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Educational

5 Activities for Group Development in the World Classroom

Reading Time: 3 minutes

If you’re looking for ways to bring your students together, these 5 activities are great for group development in the world language classroom. Try them out with your students and see!

1. FORMING, the first phase of group development

The first phase and activity for group development in a classroom is FORMING. FORMING activities are appropriate at the beginning of the year or the beginning of every class period in the World Language Classroom. Students need to get to know each other in order to reduce intimidation and encourage their participation. If you don’t do these activities already, consider adding them to your lesson plans to help build community in your classroom. 

2. THIS or THAT

You can do something as simple as making a PowerPoint daily of THIS or THAT! Have kids line up according to whether they like the Chicago Bears or the Green Bay Packers (the rivalry in my area). Then they have to explain to someone next to them why they like (“me gusta…”) one better than the other.

You can keep it as simple as red or blue, beach or mountains, chocolate or vanilla, or make it relevant to a set of vocabulary or cultural themes you are studying.

With the current online Spanish program company I am working for, FL4K, there is a cultural component that is very rich for this particular activity.

The program includes short cultural segments related to eight different Spanish-speaking countries that include the following categories: nature, adventure, lodging, global issues, art, music, food, products, citizens, transportation, site of interest, regional Spanish expressions, etc.

Students have a chance to learn about all these categories in Instagram-like posts. They are available with a single platform, including interactive real-time polling, discussion questions, and recording features perfect for the digital generation.

Students can learn at their own pace due to the wide range of language levels available for each student, from Novice to Intermediate and Heritage levels.  With this platform, students can even vote digitally on what they are most interested in and then practice sharing the reasons why with their classmates in the target language. This is a perfect way for students to get to know each other. Learning new cultural information in the target language and sharing opinions about it is a very motivating and engaging way to teach language.

This platform is available as a toolkit if you are not interested in using the entire program. Check it out at  FL4K.com.

3. Bucket List

As students learn about other cultures in depth, have them Think-Pair-Share what would be their preferred things to do in the country that they are studying (Bucket List).

Students could learn to explain the Why (¿Por qué?) of their choices as they move from Novice to Intermediate in their language development. They could also begin to ask questions to each other about their choices.

What happens with a rich cultural program is that students are not learning language in a vacuum. They are enriching their cultural knowledge as they build language proficiency.

FL4K has carefully scaffolded the language elements so that familiar chunks of language are repeated over and over until they are adopted naturally. For teachers with IB and AP programs in their departments, this is a perfect way to build cultural knowledge while building language proficiency. Take a look at our website at FL4K.com. You will be amazed by the striking images and fascinating cultural topics presented in a very appealing way for Gen Z!  NO more boring textbooks and irrelevant cultural topics. 

4. Four Corners

Every unit in the FL4K curriculum introduces basic vocabulary, verb structures, and dynamic cultural material that includes global challenges.

Four Corners is an activity for group development that allows students to group according to their own interests or opinions. The only thing you have to do is present the ideas.

With FL4K, we give you the controversial ideas in our global challenge segment of each cultural unit. You could have the students go to the corners according to which Global Challenge interests them most: Saving turtles, Recycling, Deforestation/Reforestation, Protecting endangered species, etc. Again, this gives students a chance to express their own opinions as they learn about becoming responsible global citizens.

5. Nostalgia

Have students talk about things they used to do before they learned about global challenges (imperfect verb tense), and what they are doing differently now. They can also just share their interests as children and maybe some of their more global interests now that they are learning about different parts of the world! 

There truly are so many ways to encourage group development, global citizenship, and language proficiency all at the same time!

Take a look at FL4K.com today and sign up for our free trial to see how our curriculum and/or toolkit has infinite possibilities for enhancing your language program! 

I’ll be back next week with another tooltip but in the meantime, be sure to read any past tips that you may have missed. See you next week!

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Educational Teacher's Tool Tips

5 Ways to Build an All-Inclusive Community in Your Classroom

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Be, Belong, Become. Make this a motto for building an all-inclusive community in your classroom!

The World Language classroom is a place where students should BE accepted for who they are, BELONG to a supportive community, and BECOME the best language learner possible!

Unfortunately, the World Language classroom is often a place where intimidation can be very high! Some students naturally have better pronunciation, some have an easier time understanding and applying complicated grammar matrices, and some are extroverted with no fear of making mistakes or speaking in front of others.

The World Language classroom can be scary for the introverted or intimidated! You need to consider giving every student the best chance possible to succeed, and that takes learning a little about building community and practicing it every day in the classroom. 

The following suggestions are not scientifically proven; they are simply things I learned on the job!

Give students the opportunity to get to know each other every day in your classroom!

Use small group and partner activities to reduce the intimidation factor. Mix them up randomly, too. Don’t allow them to always be with their friends. This leaves the shy students out and makes for a really miserable language learning experience for them. 

Encourage support for every student by not calling out their mistakes in front of everyone.

I was once one of those who had to publicly correct every verb form or improper use of ser vs. estar. What a ridiculous, uninviting way to teach!

