the Computers” video and rearrange the chairs slide.  My students quickly learn the games that have songs to teach the vocabulary and create spontaneous dialogues – month two of Spanish One!  They can all do “más alto, más bajo” and many others.

8. Slide leading into next activity – could be a listening activity or a reading activity or Simon says.  My students all know “vamos a jugar” and can follow it with many games.

 

9. Tidy up the room.

_13 Que desorden Pls no posting – trimmed from ellen shrager on Vimeo.

 

10.Take out the Agenda video and students write down the homework.  My students can say any line from this song at appropriate times.

“ay no me gusta, pero es importante”  “Saco mi agenda, escribo la tarea.”

_20 Saco Mi Agenda Pls no posting – trimmed from ellen shrager on Vimeo.

11. Closure – students sing and then tell me something new they learned.  My students can spontaneously say “Hoy, hoy aprendi ” and complete the thought.

My public school seventh, eighth, and ninth graders in Spanish One produce spontaneous speech even if they don’t want to – they can’t help themselves because music enters their brains and remains like nothing else that I have tried in these past 30 years.  You can make your own songs or use mine.

You can even use  my videos,  created by native speakers, and offered here  on TeacherspayTeachers. Or click here for the starter kit!  They help support several Venezuelan families. We are making them in French, Mandarin, German, and Latin, and English.  What I love about TeacherspayTeachers is that it helps new teachers to quickly climb the learning curve by selecting tried and true activities from veteran teachers still in the classroom, like me!  If you need something new to get your students spontaneously  speaking in the target language – this is it!

 

Click here for English Videos

 

Click here for French Videos

 

Click here for German videos

Click here for Italian videos.

Click here for Mandarin videos

 

Explore your Spanish options from this Pinterest Board.  

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Classroom Management, Comprehensible Input, Daily Songs Improve Classroom Structure, Transition Videos Tagged With: 100% comprehensible input, ci, classroom management, comprehensible input, German, Italian, Latin, Mandarin, Spanish class, spanish class songs, Spanish song, Spanish Survival Vocabulary, staying in the target language, student behavior, tprs, transitions

Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!
Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!

TCI CI TPRS VCI CVMCI 90% TL- Oh, My!

October 3, 2016 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

tprs, tci,ci,cvmci, steps along the path to creating teaching voice for language teachers spanish french german latin chinese esl
Language teachers must choose their path to creating their unique teaching voices.

 

The defining moment when  language teachers realize that comprehensible input is the key to students learning a language is a mixed blessing: they are excited with possibilities and overwhelmed with how to do it.  This blog reflects the best practices for world language teachers in 2017 using technology to reach the LINKSTERS, also known as Generation Z, those born after 2000.

This blog is a response to a teacher who reached out to me on my TPT Q & A page and wrote:

So I am loving your slides! I have a few questions and I wanted to ask you. I see that your site speaks about TPRS and now VCI. Do you use both? Or do you now primarily use VCI?

My 90% Target Language Journey.

Today’s TPRS is very different from what Blaine actually was using in his classroom.

I first learned about TPRS back around 199 something when Blaine Ray and Susi Gross started working together. I think we all had breakfast together in New Jersey during their second seminar together.

Back then, on that second day of the seminar, I was earnestly telling him that I couldn’t give up “my song of the week” and “my daily newspaper headline readings”  music-notes– captureall wonderful additions to my classroom as we had  just installed  the internet in school. Susi was smiling and tilting her head as she taught the way I did, all the while  Blaine insisted we drop everything and do his seven-step process.  With Susi’s influence, it was whittled down to five steps, and many best practices were tucked under the TPRS umbrella. umbrellaSusi also softened some of  Blaine’s examples of dealing with non-compliant students, his insistence that he never prepped for class, rather played golf 20 minutes after the last bell rang,  and his stories that crossed certain lines; Susi made TPRS become a more gentle and loving way of teaching.  Together they became  a dynamic teaching duo, attracting many great teachers. Their message to teachers to use more target language with the students and focus less on textbook activities resonated with many.  They added wonderful teaching practices like reading“embedded reading” and “movietalk” to the TPRS umbrella. movie-talkSusi started doing workshops on “the song of the week.”   It became an energizing  movement among World Language educators.  It also became more fluid.  Certain parts, like gesturing the vocabulary, became optional and not mandatory as committed teachers tried different things to test what worked best with their students, and reported back the results.

Some of the TPRS gurus stopped teaching and focused on giving seminars and creating books.  In my  opinion, while they represented good teaching, they  stopped representing the latest teaching practices available with technology.

Those who stopped teaching never had to teach with high-stakes testing and with compliance with national goals.  They never had to teach students who have no other alternatives because the electives have all been cut.  They never taught students with cell phones fact checking everything they said. They haven’t taught 1:1 and some missed teaching with an interactive board.  Teachers who had stopped teaching believed they knew about our new reality, but they never lived it.  With technology today, we can easily create compelling opportunities for students to interact spontaneously, reducing the novelty of circling and storytelling from the 90’s.

