Showing posts with label video. Show all posts
Showing posts with label video. Show all posts

Thursday, October 28, 2021

Breathing Space/ Resting Space

Image: desert sunset. Text reads: The Exhaustion is REAL.  How do I provide input and give myself a break?

The Exhaustion is REAL

Over the last few months, I have been getting a lot of requests from teachers for activities that give them a break- activities that are still input-focused but let students work independently or in small groups. I hear you!

The feeling of being on all the time, of being the one who has to guide the conversation, to monitor every kid's comprehension, and the sheer emotional weight of taking care of every person in the room is exhausting.  The thousands of decisions we make each hour are overwhelming. Deciding which word to use, when to walk over to that student to check in on them, when to ask a question, when to stop and give students a break, all the while that we are managing the actual humans in the room, while speaking in a different language and navigating between languages...it's really, really hard.

Image: Desert sunset. Text reads: Breathing Space, Resting Space

Breathing Space/ Resting Space

So what do we do to make it feel like we aren't on all the time in a comprehension-based classroom? How can we give students input, that they understand, and not feel like we have to be captivating their attention 100% of the time? 

Luckily, there are a lot things we can do! Some things require some up-front work- either in finding or creating texts that are 100% comprehensible to your students. Here is an article that addresses that: How to write texts that your students understand (The Comprehensible Classroom)- but if you are working with a curriculum or novel that has texts that you are confident that your students understand, or you work to co-create a text (through strategies such as Asking a Story, Card Talk, Write & Discuss, etc.) you have a TON of options.

I decided to dissect a lesson, filmed when I was recovering from a major knee surgery, and share exactly what I was doing to give students input, allow for super low energy on my part, and get through a really rough time in my life.  (You can read more about some of the lessons I learned during this season of being on crutches here: Mindset Reminder)


Image: polaroid photo with colored pencils. Text reads: Listen and Draw.  Teacher reads a familiar text. Students draw events from the story. Activity Credit:  Laurie Clarcq, Hearts for Teaching


Strategy 1: Listen and Draw

I had students draw while I read. I asked a handful- a very small handful- of comprehension questions to make sure that they were really understanding, but what I was reading was the typed out text of a story that we had co-created, so it was familiar and easily understood by students. In this activity, I had students use whiteboards and markers, but any kind of paper/writing utensil combination would work.  I also had them draw 4 pictures, dividing the whiteboard in 4 boxes.   Read more about that here: Secret Input

Activity Credit: Laurie Clarcq, Hearts for Teaching  Honestly, I don't know where I learned about this, but it seems *likely* that I learned it from Laurie. It is one of several strategies that fall into what I call "secret input" strategies, that I have presented on a few times.  If I learned it from you, please let me know so I can credit you! 

See this strategy in the video below at 0:22. 

Image: Polaroid with an image of a stamp that reads Top Secret. Text reads: Secret Input. Students: find the text that matches the picture. Underline it in your copy of the text.

Strategy 2: Secret Input

 Find the text that matches the picture (Secret input variation)

Once we had pictures, I had students prop their whiteboards on their chairs, find someone else's whiteboard, pick a picture, and, using a written copy of the text, find the best sentence to describe the picture. Then they had to underline the sentence in the text that matches the picture. They had to do this five times. 

See this strategy, including how I give directions in the target language, in the video at 9:24. 

Image: Polaroid with students of color at a table looking at pictures. Text reads: Picture Share. Students highlight their own or another's picture and read the accompanying text

Strategy 3: Picture Share

Students highlight their own or each other's art.

After students glued their copy of the story in their interactive-ish notebook, they were invited to share their own or someone else's art. My role was calling on the kid, clarifying which picture, and listening. The kids did all the work AND celebrated each other! 

In video: 15:46

Brain break!

Brain break: Pikachu (From La Maestra Loca) 

Bonus! Practicing when students did not meet my expectation of going back to their seats silently. 

In video: 18:50

Image: Polaroid of chrysalis becoming a butterfly. Text reads: Before or After? The teacher reads an event from the story, and asks students to write what happened before or after. Activity credit: The Comprehensible Classroom

Strategy 4: Before or After

This is a low-to-moderate energy activity. While it is teacher led, it feels very low energy to me because all I am doing is asking students to re-read the text and find the answer to one of two questions (which required no prep on my part), then copy the answer on their white board.  I think that it feels low energy to me because while students are writing, I am drinking coffee, futzing with the music, reading over their shoulders, providing hints or support, etc. You can read a detailed description of this activity here: Before and After. I learned it from Martina Bex. 

In video: 20:20

Another Brain Break

Brain Break: Toe Tapping Brain Break

I have NO idea where I learned this from, sorry! If I learned it from you, please let me know and I will credit you! 

In video: 29:18

Strategy 5: Draw and Write a prediction

This strategy only works for some teaching contexts- specifically, when one is teaching a novel. In this class, we had read chapters 1-5 of Brandon Brown Quiere un Perro, then diverted a bit from the novel to  ask a story.  To bring us back to the world of the novel, I asked students to draw and write what they thought would happen next in the novel. This activity was adapted from the Teacher's Guide. 

