Update

I’ll be on the road so not blogging the next two weeks. My suggestion is that readers who are getting ready to go into the classroom right now watch some of our videos (“resources” hard link above) and also go into the Beginning of the Year or Starting the Year categories. Readers can also read […]

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Workshop Menu

This post is for people attending my three day intensive workshops. It is to save them the trouble of having to take photos of the posters on the walls. The topics with an asterisk are the things with which Tina and I expect you to be fully confident, having practiced them, when the three days are

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Make The Call

We call parents because parents want to be involved. They can’t guess that their child is not following our rules, which we painstakingly explain and enforce in the first few weeks of class, unless we tell them. Telling them in the third week of school is too late. So we make the call. Parents and

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Report from the Field

I just got back from a workshop in Peotone IL which is just south of Chicago and the teachers there were fantastic. We had a good time, got good work done, and it is exciting to think that with Shaun and Alisa and that strong group north of Peotone (David Sceggel is also in that

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Robert’s Materials

Robert’s materials for German and other languages are now available!  He Ben – My website is now live. There’s still a lot to be done, and I will be expanding descriptions as well as uploading more items, but at least it’s now accessible. I even take PayPal and credit cards. If you want to see

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Report from Agen

Yesterday I was walking down the street here in this charming Mediterranean city  of Agen, France and ran into Stephen Krashen and Beniko Mason. I immediately thanked them on behalf of all of us for being here. I told them that their long journeys to get here, their presence here, is in my view of immense

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Cartoon-Sized Stories

Stories are best when they are “cartoon-sized”. Like a cartoon episode, they start, have a plot, and wrap up within 25-35 minutes.  Using the Story Driver job should help us keep our stories short, but what if class ends and the story is still not wrapped up? The best way to wrap up a story

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Compelling – 3

Tina Hargaden said: Using emergent targets, for me at least, has invited much more creativity into my work. I am looking forward to starting the year next year with no targets, because I foresee much more engagement and trust from the kids. The trust comes from the facts that a) using emergent targets honors their

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Compelling – 2

With emergent targets, the story will be different in every class, so different vocabulary and structures are used. Therefore, a traditional scope and sequence based on lists of vocabulary or grammar points is not needed or even practical. Such guides matter not to me, as the research shows that humans do not acquire language based on

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Compelling – 1

It may well be that allowing new structures into a story during the story at the very moment when they are needed to drive the story forward will frequently, through the mere inclusion of those student-generated structures, lift the story up to a level that we could call compelling.

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