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“What are your best classroom resources for Spanish 1 first time taking Spanish?”

June 29, 2016 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Tee Denombre asked this  great question on the FB page “Spanish Teachers in the US.”

My students respond to compelling Comprehensible Input – especially audio that is supported with a strong visual.

Picture4 Picture10Students (and their parents!) can pull out phrases from a song months after I have played it in class as part of my “song of the week” series.  Music seems to attach to the long-term memory fairly easily but I have noticed that many of my students recently seen to just latch on to the chorus while previously students would latch on to the whole song.

Is this a direct correlation to their social media connections being so brief? Picture14

I don’t know but this year I started to make brief transition videos and they are ‘sticky’ —  students can go through a class and sing the 30 – 60 seconds songs and voice overs for as many as eight transitions.

I’ve also noticed that they work the vocabulary into their conversations in Spanish in class.  For example, my seventh graders sing the “Saquen la tarea” song while taking out their homework and really punch the ‘ya’ at the end.  Then they start to use it in class – spontaneously.Picture12

A chance encounter with some Venezuelans looking for work as musicians started the idea of having native speakers perform these songs and now we are rolling out this series of over 50 transitions on TPT.

Picture6

How do you get started?   Use a remote mouse or presentation device so you can click from anywhere in the room.  Make an outline of your lesson, insert a slide for each activity, and then insert a Spanish Transition Video to introduce it.

Soon your students will be trained to use Spanish even for those challenging transitions – you may be surprised that certain students usually looking for opportunities to get off task instead are watching and participating in the Picture9music!

Below  is a sampling of some of the transition videos.

If you are looking for Picture2

fun resources that stick in students’ brains and pop out spontaneously,

resources to help you and them stay in the target language,

resources to improve classroom behavior and make  your class more fun,

then  look below and pick the ones that match your teaching style.  Fifteen are available this week with the rest be completed this summer.

 

 

 

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ PREVIEW VIDEO CLIP ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

Feliz Lunes – Start the week off thinking in Spanish

Al Principio de la Clase – train students to stop talking when the video ends.

Saquen la Tarea – after a few days it will be easier to do this in Spanish than English

Sesenta Saludos – Take attendance while students try a new one each day.

Las Noticias Internacionales – perfect introduction to daily headline reading

Repaso Diario – Great intro to daily review

Grupos de Dos – Students learn how to get together with their partner without using English!

¡Vamos a Jugar charadas!

La Cultura – Fascinating way to remind students of all of the elements of culture!

¡Que desorden, Señor! – Clever and Colorful reminder to clean up room!

Adiós Libros – Perfect Transition to Clearing Desks for Assessment

Perfect Transition to New Song by showing 10 genres of music sung in Spanish

Saco Mi Agenda – Students will soon be singing along and writing down their homework.

Querido Viernes – The perfect pack-up for the weekends song that has students singing in Spanish all weekend.

♥ ♥ ♥ ♥ If you have an idea for a song or transition video contact me and maybe we can make one for you! ♥ ♥ ♥ ♥

 

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 100% comprehensible input, 90% target language, best resources for Spanish, ci, classroom management, comprehensible input, new Spanish teacher, Spanish decorations, Spanish desk reference, spanish room decorations, Spanish song, Spanish Survival Vocabulary, Spanish Teacher, Spanish video, Spansih Survival Vocabulary, staying in the target language, tprs

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Regain Control of “THAT” Difficult Class!

September 12, 2015 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Emma  asked an eternal question today on a teacher  FB group. She wrote, “I have one class that REALLY is difficult . . . any tips for dealing with “THAT” class, the one that never stops talking, doesn’t follow directions, and moving students doesn’t help because they will talk to everyone? It’s really discouraging.

Emma, you need more than a few tips — you need a five point action plan, and here it is!

