Inside: Spanish vocabulary games for the language classroom. The best way to “learn vocabulary” is in context. I use to give long lists of isolated words, until I switched to proficiency-based teaching and threw out my textbook. I realized my students were memorizing the words to pass a quiz, and then forgetting them. Our students really need to see
Whether you’re trying to eliminate tons of prep time, save paper, or support ELL students in distance learning, using digital vocabulary units can be extremely helpful activities for ELL newcomers. These digital units target reading,
"Mónica" in the book, Fiesta Fatal I've been reading the book Fiesta Fatal, written by Mira Canion, with my Spanish 2 students. Mira's goal, when writing the book, was to create a book that was level appropriate for second year Spanish students and she succeeded in accomplishing that goal! If you're looking for a comprehensible level 2 book that has an interesting storyline, this is one book you should strongly consider. Today we read the last chapter of Fiesta Fatal. Some students volunteered to read the lines for the main characters in the chapter. I always look for ways in which students can interact with the text, so after reading, I projected the below sketches onto the board. We reviewed what happened as students said sentences in Spanish that matched the sketches. If they were uncertain about what to say, I allowed them to refer to the book. Find the download of the worksheet to the left HERE. After the students were familiar with the sketches I paired them up with a partner and distributed squares of paper that had the same sketches on them and gave them the following instructions: 1. Put the squares on the desk face down. 2. Randomly choose two cards and turn them over. 3. Decide the order of the two cards. 4. One partner says a sentence in Spanish to describe the sketch that they decided happened first in the chapter. The second student says a sentence to describe the second sketch. 5. The students choose a third paper, turn it over, and say a sentence to describe the sketch. 6. They they decide if that sketch is before the other two, in between the other two, or at the end of the first two sketches. 7. When the 3 sketches are in the correct order, they take turns saying a sentence for each of the sketches. (Student A describes sketch #1, Student B describes sketch #2, Student A describes sketch #3.) 8. Students continue turning the papers over, one by one, putting the new card in the correct place, and taking turns once again to say a sentence for each sketch. 9. When they were finished, they called me to their desks and I listened to their retell of the story. To download the two sheets of sketches shown below for the retells, click HERE. (The sketches on the sheets below are not in any particular order. Feel free to substitute any, or all, sketches that you are able to sketch better than I have done.)
French/Spanish faux amis Source: http://pinterest.com/pin/19281104630937940/
Check your answers: Check your answers: https://www.dropbox.com/s/xw9k1dj227glkd0/twelve%20differences.jpg?dl=0
Free printable flashcards and board games to teach English vocabulary about health and sickness. These are great for ESL kids and beginner learners of English.
Learn three simple things you need to teach your ESL beginners right away. These include variations of introductions, classroom surroundings and basic needs
Bring energy to your class or fill the time when the lesson runs shorter than expected with these ESL warm up activities with free powerpoint download.
Practise your German wuth free word lists. This blog post tells you where to find them and how to use them for some effective vocabulary revision.
The following infographic offers some simple Dos-and-Don'ts for how to teach vocabulary in any content area.
Inside: Common Spanish verbs every Spanish learner needs to know, and a guide for parents teaching Spanish. The Spanish language has a lot of words. It’s impossible to calculate exactly how many, but the Diccionario de la Real Academia Española (DRAE) contains about 93,000. Don’t worry, though! There’s good news for Spanish learners: only a tiny percentage
Discover more: ➡️ https://www.spanishpod101.com/?src=tumblr_questions_022218
Learn Spanish with the best Spanish lessons in the net. You can find a Spanish structured course with all the levels, from beginner to advanced.
Here is a list of the most common verbs in Spanish, containing more than 200 verbs (with audio), it's essential for Spanish learners.
Learn Spanish with the best Spanish lessons in the net. You can find a Spanish structured course with all the levels, from beginner to advanced.
Learn how to use and conjugate the most important verbs in Spanish.
Here’s a list of Spanish words related to learning inside the classroom.
Are you considering taking up Spanish? Or planning a trip to a Spanish-speaking country? These 71 common Spanish phrases will have you speaking in no time!
I’m back to teaching…not in a classroom, and not with adolescents. And not with 35 students. Buuuuuut…. For the first time in five years, I have students that I get to call my very own <3 <3 My friend Adriana over at Vermont Commons posted that one of the parents at their school was looking…
Get a list of the most useful and common Spanish adjectives used in Spanish. Also Free downloadable PDF available here at My Daily Spanish.
Inside: Common Spanish verbs every Spanish learner needs to know, and a guide for parents teaching Spanish. The Spanish language has a lot of words. It’s impossible to calculate exactly how many, but the Diccionario de la Real Academia Española (DRAE) contains about 93,000. Don’t worry, though! There’s good news for Spanish learners: only a tiny percentage
Here is a small list of words you have to be careful with. Remember, gender is VERY important in Spanish!!! el capital = financial capital la capital = capital city el cometa = comet la cometa =...
You might have seen a meme going around that compares “do”, “did”, and “done” in English to Spanish’s seemingly endless number of different forms of their equivalent verb: hacer. But don’t let this scare you off. Everything in Spanish has a pattern. Once you understand the hacer conjugation, it all makes perfect sense.
Learn Spanish with the best Spanish lessons in the net. You can find a Spanish structured course with all the levels, from beginner to advanced.