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Craig sent this a few weeks ago but I forgot to share it here. Thanks Craig!
It’s refreshing to see department heads who are even aware of NTCI as an option for their schools. David Brady wrote this to me in an email today: Lots to consider as we make this monumental paradigm shift to CI-based teaching. Upon reflecting, I think our penchant for curriculum mapping is a vestige of the
I interviewed myself: Q. What is your intent in teaching? A. My intent is to explore the beauty of the French language for myself, because I love it, while getting paid to share ideas with my students in a loving way. If some of them pick up on the beauty of the language and want
The Free Write bar graph, at the bottom of this list, needs a credit. But it’s been around for at least 15 years. Any ideas who invented it? These charts give an idea of the essence of the just-finished tome:
Well, the book is done. Again. It is in its fourth or fifth state of being finished. Carly and Alisa have been instrumental in making suggestions and I cannot thank them enough. Both are amazing readers. Carly suggested breaking the book into two pieces. It was the perfect suggestion. There are now two books of
Someone asked this question about a requirement that she is going to have to do next year in her building: Q. We are going to have to start to have learning targets each day/week and the kids are going to have forms to fill out explaining how they have reached that learning target….I need to figure out
I repost this from time to time; it first appeared in TPRS in a Year! – For thousands of years, children learned languages by listening to them. Their listening was the exact right curriculum for them, and the word “curriculum” was never even mentioned. Meaningful speech that they could understand with zero effort was all
When we work from lesson plans and word lists we put a blanket over precisely that part of ourselves that we are trying to uncover in our professions – the joyful part. It is an unavoidable part of that misguided (in terms of the research) effort. Krashen calls the effect of such targeted “a constraint
So, what to do when the observer walks in and you are enjoying a discussion about the something completely unrelated to your subject matter with you students? The answer is that we use Total Physical Response (TPR). We want to fool the observer into thinking that we were doing TPR before they came in. If
I know that we don’t get observed much at this time of year, but this information may come in handy at some point next year: How to respond to those electric moments when observers walk into our classrooms unannounced and the class is not focused and needs to be brought into immediate focus without the
Those who have an advance copy of my new book on the Invisibles: please delete it from your files as it is now way out of date. Thanks for all the suggestions. Most have been implemented in the new text. If you want the new version, let me know in a few weeks as I
Kristi Lentz Taylor poses a question that I’ve never heard before. Hopefully we can shed some light on it: I am a homeschool TPRS teacher new to the group. In one of my homeschool teaching settings, a colleague in the home (housecleaner) is a skilled and trained teacher in her home country in Honduras. I