So.....Where Are We?

So it’s Day 5 in my room.   This year I am teaching Levels 2,3 and 4.     (The nomenclature is a bit deceiving;  Level 2 students are in HS Level 2, which is actually their 3rd full year of study)   My student teacher and I feel like we should be “going somewhere.”   You see,  we had a weekly plan.   Then that weekly plan was broken down into daily plans.

Every single day we have had to move things (that didn’t get done) to another day.    The “things we haven’t gotten to yet” list seems to be getting longer …and longer…and longer…. So I really had to sit down this afternoon to see where we are…and where we ARE going.    Normally this doesn’t bother me much.   But this is a new curriculum for me (Levels 2/3) so I don’t have my bearings yet.  Besides,  my student teacher has a supervisor to report to who does not have a lot of experience with CI-based classes…so I want to be able to “translate” our curriculum to him.

It’s a bit ironic…only 5 days in and it feels like we should have gone farther.  :o)   At best we’ve only had 3 ½ hours of contact time.   From that we can deduct time for attendance, transitions, setting up the seating chart, discussion the course expectations, a fire drill, phone calls from the office, morning announcements etc. etc. etc.    An optimistic estimate would be that we’ve had 2 ½ hours of instructional time.   From that we can deduct time to give directions, pass out and return papers, give a short “quiz”, clarify answers, check for materials, etc. etc. etc.   Now we are down to about 2 hours of interaction in the TL.  Total.

When I went back over our weekly plan, I looked carefully at what we have been doing.   In that time we have discussed the situation of the miners in Chile, explored what students did over the weekend,  read an “email’ from a “former student” who went to the VMAs in LA, sang a goofy song with IR in the past tense,   started to dig deeply into the song Aqui Estoy Yo (Luis Fonsi, David Bisbal, Neil Sedaris and Alex Syntek), revisited a few of our favorites from Sr. Wooly,  and spent some time getting to know each other via introduction letters and conversation.  

Wow.

Why on earth then does it feel like we haven’t “gone” anywhere!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!

I think, and I could be wrong, so I’ll be paying attention to this as the year goes on……that it doesn’t “feel” like a lot because we have worked hard to connect all of the activities.     The structures used to discuss the weekend were the same ones that we used to understand and talk about the Video Music Awards.    Several of them came from the song, and we used other phrases from the song to take attendance (Aqui estoy yo..es obvio!)    Structures connect activities to each other and allow students to connect their thoughts and emotions to the activities themselves.    When the students connect with the activities, they begin to connect with each other.    Time flies.  It “feels” like we haven’t “done” anything.   

We have physical evidence that a lot has been done:  papers,  powerpoints, stories, letters, even a couple of grades in the gradebook.   Yet, apparently, none of it felt like “work.”  If it did, we’d feel more productive.   I’m glad I sat down to take a look at it.  I feel much better now.

 

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  • 9/16/2010 10:29 PM Carol Hill wrote:
    Hi Laurie: I almost feel like I am stuck in mud. I moved to a new room after 17 years in on spot and I am totally disoriented. I feel like I was kicked out of my house and I can't find anything. I am really feeling out of sorts. French 1 is fine. They are enthusiastic, like the silly songs, gestures and the get to know you questionnaires. Level 3 is a big group - wide range of abilites. They are juniors who are feeling their oats. I have to run a tight ship with this group. They are feeling lost too b/c this is the group that can't meet in my new room, so there are no posters, word walls, etc. Level 4 is great. When they graduate in June and when the French 3's graduate, I will be left with kids who know only CI methodology. I still have a hard time deciding whether to use pre-made materials -they give me structure, but sometimes the book's structures lack energy to get a story going. Everything that seemed so clear to me before seems less so. Your posts are so helpful. Thanks for the support.
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  • 9/18/2010 4:08 PM Carla wrote:
    You are so gifted, Laurie. I love hearing about your classroom. I wonder if this thing of connecting activities is one of the advanced skills of TPRS... I haven't heard a lot about it, but when it means you can read the news, sing songs, discuss music awards and the weekend, and it doesn't feel like work, you have really accomplished something. If you've got time to elaborate, that would be a good read.

    I like watching Susie on video because she makes it look so *easy* and natural. It sounds like you made it feel easy and natural for your students.
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  • 9/18/2010 5:42 PM Michele wrote:
    I love this too--was just watching Jennie, and though she swore her day was total winging it, I could see the thread going from activity to activity. Carla is probably right--that connection is an advanced skill. It's from knowing at a deep level what your kids need to practice and using it to get wherever you're going. I can compare it to what Susie told me about using the same 25 words to tell every story during a particular quarter.
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  • 9/19/2010 9:51 PM Carla wrote:
    hmmm... "using the same 25 words to tell every story during a particular quarter."

    That makes me realize that I've been seeing something similar with PQA. I keep asking the kids the same 5-10 questions during PQA... color, shape, size, name, how?, who, good/bad, do you like it, prefer it/want/need/can you have it/ etc... Right now I have to pause and point every time, and they have to look at the wall (or watch me demo or look at a picture) to be able to answer. But since we keep doing the same questions over and over, by the end of a quarter (or a semester), they could really be experts. That would be something to look forward to!

    I may do PQA/TPR the whole 1st semester, gradually adding all the when and where answers of Spanish 1. And then focus on stories and novels 2nd semester. (Last year I never quite got to stories.)
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