Predictably, there was a split in the TPRS camp!  It was somewhat hushed up, but it fell along many of the beliefs that divide our country: the definition of marriage.  Groups split off and CI and TCI were two of them.

About this time, ACTFL started developing the idea of 90% Target Language teaching earlier than the traditional benchmark of the third year of the language.

Along the path  to learning with 90% TL  during the first year,  students must engage with compelling, comprehensible input.  Dr Krashen’s  ideas about comprehensible input and not pushing for output gained more momentum.

A lively debate has grown as to the ‘best’ path to total comprehensible input.  Probably 99% per cent of teachers in the classroom today support eclectic activities as stepping stones to create the right path for each individual teacher.   But there are a vocal few who insist that only their way that matches their teaching voice is the universal path for all.  Some appear to have plenty of time to bully and belittle people who choose a different path to comprehensible input.  Hence, a lot of us don’t engage in theory debates, we use the latest technology and other tools to prepare lessons that bring remarkable results for our classroom management and for our students speaking in the target language.

While I can choose among many different kind of activities suggested by TPRS, CI, OWL, AIM, and  TCI,  my students have taught me that they need visual support for their comprehensible input.visual-3333

I started offering a slide for every activity and then for transitions and the next thing I knew, the whole class was scripted with support and the Spanish One students and I were able to stay in the target language by using Visual Comprehensible Input.

I thought I was set until retirement when a funny thing happened.  The class of ’95 wanted me to join FaceBook so that I could be up on all of their activities for the reunion.  From there, I was able to connect with some of my friends from when I lived Venezuela.  They are desperate for work and money.  Next thing I know, I am paying them to sing my songs and to bring my storyboards to life in videos.  Now all of my transitions are supported by videos and the number of slides needed to tell students what to do has been reduced to a 30 second clip showing them what to do.

 

I am astounded. On the second day of class,  I showed the “Saquen la Tarea”  transitional video, and as I walked around the room, the students each said “La tengo.”

 

We haven’t looked back.  While I don’t know much about research, I believe that the focus on Dr. Krashen’s theory only goes so far.  Once I introduce musical transition videos, the output gushes out of their mouths like nothing I have ever seen.

 

 

 

Sure they sing my Sr. Wooly songs with enthusiasm and asked to go to the bathroom, but that is just one of my 50 musical  survival slides.  The 35 transition videos with the announcer voice and the 10 transition videos with the songs and the 50 musical survival slides  all have entered a different part of the brain, in my opinion.  I think the next step, is CVMCI  Compelling Visual and Musical Comprehensible Input.

So, Olgie, to answer your question, I use many activities also used by TPRS, CI, AIM, TCI and OWL teaching voices, but the latest development is CVMCI.  No theory, no research, just my classroom experience.  I’ll be sharing what I believe to be cutting edge ideas in Lansdale, PA on October 5th, in Boston, MA at ACTFL on Friday, November 18th, and at Central States in Chicago on Friday, March 10, 2017.

These videos support some very desperate families in Venezuela.  Read my blog about them and what you can do to help.

You can help some starving Venezuelans
All net proceeds go to help three Venezuelan Families to survive their economic crises.

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Comprehensible Input, Uncategorized Tagged With: ci, cvmci, ESL, French, German, Latin, Mandarin, Spanish, tci, tprs

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Stop Students Speaking in Spanish Infinitives – Motivate Your Students to Conjugate!

March 19, 2016 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

About a quarter of my students just use infinitives . . . until this recording! They cranked up their efforts because they don’t want to sound “dumb” and “annoying.”

Try it – you’ll be glad you did!

https://minutebyminutespanish.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/03/Spanish-Speaking-In-Infinitives-Is-Annoying-MinutebyMinuteSpanish-blog.mp4
About a quarter of my students just use infinitives . . . until this recording! They cranked up their efforts because they don’t want to sound stupid and annoying! Try it – you’ll be glad you did!
About a quarter of my students just use infinitives . . . until this recording!   They cranked up their efforts because they don’t want to sound “dumb”  and “annoying.” Try it – you’ll be glad you did!

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Reflective Teacher Tagged With: motivate students to conjugate, Spanish Conjugate, Spanish conjugation, Spanish infinitives, students only use infinitives, Students refuse to conjugate

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Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!

Super Engaging Lapbook for Spanish-Speaking Countries, Capitals, Flags, Breakfasts

November 8, 2015 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Students love the change of pace from hi-tech lessons to creating their own Spanish Lapbook!
Students love the change of pace from hi-tech lessons to creating their own Spanish Lapbook!

How do I keep the other students engaged while individually assessing their oral proficiency or during an individual  speaking performance-based assessment?

How do I combat their groan of “worksheets” when I announce I will be out and they will be having a substitute who may or may not speak Spanish?

How do I get my Level One students excited about learning about other countries?

How can my Level One students be subtly exposed to the nuances of grammar in an exciting way?

Between July and October, I must have spent over forty hours thinking about a captivating answer to these questions.

