Tech Tool

From Alisa today: I know I’m the least likely person to share a tech tool but a few years back I saw something on Scholastic.com where you could play a virtual slot machine and get a random character + problem + solution, and I thought it would be great as a tool to generate ideas […]

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Big Red Ball

This is just my opinion: When we go for massed repetitions we just can’t get to the human side in our classrooms, not really. We can’t seem to get a decent level of community going. But without a very high level of community – something I try to design like an architect designs a building

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University

Q. Why do you think that university teachers aren’t doing much of anything in the way of storytelling? A. They are given the cream of the crop from high schools. That instantly maintains the status quo that the kids brought with them to college. It’s a win-win for both the professors and students – everyone

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Low Ebb Today

The change we are in about how languages are taught is not going to go away because it doesn’t align with the bland, predictable and uninformed district expectations of what language teaching should look like, expectations that have not changed in decades while the profession itself is on fire with change. Are we really going

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100 Story Scripts

Those who have been reading here for the past ten years know that Anne Matava’s script books rock the house but as we move forward more and more toward non-targeted work, we are starting to see that her story scripts are really much more aligned with non-targeted work than with targeted work. So now we

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Underachieving

Many of us need to take a good hard and honest look at what we are doing, in the interest of keeping our mental health at the forefront of our work with CI, since many of us have decided here recently is far more important than being a CI rock star. This article from Carolyn Dickson

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Staying in Bounds

Q. I try to not introduce any new words and go out of bounds but I am not very good at it. Too many words seem to creep into the discussion. What can I do? A. There is kind of a self-regulating mechanism in non-targeted instruction and so really we don’t need to worry so

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Superman

I once visited a Montessori school where 3rd graders were doing vocabulary worksheets. They weren’t overly enthralled, and probably would be more enthralled by this story from Alisa: Superman calls Sponge Bob (SB) and says, “There’s a party.” (Hurray, I love parties!) SB called Minnie Mouse (MM). He says, “There’s a party.” (Hurray, I love

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No Planning

Q. The idea of no planning destroys my entire concept of what my job is as a teacher. Don’t I have to plan? Don’t I have to teach? A. You can if you want to but in my view it destroys the very spontaneity and beauty that are required to get our students to acquisition

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Just Talk to the Kids

Q. It seems like such a simple thing – just talking to the kids. Why is it so difficult? A. Actually, I recently remembered that I used to just “talk to the kids” thirty years ago. I had forgotten that, but now I remember it. It was emotional to remember that I had once tried

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Wordsift.org

Craig shares a website called wordsift.org: Just paste any text into the space there and it gives you options for analyzing the text: word clouds, word frequency, thesaurus, etc. It can be a quick way to review language from class stories, create quizzes and things like that.

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