Keep Them Separate

Using CI to teach lists of words associated with common exams is a dumb idea. Give the lists separately using part of class and test frequently on them. I have lists of words in semantic set form for this purpose from years ago: Level 1 and 2 Spanish: https://benslavic.com/Posters/spanish-thematic-units.pdf Level 1 and 2 French: https://benslavic.com/Posters/french-thematic-units.pdf

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Pigs Can’t Fly 3

This pig/kid thing is real, rarely talked about in a clear way because the kids who oppose us in this passive aggressive and devastating fashion are so rare. But that they are rare makes their effect on our work no less devastating as we try, sometimes against hope, to teach languages using comprehensible input. I would

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Pigs Can’t Fly 2

This is the second in an eleven part ramble: Is there a “cell of defiance” led by one single kid, a group leader of a few other kids, being built in your classroom right now or already in place? Do such uniquely and intentially troublesome kids really exist? Are the other kids victims because the teacher didn’t stop the defiance in time

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The October Collapse

  There is a thing that I call the October Collapse, where the reality of the year sets in and a lot of new CI teachers begin to collapse under the weight of what they are trying to do, and the students’ interest often collapses too. The teachers often think it’s them. We can’t let that

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Pigs Can’t Fly 1

This is the first in a series of blog posts about how pigs can’t fly: I have come to the conclusion that teachers who use comprehensible input are in a much more dangerous position than regular teachers. They are in a dangerous position because the work of making a class human, that is to say one in which

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Keep Elementary Simple

I have heard from a few teachers that implementing the Invisibles at the lower levels is not easy. Corroboration came on that from Alisa this morning who was responding to a question from Jenna about it. Below is Alisa’s sage advice, which in a nutshell is to keep the Invisibles program itself above sixth grade,

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Elementary Question

Hi Ben,  I’m an elementary teacher of Spanish these days (coming from a secondary background),  I can see why elementary foreign language teachers go through a revolving door. Most of the challenge is parent/admin perception of how much can be learned quickly by small children. This year I’m tasked with teaching K-7. Yes 340 students,

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