Let those mistakes go as long as there is communication happening. Once students have heard the correct language chunks enough, they will just begin to use them correctly.

In my opinion, we are so wrong to call out every grammar mistake every day for every child. It is discouraging and makes them terrified to ever speak the language! How antithetical is this to what we want to do in our classrooms?

Give students positive feedback!

Make it up! If they draw beautifully, comment on that! Find something good about every child and praise it!

Let your students know that you appreciate them in all their wonder, even if their wonder does not include being talented in learning a second language in your classroom. Connect with your students and let them know that you don’t judge their whole being on whether they are successful in your classroom!

This will go a long way toward opening their spirit to the possibility of having a positive language learning experience. 

Measure students against themselves!

If a student can only get two words out the first time they speak in the class, praise that, and encourage them to get three or four out the next time! Let them know that they are making progress and that you have noticed it!

I have taught kids who stutter, have dyslexia, dysgraphia, ADHD, suffer from severe anxiety and depression, are painfully shy, struggle with family issues, just don’t get it, etc.

It was always incumbent on ME to make a comfortable learning situation for them! And guess what? It was always so rewarding to watch those challenged kids shine! And they can and will if you build the right community for them!

Make your classroom about the learning COMMUNITY and not about you and your frustrations with them!

Tune into your kids and hone your community-building skills.

Study Bruce Tuckman’s group development skills of forming, storming, norming, and performing.

Starting with these methods will help build an all-inclusive community in your classroom. In the next few weeks, I will share specific activities for the World Language classroom for each of these stages of group development based on a workshop that my friend and colleague, Elena Giudice, has brilliantly created.

Elena and I are now part of a teacher team that is helping to write curriculum for an amazing language program for kids! Check out FL4K.com to see the latest design for an innovative and interactive way of engaging kids in learning Spanish (for now and many more languages to come)! 

Sign up here for our free trial and see what you think! And if you’ve missed any of my past tips, you can read them here!

Categories
Educational Teacher's Tool Tips

5 Ways to Build Student Success in the World Language Classroom

Reading Time: 3 minutes

This Week’s Teacher Tooltip: Student success comes from making the target language come alive for your students by giving them opportunities to practice using the language outside the classroom. I’ll share some great ways to do this in this post.

Advocating for summer language camps, homestay experiences abroad, or even hosting exchange students can help language come alive for the learner. When students have friends who speak another language, they become more motivated to communicate and build their language proficiency skills almost unwittingly.

Check out Language Testing International and FlipGrid for ways to get your students talking in the target language with native speakers.

Student success comes from making the language come alive through entertaining, comprehensible input!

Other paths that lead to student success in language learning are through media entertainment.

Our students need ample comprehensible input. I remember asking exchange students from Spain how they learned to speak English so well. They told me they loved watching American movies and listening to American music.

TV series, podcasts, music, and movies in the target language are not only entertaining; they lead to student success. When students hear structures used in meaningful contexts, they tend to remember them and begin to use them with confidence. 

Student success comes from teaching your students the language to actually communicate!

Another key point in leading language learning to student success is teaching language in meaningful chunks for communication.

This helps students to hit the ground running as they build proficiency skills. Instead of bogging them down with unwieldy verb conjugations in a vacuum, teach them the super 7 verbs (poder, tener, querer, estar, ser, hay, gustar) that help them be conversant from the start.

When students learn basic phrases for practical needs early in their language studies, they feel empowered and more successful.

Student success comes from lots of repetition that leads to confidence in using the language for practical purposes!

One more key to student success in language learning is repetition! While this is a basic concept, it is not always easy to prioritize in instruction.

Many textbooks and curriculums try to force-feed language to the student. It is overwhelming for them and they often end up feeling defeated. A few gifted and talented students can do it, but the majority can’t. Language learning is for everyone, not just a few talented students.

Student success comes from providing dynamic contexts for the language to keep it fascinating for them!

The last key to student success in language learning is contextualizing the language for the students.

Embed chunks of language in a compelling culture program that helps students develop a global perspective about the world and not only speak the language, but appreciate the richness of being an inclusive language learner, embracing the cultural tapestry woven with language.

Student success is very possible if you find the right curriculum for your students!

Check out FL4K, a state-of-the-art language program for young language learners, that actually prioritizes the criteria that I have mentioned as necessary for student success!

We are a teacher team with many years of experience in the classroom that is helping this company to include these keys to student success in language learning in a single learning platform that captivates young language learners’ attention.

Our curriculum includes entertaining videos, interactive digital games and dialogs especially designed for language learners, built-in language lab practice, and an eight-country culture program that embeds chunks and prioritizes repetition, providing a scaffolded curriculum that truly builds language proficiency skills.

FL4K is designed to build student success. For a program that your students will love: FL4K.com.

We are currently accepting accounts for our upcoming free trial to pilot this program! If you’d like to participate in trying out the program for free, sign up here.

P.S. Missed any of my past tool tips? Catch up here.