My answer is to use Pam Kaatz’s song of the countries and capitals of South America and focusing on the eight Spanish-Speaking countries in South America in the order of her song. Pam has kindly allowed me to include her song, and for more information about her clever ideas,  go to Pam Kaatz Color Connection.  Students love this song, and frequently former students from twenty years ago can still sing this song for me!

https://minutebyminutespanish.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Textivate-video.mp4

 

For eight days the students fill in the graphic organizer as they watch a video on how to make the breakfast food associated with the country and watch a brief travel video on the country.pre-class

 

They are required to fill in what they would like to visit/do in each country on the graphic organizer. For some reason, my seventh and eighth graders are fascinated with the cooking videos – I think they have so many activities after school they really don’t watch anyone prepare food, or maybe takeout is more common than I realized. They would actually come to class early trying to pry information out of me on what they would see that day.

They also really enjoy the travel videos and now talk about visiting Ecuador, Chile and Paraguay – not just the typical “My family is going to a resort in Mexico or Costa Rica.

I've assembled 19 videos for this project!
I’ve assembled links to 20 videos for this project! Two Homemade Instructional Videos, One Rock of the Countries and Capitals video by Pam Kaatz, Nine Food-Preparation Videos and Eight Travel videos. They are a mix of Spanish and English.

 

After the video, we go through the day’s PowerPoint and they practice with their partner on the summary page for that item.

One of nine summary pages in the daily pre-class PowerPoint. There are nine PowerPoints - one for each day.
One of nine summary pages in the pre-class PowerPoint.

At this point, I had to be out with a substitute and I left instructions for the students to start coloring the flag matchbooks and if there was time, to color the countries on the matchbooks with the colors on the map.

Using the slide with all of the flags stimulated the students to make comparisons of the flags.
Using the slide with all of the flags stimulated the students to make comparisons of the flags.

 

If I had been out for all three days, they could have gone on with assembling and then practicing the lapbook.

Flip Books for Indirectly Teaching major grammar points!
Flip Books for Indirectly Teaching major grammar points!

Students also had the chance to practice the dialogues using Textivate.

https://minutebyminutespanish.com/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/Textivate-video.mp4

 

I returned and started their individual speaking assessment. If they came up the first day they could choose five of the cards, then put them face down and choose three that I would then ask them the questions we had practiced on the PowerPoint.  If they didn’t come up the first day, then they had to choose three from all nine that were face-down.

20151016_165211_resized20151016_165224_resized

The interest in the actual game was short-lived, as are most games!  But the students’ delight in the process of creating this first piece of their portfolio surprised me and warmed my heart.

20151016_165403_resized

20151016_165834_resized

They did so well that I also gave them a brief reading and listening activity on this same information and they did really well.

My students have a major individual speaking assessment each quarter and I intend to create a lapbook to engage the rest of the students as individuals are assessed at my desk.

I hope this stimulates some ideas for your own students!  If you want to take a short cut and use mine, here is the link.

Spanish Lapbook Available at TpT:

All net proceeds from the TpT store  help three Venezuelan families – meet them in this video as they open three boxes I sent to them.

 

 

If you want to read more about class structure and transition videos, read my blog here.

 

 

 

May 2017 Update:

A teacher asked how to use this for a full week with classes that meet 50  minutes a day.  I converted the first time table with 8 days of pre-classes and three days with a substitute  to one full week below.

If part of your class is missing and you want to fill one week with enrichment, try this schedule.
Super Engaging Spanish COuntries and Capitals lap book
Lesson plans with 8 days in advance and 3 days with substitute.

 

 

 

 

 

Available on TpT

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

20151016_165605_resized

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class

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Necessary cookies are absolutely essential for the website to function properly. These cookies ensure basic functionalities and security features of the website, anonymously.
CookieDurationDescription
cookielawinfo-checkbox-analytics11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Analytics".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-functional11 monthsThe cookie is set by GDPR cookie consent to record the user consent for the cookies in the category "Functional".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-necessary11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookies is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Necessary".
cookielawinfo-checkbox-others11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Other.
cookielawinfo-checkbox-performance11 monthsThis cookie is set by GDPR Cookie Consent plugin. The cookie is used to store the user consent for the cookies in the category "Performance".
viewed_cookie_policy11 monthsThe cookie is set by the GDPR Cookie Consent plugin and is used to store whether or not user has consented to the use of cookies. It does not store any personal data.
Functional
Functional cookies help to perform certain functionalities like sharing the content of the website on social media platforms, collect feedbacks, and other third-party features.
Performance
Performance cookies are used to understand and analyze the key performance indexes of the website which helps in delivering a better user experience for the visitors.
Analytics
Analytical cookies are used to understand how visitors interact with the website. These cookies help provide information on metrics the number of visitors, bounce rate, traffic source, etc.
Advertisement
Advertisement cookies are used to provide visitors with relevant ads and marketing campaigns. These cookies track visitors across websites and collect information to provide customized ads.
Others
Other uncategorized cookies are those that are being analyzed and have not been classified into a category as yet.
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