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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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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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