But first, the usual suggestions/tips should be followed, and if they work, then you don’t need the action plan. The usual suggestions are:

  1. Call Home – find something genuinely positive to say as well as deliver the difficult message.
  2. Talk to other teachers who have the same students and find out if anyone is successful with them and duplicate what they do.
  3. Talk to you administration about them.
  4. Talk to their coaches.
  5. Use Class Dojo to track class behavior and offer a preferred reward activity for X amount of time of good behavior.

If none of these work, then it is time to start the five point action plan. This will be a lot of work at first, but it will work, and thus be worth the time invested.

 

Step One: Get Your Head in the Game

No teacher wants to admit this but it is true. When a class acts this way, the students are actually bullying the teacher.

I have learned a lot from my dogs. There is always an alpha dog. When we try to interfere and not let the alpha dog take charge, the other dogs are not grateful; rather they are confused and act worse until the alpha dog returns and re-establishes the pecking order.

Be the alpha in your classroom!
Like my beloved pets, students need the alpha to take charge, else they will all jockey to be the one talking the most and in charge. They need you to assert your alpha position.

Children need to know who is in charge and will act out if the teacher does not lead.

In my most still, reflective moments, I have to admit that when a student has more power in my classroom than I do, it is because a little part of my psyche agrees with the student that I don’t have to be respected.

I can blame that on my family legacy of beating us as kids, and most times I have vanquished it.

Sometimes it crops up when:

  • I am stressed with a life event.
  • When there is a really bad combination of students who should never be scheduled together, and I am powerless to make changes because Spanish just isn’t perceived to be that important.

I have a friend who let students talk over and walk over her because she is a French teacher and needs her enrollment. Turns out, only when she took charge did she retain her enrollment. You need to fearlessly address what part of you gives them permission to have more power in the classroom and deal with it.

You need to talk to yourself and tell yourself: I am the adult in charge.

I will be obeyed.

I will not let children take away from those who are here to learn.

When students whine, it is not a moral judgment about me, but more about their own teenage angst. I will not feed their whining and let it grow by responding to it.

I deserve respect and if I don’t get it, that child will be removed for the rest of the period. My other students deserve respect.

There is zero tolerance for talking over me; it undermines my authority and I DO NOT DESERVE IT AND WILL NOT TOLERATE IT.”

You deserve better!
Practice this pep talk in the mirror, in the shower, in the car, everywhere until you exude it!

Scream it to yourself on your way to school. Buy into it. Believe and live it.  (Every teacher has to find his or her own teaching voice. Take my suggestions and change them to reflect your teaching voice, or if you are unhappy with your current teaching voice, borrow mine until you are on firmer ground.)

 

Step Two: Enlist Your Tribe to Help You

Line up a few other teachers willing to help you. Explain to them that you need them to let the offending student sit in the back of their class and work on their packet. My 8th graders hate when they are sent to a 7th grade class as it makes them look bad. Awww.

No fumbling when calling!
Put those extensions right next to the phone.

Have their phone numbers on a post-it by your phone. If they can be the cool teachers or the respected coaches, even better.  You must have worksheet packets lined up for offending students.

Yes, this means 4 or 5 packets each day that relate to the class material so you can’t be accused of giving unrelated busy work.

Step Three: Prepare, Prepare, Prepare

You are about to make a big change and you must have your homework done.

You must plan the next week’s lessons minute by minute so that there are minimal transitions.

You must have an extra ten minutes of activities to make sure there is no down time. I would avoid any competitive games as when this kind of class competes it opens the door for trash talk and over-the-top talking.

I suggest you make a Daily Tech Guide (“DTG”) in either PowerPoint, Google Slides or your interactive board’s software.   You need to vary the activities, embed the videos, embed the songs, insert pictures of the pages in the text, insert worksheet with the answers, everything so that there are no transitions.

This remote will change lives!
This remote will free you to walk around the room and stand strategically behind challenging students. It changes lives!

