1/80th

As I look back, I can identify three segments to my career as a language teacher. Below, I rate each one in terms of the personal fulfillment and misery they each brought me: 1. 1977-2000 – Traditional AP French Language and Literature instructor in three South Carolina high schools. Level of Fulfillment: 0/10 Misery Level: […]

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The Din is a Bee Hive

I wrote this in 2015 after visiting a TPRS classroom in Denver Public Schools: It’s been 24 hours since I left Julie’s classroom and during that time I have, even in sleep, been besieged by the word ruido and a bunch of other Spanish words. The din is happening. It happens in the target country

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Memorization vs. Life

The tough teenage years don’t have to be so tough. They can be easier. What happens is that when kids move into middle school and even before, they are met with most teachers asking them to start memorizing stuff. Does this even make them “teachers” in the real sense of the word? I think not.

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It's Not You!

I often felt, at the big summer workshops, that I couldn’t possibly remember all the stuff they were teaching me. It really was overwhelming. But now I realize it wasn’t me. They were giving me too many rules and things I had to follow, like circling and targeting. I’m glad it worked for them, but

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Fluff

Many CI teachers don’t/can’t apply what Krashen has shown to be true that language acquisition is an unconscious process. The teaching gene in them is too dominant. They think they have to teach. But they don’t. All they have to do is communicate, which is far different than teaching. Here is my point again: …many

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On Lesson Planning

It’s not good the way we collect papers from students. I don’t even collect free writes. They go in composition books kept in the room. If I have time, I look at them. What teacher has time? I only read some of the free writes. I guess that makes me a bad teacher. They need

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Personalized Learning Is A Central Design Principle In Education

Here is a 2009 article by John Bordeaux about personalized learning. The last few paragraphs are particularly powerful: Let’s imagine a conversation at the close of the 19th century.  You and a team of designers are considering elements of the internal combustion engine that will, if successful, trigger a revolution in personal transportation and change

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PQA in a Wink

I wrote a book – PQA in a Wink! – that addresses classroom management in TPRS. That was back in 2008, ten years ago. I was reading the conclusion to that book recently and thought I would share it here, since it reflects the same core attitude toward this work that can be found in

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The New CI Mobile

This is an updated repost from February of 2008: My teacher gave me a fender. She told me it was “important” to really look at the fender, which she called relative pronouns. Then she gave me two bumpers, front and back. Verbs, she called them, regular and irregular. Important. Then she gave me a steering

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Greg on NTCI

I was going back and reading Greg’s comments from over the summer here and this one I thought was worth sharing here today: I think NTCI is superior for two reasons 1) targeting is a constraint on student interest 2) targeting can lead to a denial of i+1. That being said, for COMPLETE beginners (first

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