A Sham

There are two things that are considered standard operating procedure in foreign language classrooms that I just can’t accept. I really believe, and so must state that as my truth, that some, many, teachers are getting away with ineffective practices in their classrooms and nobody is calling them on it, in two ways specifically. First, […]

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Beginning The Year

We created a “beginning the year” category here a few months ago. Here are a few quick additions to that list, which I will time stamp as well for August. First, there is no doubt that TPR is in for a renaissance in my CI classroom. A lot of us seem to have been thinking

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Revisiting The Realm

Those who remember the heyday of the Realm in TPRS can recall the great excitement around the idea of building an entire year of stories around certain medieval/gang/whatever characters, as the class chose. I think I have finally figured out why the Realm didn’t work for me. Those very characters, as excited as the kids

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ACTFL Announces New Position Statements

Susanna Kesterson thank you for sending me this which I share here with all of us: ACTFL Announces New Position Statements Source: FLTEACH The ACTFL Board of Directors recently approved the following position statements: * Use of the Target Language in the Classroom (http://www.actfl.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=5151 ) * Language Learning for Heritage and Native Speakers (http://www.actfl.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=5152 )

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Hebrew

I was in California for ten days up in their mountains, and so apologize for my absence. I”ll try to catch up on any threads in the next few days. While I was gone I got a question from someone overseas. I have no idea how to answer it: “I teach English but the students’

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I Apologize For Apologizing.

The strangest thing about fully espousing comprehensible input methods, including TPRS, is that in June I’m not exhausted from trying to push a program that essentially doesn’t work down kids’ throats. The kids liked what I taught them last year, and they want more next year. Thank you Dr. Stephen Krashen and Blaine Ray! The

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On Grading/Assessment

Jim suggested that I turn this recent comment on grading into a blog entry so that we can access it via the categories. Here it is: Most kids have to want to be in the classroom in order for most approaches to grading to be accurate and honest and true indicators of progress. In my

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More On Planning

In talking about planning classes, Jim said: “You have to use those assigned structures in CI that will be interesting enough for the student to listen to you, and be able to change things up enough to not lose their attention…the less we plan…perhaps the better we will become at the art of CI.” This

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