Ben Slavic

Listening Ears

Today Judge Judy was trying to get a defendant to listen. She put up her hands next to her ears kind of like antlers but next to her ears and started waving them and said, “No sir…what I need now are LISTENING ears. Can you do that?” That combined w Classroom Rule #2 might be […]

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Three Questions

This is from Julie for group input: Hi Ben, Most of my students are listening well during our story creation. However, some aren’t. Although I’ve spoken privately to student 1 regarding the issue, stubborn habits continue. Let me call this a tale of 3 students: Student 1: His earbud is in. He’s listening to Blake

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RATCHET

Just what we need here – a new acronym. We must have hundreds by now. This one gets added to the Invisibles Star Sequence. When I get this cast off, I’ll explain it. It’s good.

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NT 2

Emergent input opens up a whole new vista in language learning.  It allows the language to be what it should be according to the research: the vehicle for authentic communication in the classroom, and not the center of our conscious attention. Making the shift to non-targeted, emergent input unlocks a myriad of exciting new conduits

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NT 1

A repost from the early days of the Invisibles: We should try to teach for true proficiency and for real communication, and not to have our students notice or remember certain parts of the language on an artificial timeline that has nothing to do with the natural order of acquisition.   When we do this, we

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Literary E-Zine

Greg shares: Martina Bex is starting a new Literary E-Zine for students and is looking for contributions. https://martinabex.com/2017/10/09/revista-literal-free-e-zine-for-spanish-students/ Deadline for this issue is Friday 10/20/17 We should contribute our Invisibles and One Word Image stories! It’s a great idea…even though she says it is only for students to read OUTSIDE of class. I am going

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Jack

A repost from American Embassy School days in 2016: Jack, the creator of one of the first Invisibles, Vampspooder the Spider, is my best student. He is a funny, witty, super-engaged 6th grader and a wonder to have in class during the creation of a story. I went down to the office. He was standing

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