This blog is where I'll share about my quest to become a master teacher of High School Spanish. I will try to share my successes, failures, insights, resources and more here. I hope this will help others in education to reflect upon their own practices and share their experiences with our community of readers.
Saturday, January 22, 2011
Sheltering vocabulary not grammar...
This seems to be a recurring theme for me: the struggle between covering it all and getting my students to acquire the language. I realized that during my struggle to get myself back on track this semester, I assigned a vocabulary relevant story, but a grammatically irrelevant story (since we have a common assessment coming up). We're currently reading the story ourselves. So now I'm stuck in a situation where I have to navigate this mistake. I need to get my students back to focusing on commands. Does this mean I totally drop the story to the wayside or is there some other way to get them back on track. The story follows a similar story line as one from Blaine Ray's LICT muchísimo book - Girl sells love pills, girl accidentally takes love pills, girl immediately falls in love with herself and never leaves the bathroom. That's where I get into a bind - there aren't any other characters in my story, so it's pretty difficult to incorporate some sort of commands. Any ideas out there?
Labels:
Reflection,
Skills,
Year 1 of CI/TPRS
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