Ben Slavic

OWI Detail – 5

Q. I can’t get my kids to really listen to each other. They are always blurting over each other. A. You have to use the Classroom Rules with the smile. Every time. Each and every time there is blurting or talking over, simply take a deep breath, walk calmly and slowly over to the Classroom […]

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OWI Detail – 4

Q. But what if the character is really good and falls flat, even with a good emotion and a good reason for that emotion? A. I am quite happy to provide the students with boring instruction by providing worksheets for them. I know what you mean – classes can get like that. I am very

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OWI Detail – 3

Q. What if a character falls flat? What do I do then? A. It always goes back to the fact that the quality of the artwork and thought that went into creating the character has to be of a high quality. Boring characters with little visual appeal make for boring stories and boring classes. I

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OWI Detail – 2

Q How would you define a balanced character? A. I would say that it would be one with four or five details. That is as much as I feel works for me. However, I do sometimes like to add one random outrageous detail. For example, a snowman who hates carrots and coal might have a

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OWI Detail – 1

Q. You spoke about how the word chosen for the one word image should come from the class. What if the class simply cannot come up with anything interesting? A. Oh that happens! But I am always ready for such classes – the ones that give us the snarky “look”. What I do is, on

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Bryan Whitney on TPRS

Bryan seems to have put his finger on exactly where TPRS is these days, in my opinion: “I’ve been thinking about how circling as it is usually taught (at least to beginning TPRSers) really is so unnatural, particularly when the goal is to get a student (or even an entire class) to remember a particular

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The CI Cloth

Tina told me this: The teacher has to do CI according to what they think is best for them as an individual teaching artist. One person likes targets as they are used in conventional storytelling, the next prefers a more free-wheeling style of CI, like emergent targets using the Invisibles or Story Listening. We all

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Tina On The Change

A member of the greater CI community, but not of this PLC, recently wrote: …if someone is a purist about TPRS, then they have the right to be. If someone is a “dabbler” and hasn’t gotten “on track” in the way that you would like, well, that is who they are. If someone has found,

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The Data Piece

The data piece is vastly overrated in language classes, because of the intensely human, not robotic nature of human communication. Paying more attention to students’ eyes and body language shows us far better than tests what they are absorbing and if they are with us.

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