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The Ultimate Guide to Proactively Teaching Spanish Class Social Skills _ New Student _ Interrupting _ Emails _ Congrats _ Random Partners _ I’m Not Your Dictionary

January 14, 2023 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

 

Delivering Classroom Expected Behaviors up front in an impersonal way rather than in a reactive way to one specific student strengthens your classroom management.

Why are students so thin-skinned and where do they learn their social skills?

When I started teaching in the 80’s, teachers were expected to be caring adults providing boundaries and feedback about appropriate behavior.

In 2020, when responding to a student’s inappropriate behavior, I am contacted by parents about their concern that I don’t like their child. I fear that students are learning their social skills from social media; many are  not making the correct leap from talking to Alexa to talking to their teacher.

After thirty plus years of teaching the same age group, I can predict certain topics that come up every year and rather than correct a student for being inappropriate, I proactively give direct instruction on social skills using catchy musical videos to everyone.  Thus, when a student is interrupts, or treats me like a walking dictionary, the rest of the class breaks out into song and the correction is considered impersonal rather that a personal correction.

We, my Venezuelan friends and I, have  created six musical videos sung in Spanish to demonstrate these skills.  See the video below about the Venezuelans who make the songs and videos and how all net proceeds go to them as this is my charity work.

1. How to treat a new a new student.

It includes offering to escort the new student to his or her next class, offering to eat lunch together, sharing recent classwork, and welcoming them to the class.

2. How to write an email to a teacher.

Many students write emails to teachers as if they were texting a friend.  This social skill video reminds students to identify themselves, address the teacher by name and use querido, atentamente, por favor, gracias.  The video reminds them that their future bosses may not know how capable they are because their poor manners.

3. Asking if now is a good time before just talking at the teacher with different requests.

This will save you from middle school teacher burnout!  I share rooms and am rushing into set up my laptop and complete a variety of housekeeping tasks and it can take my last ounce of patience when a student just starts talking to me in a long-winded story.  Now they know to first ask if now is a good time and if it isn’t I always circle back to them.  This has made for much more pleasant relationships and a smooth start to class.  It may very well help them to keep future jobs.  Parents tell me they love it when I explain it to them at Open House and they also use it with me!

4. The expected behavior with random partners

The best way to ensure that students get along in a class is to use random grouping cards and explain to them the importance of learning how to work with everyone.  All of the directions are included along with the video.  Be the adult in the class and set the expectation that they must work with anyone for a week at a time  and they will.  Let’s fight the growing tide of selected social media narrowing the variety of  exposure that students have to different kinds of people.  By the end of the year, substitute teachers and students will comment on how well the class gets along.

5. How to congratulate someone.

We must give our students direct instruction on how to congratulate one another in the target language.

Use this musical video, and ‘en hora buena’ and ‘felicitaciones’ will roll off their tongues at appropriate times.

6. Tell your students you are not their dictionary.

It is a playful reminder to look up the words they should know rather than just rely on the teacher to be their dictionary.

Let’s further examine this issue of asking Spanish teachers to be a walking dictionary.

Students in our classes are accustomed to asking Alexa questions at home and getting immediate answers.  When I first started teaching, we spent a couple of days using paper dictionaries and teaching them how to look up infinitives and other basic skills.  Now we train them to use Word Reference while they may still very well be ‘Google Translating’ their homework.

I even had a parent send me a google translated e-mail – and she has never studied Spanish.  She thought I would be so impressed!  But I digress.

We train our students to ask three before me or use three before me or write their name on the board with the word they need help with in the hopes  a classmate will help out.

But the best solution is to teach them the song “No soy tu diccionario” and when they forget and ask you how to say something the rest of the class breaks out into the song.

It works!

Every year students want to learn how to insult one another in Spanish.  They will ask me how to say “stupid” in Spanish so that they can insult one another.

You do you with your teaching voice,  but my response,  said with the sweetest, most sincere drippy concern of a grandmother, “oh honey, I see why you feel that way about yourself but it would break my heart to have you talk about yourself that way, no I just can’t add to your negative self-talk – you are just too good!”  This puts the kid in checkmate – can’t admit he/she wants to use it for others and the whole class is laughing about my thinking he/she wants to call himself/herself stupid when clearly the intention is to insult someone else.

Using direct instruction of these social skills has improved my happiness in the classroom and reduced my sense of ‘burn-out’ –  I used to be annoyed that so many students were learning their social skills from apps and not from interaction with caring adults.  So I decided that I need to be the change that is needed and it has made all of the difference for them and for me.

 

All net proceeds 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.

 

If your school won’t provide you with these tools, you may consider this:

 

 

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Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: 100% comprehensible input, 90% target language, new Spanish teacher, Spanish, Spanish class, Spanish classroom management, Spanish song, staying in the target language, student behavior, student is disrespectful

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Unintentional Consequences of Social Media Clash with Appropriate Classroom Behavior

March 21, 2018 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Don’t blame the parents or the students! Blame social media surrounding our middle school students with the belief that every opinion is important and demanding of immediate attention.  The village needs to directly teach children and their parents to stop this or else the students will not deserve an excellent Teacher Evaluation when applying to colleges.

