Thematic Units – 4

I wish to clarify what is going on in this discussion, because it has gotten so big, spilling over to other lists. It is a discussion which may involve Helena Curtain directly. What is going on is that Eric Herman has turned one of the most pivotal and foundational assumptions of traditional language teaching on […]

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Thematic Units – 3

Eric continues on the ACTFL list: Thank you, Robert and Catherine, for your responses. I’ve also received numerous (8?) emails in order to thank me, to agree with me, to ask permission to repost to other listservs, and to tell me it’s the “best question I have ever seen posted on ACTFL.” I also had

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Thematic Units – 2

Here is the first of Eric’s two posts to the ACTFL listserve: 2 Questions: In the ACTFL 21st Century Skills Map (p.4) it says this about Today: “Use of thematic units and authentic resources.” ACTFL promotes thematic instruction and authentic resources to be used for instruction and for assessment. I want to know: Why? 1)

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Thematic Units – 1

Eric Herman has recently taken part in a discussion on the ACTFL listserve. Eric made the point against thematic unit grouping of vocabulary to teach languages. To avoid an overly lengthy article here I will publish both of those posts after this one as “Thematic Units – 2” and “Thematic Units – 3”. After making

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VanPatten Videos

Here is the link for those who want to watch some video of VanPatten: learninglanguages.celta.msu.edu/sla-vanpatten I also include a few points Eric made here as comments after asking Krashen about VanPatten: One thing I don’t understand is how come VanPatten and Krashen don’t seem to mention each other in their research. Krashen did write this

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jGR Self Assessment

Diane suggested publishing the following comment by Eric as an article to make it accessible in the jGR category. It’s an idea we’ve seen before, where the students self reflect on the level of engagement they brought to the class that day by answering questions about how they observed the most important of the Three

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Failure of TPRS

Looking back, I often wonder why the method, almost 25 years old now, hasn’t taken off in our schools, since it arguably still remains out of at least 99% of our classrooms in any effective way. Here are the five biggest reasons for this failure, ranked in order, in my opinion: 1. Lack of persistence

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