Note: That day, before I went home, I picked 7 or 8 of the best predictions, corrected any language errors, and put them in a slide show to print out.  When we next met as a class, I put the printed slides around the room and had kids walk around, read the predictions, and then vote for funniest, most probable, most improbable, and most creative. This was another way for me to get them to interact with input without me leading the class- but it did require prep on my part.   

In the video: 30:15

High Energy Strategy: Weekend chat

For the last few minutes of class, I asked students what they did over the weekend. So you can see what it looks like! Read more about weekend chat here: Weekend Chat

In the video: 34:28

The Video

Here is a *very* long, unedited, un-captioned, imperfect video in Spanish that shows most of the  this lesson. I am sharing this so if you want to see what some of these strategies look like, you can! This video is unique in that I was about 4 months post-knee surgery, and I was on and off my crutches throughout the video. I was a real mess during this time period (because of the surgery and accompanying massive pain levels and stress of not being able to do anything that I wanted to do, e.g. ride my bike), and I think the video really shows how you *can* provide tons of input without being captivating or high-energy.  

About this video: Students are in a Spanish 1B class in April of their 8th grade year. For most, this is their 2nd year of Spanish in a comprehension-based program.  All students have permission to be used in this video. 

Minute by minute guide 

0:22 

Directions for Secret Input: Read and Draw

9:24

Directions for Secret Input: Find the Text 

15:46

Secret input: Picture Share

18:50 

Brain Break: Pikachu


Practice returning to seats quietly!

20:20

Before or After reading activity

29:18

Toe Tapping Brain Break

30:15

Make a prediction: Draw and write

34:28

Weekend Chat (brief!) 





Tuesday, February 25, 2020

Engaging: shared reading and student accountability and teacher mindset



One question (and variation) that I see a lot from teachers has to do with "how do I keep kids engaged?"  It often goes with "how do you handle reading long blocks of texts?"

I was thinking about this because it seems to come up very often for teachers, and because it isn't something that I have spent much time thinking about, to be honest.

I decided to sit down with a video of myself reading a long block of text with one of my most challenging classes (which has improved a lot) and actually write out what I did.  I was asking myself:  What did I expect from kids?  What did I say to them?  What did I do?  What did they do (or not do)?    

You can scroll down to a minute-by-minute guide and reflection of the video, but first, read this:



My "engagement strategies" are only about 10% of what I do to keep kids engaged. 
Teaching my expectations, and practicing them is maybe 25%. 
My belief (mindset) about student engagement in my class is at LEAST 65%. 





Mindset for engagement in the classroom:  

  • I control the culture of my classroom (as Jon Cowart puts it so well in his book).
  •  Most kids *will* respond to whatever I do and ask if they are motivated to do so.
  • Students are motivated, not by grades, but by previous successes, a desire to engage with the community, with the discussions, and with the content (language + topic).  

You can't see me doing "mindset" in a video.  (Can you? I would love to know.)  

What you can see is a classroom that is founded on those beliefs, and kids responding.  

Here are some the strategies that you are going to see:  

  • Gestures for  many words (learned from Alina Filipescu) 
  • Sound effects.
  • Class job for that one kid who really needs something that day..in this case, holding up a crocodile every time I say the word in Spanish.
  • Comprehension questions to confirm understanding.
  • Personalized questions about students and content and connections between the two.
  • Personalized question referring to a prior class reading.
  • Brain breaks.
  • Acceptance of L1 (English)answers to keep the communication flowing. 
  • Denial of L1 (English) and support in circumlocution, as appropriate. 
  • Student signals- they signal me to indicate when I am not clear, and to say it again.
  • Student runs out of class sick.  


This is a whole class reading of a projected text, never before seen, of Lágrimas de Cocodrilo, from The Comprehensible Classroom **.

Scroll down to the minute-by-minute breakdown to see what exactly it is that I (and the students) are doing.

Click here if you have trouble playing the video.





Minute by Minute guide to what is happening:



 ???
llora (cries) - I say the word, students do gesture
00:01:36
está triste- (is feelings sad) gesture
00:01:50
Comp question /review: What were the consequences in the previous reading?
00:02:04
Personalized question: is this a problem for you? (Personal connection- consequence is about American football, this kid plays that sport and is amazingly proud of it.)
00:02:17
Personalized question to another kid- who does not do sports. Then...digging for more info about what would be a big consequence in his life. (Acknowledging who he is.)
00:02:51
Lágrimas (tears)- student uses an instrument to make a noise every time I say the word.
00:02:58
Cocodrilo- one student holds up a mini-crocodile toy and the rest make crocodile mouths with their arms.
00:03:34
Gestures and noise:  Lágrimas, cocodrilos, lágrimas, cocodrilos
00:03:37
Pause for kids to do gesture: tiene hambre (has hunger)
00:03:40
Gesture: lo come (he eats it)
00:03:48
cocodrilo, come (gestures)
00:03:54
Cocodrilo again
00:04:00
llora (cries)- gesture
00:04:04
comprehension check choral response, L2, (does the crocodile laugh or cry?)
00:04:14
Whole group, turn to your partner- comprehension check in L1
00:04:28
Listen for response, confirms correct answer "is eating"
00:04:48
lágrimas, cocodrilo
00:05:14
Call back to earlier conversation about manipulators
00:05:43
1) Student uses rewind / go back signal, so I go back and give more support:
 a) Gesture and check that the first word- they want- is understood.
b) cognate gesture to indicate that the word sounds the same and means the same in English, kids shout it out.
00:05:47
lágrimas
00:06:06
Student interrupts in L2 on topic
00:06:11
Affirm interruption and open it up to the class for discussion.
00:06:24
I ask interruptor for more information
00:06:35
 Student uses L1 word (hide) and I push him to circumlocute, so he restates it with words he has- crocodiles under tree. Then I restate.
00:06:41
cocodrilo  
00:07:00
Student signals that I used a word that they don't know- árbol - tree, so I quickly translate.
00:07:36
I draw what the student is describing (and extend the language)
00:08:47
Personalized question: who is a carnivore in class?
00:08:53
Personalized question: who is not?
00:09:01
Gesture: son (they are)
00:09:04
Comprehension check: what does "son" mean?
00:09:20
lágrimas
00:09:23
cocodrilo
00:09:34
Brain break (ant vs. crocodile, a tiktok meme)
00:10:28
Kid looks like he is going to pass out. So..I go after him.
00:10:42
cocodrilo
00:11:13
L1 comp check
00:11:40
Student interrupts with a question in L1, and I respond in L2

Thursday, February 13, 2020

New Video: Raw and Uncut- Reading from a projected text with actors

This video was taken in early February with my Spanish 1 Honors class of 7th graders.  In it, we are reading a projected text (from SOMOS 1, Unit 5*) that students have encountered for the first time.  I am using a variety of student actors.  It gets a little (OK, a LOT) silly but it is a short text and was a great day.

The first thing you are going to see is some extensive small talk or chit chat.   I asked all the kids to ask each other how they were and then invited them to share about someone else. This might sound like forced output- but watch.  The question went something like "Joe, how is someone in the class?" Joe then responds "Keisha is fine." "Keisha, why are you fine?" and so on.  Notice how they answer the more complicated questions with a mix of English (L1) and Spanish  (L2)- and the world doesn't stop!  I just restate it in L2 and move on, and the conversation keeps going.

Then, after quite a while, I move into a write and discuss model- just a few sentences.

17:00 in is where the reading activity starts.

Download an observation sheet here if you would like an organized format for your observations! 

My apologies for not taking the time to subtitle it.

Click here if it does not play for you.




*This reading is a suggested assessment, but I do not use it as an assessment in my Honors class, just as a reading.

Friday, January 10, 2020

Story asking! Video! Friday Afternoon!


So, you remember that Plan B class? They have made big improvements. HUGE, in fact. Not perfect. Far, far from it.  But...they have come a long way. 

So much that I asked a story in class today!!!  Since storyasking is one of my very favorite things to do in class, I was pretty joyful. Since it was the end of the day on a Friday, I was pretty exhausted.  

In fact, I asked the same story with two different sections of my Spanish 1B class of 8th graders.  


Level Up your Learning


 Use this form (and read the article while you are at it) to observe.  (This was a collaboration between Martina Bex and I.)  

Real talk

Please forgive any and all language mistakes- I am human.  And for a minute, I started to ask the story in past tense, then remembered mid-word what class I was in front of. 

Notes: The first THREE minutes are in English! Gasp! I was setting expectations.  That, to me, is a very good use of L1.   Also, for the first couple minutes or so of the actual story, the camera is on its own personal journey of discovery in my classroom.  It decided not to focus on me at all.  Skip to about minute 5 if you feel like you must, but the sound is pretty good in those first couple of minutes.  

You will see me mouth the words "pollo frito" a few times.  I am doing this because we established (ages ago) that when we say it, one kid leads us in his favorite dance. Thus, I use the magic of the fried chicken dance very carefully.  

At about 13:20, a kid starts to have a side conversation and I have to send them out of the room.  (They are going to work on a written assignment.) 


I also did this story with another class, but for now, here is one video. My apologies for not taking the time to add subtitles.  It's Friday night.

Click here if it won't start playing. 





This lesson is the Story asking part, day 2, of SOMOS 1, Unit 10.  Used with permission.  




Resources about story asking:  
Story asking: Summer SOMOS Fun Club Video
Story asking: bit.ly/storyaskingsupports  
Blog post and more info:  https://comprehensibleclassroom.com/2019/07/24/tprs-storyasking-made-simple/

#StoriesConnect Tips
#1-Set expectations
#2 Managing Choral Responses
#3- Teaching how to make suggestions

What is TPRS™?