In case the parents don’t know, over 700 universities accept the Common Application. Its Teacher Evaluation will be important and students really don’t know who in their senior year they will be asking to complete it.  Acting like  jerks in ninth grade study hall may prevent students from getting the kind of recommendation they need. I described this in detail in books for parents and a book for teachers.  If you want the whole explanation and create a paradigm shift with your community, consider using these books: Seventh Grade Guide  Sixth Grade Guide  Teacher Dialogues

But if you just want the 10 minute explanation it goes like this.  Pick a time to have a heart-to-heart talk with your class.  Explain that their speaking out, whining, and interrupting, is becoming a habit that must now be broken in middle school because their high school teachers will be judging them and evaluating them.  Even if they think they will grow up when they are juniors – their senior teachers may have had them in a study hall or lunch room duty when they were freshmen.  Even if they are marked as being good – they are in column 5 of 7 – and not the best candidates.  The margin is very slender.  Show them the four areas indicated with the arrows that concern you.  Tell them that they have a great future, but not if they don’t have the social skills desired by adults writing and reading the college applications.

This usually stops students and parents.  I tell them that I will do my job by reminding them with the words, “social skills alert” meaning their lack of appropriate social skills is a problem.  I call their parents and tell them that I am doing this to help them and ask for their help.  I assure the students and their parents that this is so important that I am willing to assign detentions and work with their parents to get them back on track.

As for Spanish class, I have created three musical videos to demonstrate these skills.  The first is how to treat a new student in class.  The second is how to write an email to a teacher, and the third is the most important, asking if now is a good time before just talking at the teacher with different requests.

As

As I write these words in March, I see many teachers writing about classroom management beginning to unravel. Point systems are all about external validation that quickly loses its attraction and the external rewards need to be upped as time goes on. There is no magic bullet that will last the year. External rewards only last so long.

But internal validation is something else.  It’s about catching their vision of who they want to be and showing how developing self-discipline will get them there.  Connect with your students by sharing this information with them and their parents and relating their behavior choices to their future ability to have the things they want and the lifestyle they deserve.

Filed Under: Classroom Management, Difficult Class, Improve Class Behavior, Out-of-Control Class, Reflective Teacher, Regain Control of Class, Take Charge of That Class Tagged With: classroom behavior, classroom management, Spanish class, teacher dialogue with student

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Five Rules for Spanish Class Transitions

February 7, 2018 By Personal thoughts and beliefs of E.B.Shrager - do not represent those of any past or current employer.

Use these 5 rules for any world language class.
Don’t let transitions undermine classroom management!

A student studying to be a Spanish teacher asked, “What frase in the target language should I use to get their attention when transitioning to an new activity?”
The shallow answer is “¿listos o no listos?” My students answer in unison “listos” and occassionaly in a playful mood they will tell me “no listos” and I will tell them “no es la respuesta correcta” and we try again and move on.

Transitions can make or break classroom management and a one-size-fits-all approach is a common pitfall for new teachers. As a reflective teacher in her 30th year in the secondary classroom, I have 5 rules for world language class transitions.

1. Do not try to get the class to be quiet, rather you want them to be attentive. Students respond better to giving you a reply than to hushing. Create responses for them and they will all join in.

2. Do not get their attention until you are 110% prepared with the next activity. Getting their attention and then fumbling for the location of the handouts or the track on the CD or link to the video is deadly to classroom management. You will loose them and their attentiveness for future transitions, as they figure you don’t really mean it . . . yet.

3. Support your transitions with a visual, assuming you can project on to a screen or wall. I make a daily tech guide with a slide for each activity and each transition so that the students look up and know what to do even if they can’t quite hear you above all the paired practice speaking going on around them. Make a list of your weekly activities, make a slide for each one and a transition for each one.  Use a remote presentation device or wireless mouse so you can stand near certain students while you transition through the class.  Click here for videos of my tech-guided classes.

4. If you are using music or a video, embed them in your daily tech guide. This extra prep work will pay large dividends as you minimize down time.

5. Use musical transition videos. Over 50 of them were made by some fairly desperate Venezuelans and all proceeds go to them. They have created the best atmosphere for my level one classes, students delighting in the musical breaks and singing along as they do the transition. My transitions are now seamless.

2023 Update: Check just prep during your prep here  – we now have over 100 videos. 

Get a free version here.

Scroll down this previous post to get a feel for them – there are examples in six languages. They are a game changer!


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.

Video 69 Señora – trimmed from ellen shrager on Vimeo.

 

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

Filed Under: 90% Target Language Class, Classroom Management, Comprehensible Input, Daily Songs Improve Classroom Structure Tagged With: classroom management, English class, French class, German class, Italian class, Latin class, Mandarin class, new teacher, Spanish class, transitions, world language class

Thanks for Visiting For the Minute by Minute Spanish!
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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

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