Invest in a remote presentation device or wireless mouse so you can walk around the room and stand next to the trouble-makers as you click through the lesson. If you are pressed for time, these lessons are available from my store. If you want to learn more about making DTGs, you can get a free template  without musical videos on the first day when you join my challenge  or read my blog on Just Prep During Your Prep

Here are my first 20 lessons.

If you are still doing paired practices they are not to choose their friends, You choose their partners because you are in control.

Develop signals – my DTGs are sprinkled with “¿listos?” — ready? I say it and they all answer. If some are off task I walk over to them and repeat it and the whole class answers. Then zip into the next activity. Getting their attention is easier than having them be quiet. So train them to do this.

 

Step Four: Give Your Best Heart-to-Heart talk (or steal mine, changing “father” to “grandfather” or ‘great-grandfather” if it fits better.)

Teaching from the heart is good for you!
When everything is in place to make the change, use your most sincerest tone for your heart-to-heart talk with students. It is more effective than any lecture.

Tell your students, “You need to hear my story.”

In 1921, on my father’s 6th birthday he chased a ball into the street and was run over by a truck. No one stopped to helped him because cars were still so new that only the rich had them and they didn’t want to dirty their cars up. The town drunk found him and brought him to the hospital. They stitched his face up for his wake, in order to lessen his mother’s sorrow, never believing he would awaken from his coma.

His father kept vigil for seven days and did not shed one tear. My father never saw his father cry until he was 15.  He found his father weeping that he had been a horrible father. My father asked him why and my grandfather told him “A guy at work was walking with his son past a construction site and realized some bricks were falling right in front of his son and he yelled ‘halt’ and his son halted immediately and the bricks just grazed his toes. If I had yelled halt, you would have argued with me and be dead. I didn’t raise you well enough to keep you safe.”

I have been reading the book on Columbine High school and have been impressed that many students were lead to safety because they listened to a teacher or principal.

I am upset with myself because you don’t listen to me and if anything were to happen, I couldn’t protect you.

I was talking to my brother who hires students to work in his business, and he said if a high school student isn’t trained to show interest, he won’t hire him – and he pays the highest wages.

So by giving you permission to talk over me, I am also neglecting to help you learn how to behave around authority figures and it might cause you to not get a good job or to have the police misunderstand your attitude.

I learned that teachers who train their students with SLANT find that their students do not have this problem. So going forward, to keep you safe, you must not talk when I am talking and you must stop talking when I tell you to do so. Also when I say “slant”, you need to

  • Sit up
  • Lean forward
  • Ask questions about the topic
  • Nod your head
  • Track the teacher with your eyes (move around the room when practicing this)

If you practice this, you will get a better job, and be surprised that adults believe you are really paying attention, even if you aren’t. We are going to practice this and you should try this elsewhere and let us know the results.”

Then, start practicing it with the students and start your lesson with the most engaging activity. Remind them to slant when you sense they are fading.

Practice the signal to be quiet. If someone doesn’t comply and is blatantly disrespectful, go to step five.  

Step Five: Show You Mean It.

When someone disobeys, you call the teacher on the list but don’t say the teacher’s name. “Hi this is Ellen Shrager, I am sending X to you. Thanks.” Go out into the hall and signal the student to join you. (Out in the hall is better and the class will quiet down to hear what you are saying.)

Packets are a go!
Your packets are ready and handy for you to give to student who needs to leave the room.

Give the packet to the student and neutrally send him to the other teacher for him to complete the work. “Today isn’t working for you, so you need to finish the class work with Coach Nopardons. I hope tomorrow is better for you.”

No threats, no discussion, the kid is gone for today. Continue with class. Do not let them talk over you. Repeat with a different teacher if necessary.    After a week they will know you mean business.

You do not deserve that kind of treatment. Emma, your genuine angst motivated me to write my first blog.

Let us know what you decide to do and if it works for you.

Filed Under: Classroom Management, Difficult Class, Improve Class Behavior, New Teacher, Out-of-Control Class, Reflective Teacher, Regain Control of Class, Take Charge of That Class Tagged With: classroom management, discipline

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Stopping Student Swearing and Being Disrespectful for Attention

September 9, 2015 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Advice for Stopping Student Swearing and Being Disrespectful in Class
Advice for Stopping Student Swearing and Being Disrespectful in Class

Recently on FLTEACH, a teacher, Joe, asked advice for dealing with a sophomore who swears and is disrespectful in order to get attention. Bill Heller responded with different books including my “Teacher Dialogues.” Joe still isn’t sure how to create a dialogue with this student because of their strained relationship and feared that it would be awkward to probe into the student’s life to figure out what was going on with the student.

Here is my advice:

Joe, we are constantly refining “our teaching voices” because they change with our own life experiences that we bring to the classroom.

As I approach 60, my teaching voice is blended with grandmotherly concern, so my dialogue would most likely be like this:

“I am concerned for you. I’ve taught thousands of students and some of them are now 40 and I keep up with them. Through them. I’ve learned the importance of keeping all options open for a great life.

One way to do this is to be hired for interesting jobs and the folks hiring are the older folks who usually offer jobs to people who know how to be appropriate. This habit of swearing is obviously serving the 16 year old version of (kid’s name) but will it serve the 25 year old version of yourself?

Probably not.

It’s easy to let swearing slip at the wrong moment, especially if you are anxious during a job interview.

As one of the adults in your life, I feel responsible for helping you to be the best version of yourself and to help you to eliminate swearing in my class as an exercise in self-discipline and as a commitment to the vision of the great man you can be.

Maybe if you help me to understand how swearing and being disrespectful in my class helps you now to get through my class, we can brainstorm other ways to meet your needs.”

I would have this conversation privately and I would make sure that I flushed from my attitude   any residual resentment towards this student before starting the dialogue.  I would make sure I was full of sincere concern so that my tone reflects my words.

Joe, I hope you can use this as a springboard for crafting your own dialogue.  Good luck!

[Read more…]

Filed Under: Classroom Management, Difficult Class, Uncategorized Tagged With: classroom management, student being disrespectful, student is disrespectful, student swearing, teacher dialogue with student

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Compelling Transitions are Key to Creating Classroom Routines, Managing Student Behavior, and Staying in the Target Language!

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

Spanish song and video "Feliz Lunes" is the perfect 90 second transition for students as they come to class on Mondays. Musical Videos make transitions seamless, improve student behavior, classroom management and maintain 90% target language usage.
Spanish song and video “Feliz Lunes” is the perfect 90 second transition for students as they come to class on Mondays. Musical Videos make transitions seamless, improve student behavior, classroom management and maintain 90% target language usage.

 

 

 

https://minutebyminutespanish.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Feliz-LUnes-tpt-capture.mp4

 

What if you only have 25 minutes a day to prepare for a class lesson and want to improve class routines, student behavior, classroom management, and stay in the target language?

1. Make a slide for each activity in the day’s lesson.

2. Insert one of my brief 50+ transition videos before the slide and train your students to watch the video in Spanish. Soon they are imitating the voice over or else singing the song. Do this every  day and when you are observed by your administrators they will note your seamless transitions.

3. Buy a remote presentation device or wireless mouse and click to the next slide from any part of the room so you can stand close to students who struggle to behave.

Let’s start with Mondays. Students are coming into your room and an engaging, 90 second video called “Feliz Lunes” nudges them to start thinking in and using Spanish. As the bell rings, click to your slide with your pre-class and start your greetings and attendance taking. Don’t be surprised if the students are still singing it under their breath.

How to purchase “Feliz Lunes”

https://minutebyminutespanish.com/wp-content/uploads/2016/06/Commercial-Final-Mimi.mp4

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Classroom Management, Comprehensible Input, Improve Class Behavior, Regain Control of Class, Take Charge of That Class, Visual Comprehensible Input Tagged With: 90% target language, classroom management, comprehensible input, Spanish song, Spanish video, staying in the target language, student behavior, transitions

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