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Dr. Baros is a dedicated researcher, educator, and LGBTQ advocate. Her areas of expertise are proficiency-based language teaching and creating inclusive environments for LGBTQ students and people.
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Kagan Cooperative Learning and Spanish

10/4/2015

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Last year, I was introduced to the Kagan Cooperative Learning method.  I have to admit, I was skeptical at first.  However, as soon as I saw it in action, I was hooked!  I knew I could get more engagement, more comprehensible input, and more communication happening in my classroom if I could successfully transfer Kagan principles to my classroom.

Although I had some success incorporating Kagan into my classroom mid-year, the real strengths are showing this year now that I've had a summer to think it over, truly dive into my lesson plans and modify them to be Kagan-based at least a few times each class, and set up my classroom both physically and with expectations/procedures.  Here are a couple of examples of activities that we've done:

Objective: Read an article in Spanish.
  • Kagan Structure: Rally Coach
  • How it worked: Students worked in pairs.  Each pair had one copy of the article.  Partner A pointed to where they were reading and translated the sentence, asking for help from Partner B as needed.  Partner B followed along and listened.  When Partner A finished the sentence, they Praised (I have Praise Words in Spanish on my walls) or coached (helped make corrections, then praise).  Students traded roles after each sentence.
  • What I liked about it: At a glance, I could see that almost all students were engaged.  They were leaning in toward one another, both looking at the same page, as one student was pointing and reading.  They were asking one another questions and helping each other.  No one was frustrated or embarrassed and it was easy to spot those who checked out on occasion and then redirect them.

Objective: Write sentences in Spanish.
  • Kagan Structure: Jot Thoughts
  • How it worked: Up to this point, students had explored cognates, worked on memorizing some common classroom verbs, and taken notes on classroom items.  The day before, students did an activity where they translated sentences I drew out of a bag (I drew an animal cognate as the subject, one of the verbs, and a classroom object resulting in often silly sentences like "The elephant sits on the stapler).  Having had this modeled for them, they were to create their own sentences using the animal cognates sheet and their classroom verbs and objects notes.  Each group had a stack of small paper squares.  They were to take a paper square and write one sentence on it using the above format, lay it out on their desk, read it to their group, and then repeat.  The goal was to cover as much of their desks as possible with little squares.  I walked around with my Spanish stamp and stamped correct sentences or coached on how students could fix a sentence to make it correct.  I made sure everyone had at least one stamped sentence.  Then, students were to take their notebooks around to different groups and copy one correct sentence for each of the verbs in their notebook.
  • What I liked about it: Everyone was working on sentences.  In fact, they enjoyed creating the sentences so much that they didn't want to go get the notes when it was time - they begged me to let them keep writing sentences!  I couldn't believe how a simple structure could turn a would-be boring activity into something the kids didn't want to stop doing.  It was one of those days it felt like the heavens opened and the teaching angels came down to my classroom singing their praise chorus for the students as they worked.  Students were giggling as they made up silly sentences and others were satisfied that their sentences were perfectly practical and made sense.  Everyone was engaged and everyone got correct comprehensible input when it was time to read one another's sentences.  This was an excellent example of positive interdependence as students asked each other questions as they worked and relied on one another to get all of the sentences in their notebook.  I will definitely be doing this activity again!

If you are interested in Kagan Cooperative Learning, I highly recommend starting with their book and the Kagan Structures for Engagement Smart Card.   I also prepared a one-page handout to share with other teachers who are new to the method.  I'll be attending the Kagan 4-day workshop in February and cannot wait to learn more!
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The new Señor Wooly Site

10/4/2015

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I could not be more happy about this!  The new Señor Wooly website exceeds expectations and then some.  I am so excited to be able to share this with my students this year!

There is now a complete curriculum and you can assign "Nuggets" for each song to students for homework, then monitor their progress.  It does not let them progress until they have achieved 100% on the assignments.  Easy grading and differentiation!  Speaking of differentiation, the website also allows you to set not only the class proficiency levels, but you can adjust the proficiency levels of individual students so the tasks meet their abilities.  The only downside to all of this is that I'll have to re-think a few of my original lesson plan ideas as they were based on the supplementary packets and many of the same activities are now in the "Nuggets".  However, that also means I can reserve my class time for the higher-order thinking activities, such as Movie Talk, writing and speaking activities, and more organic language as students get the basics down from doing their homework.

I cannot recommend this website highly enough - it forms the backbone of my curriculum (more to come on that soon), and this just made everything even easier, more interactive, more focused on comprehensible input, and overall more exceptional than ever.  Thank you Señor Wooly!
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Interactive Notebook BreakTHROUGH!

10/4/2015

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Every year that I've taught, I've attempted to do Interactive Notebooks with my students.  It looks like the third time is the charm, though!  I finally have the Interactive notebooks working out very well.  I definitely enjoy having these notebooks over a standard binder.  I can get creative with how students take notes and I know all of the information is in one place.  Moreover, students know when they are missing information and actively come to get foldables, glue-ins, and copies of notes.  It's so easy to simply tell them which page to open up to, and everyone has exactly what they need!  Here's how we finally made them work:

School Supplies
The first step was to make sure students had the materials they needed in order to create their notebooks.  The items I included on my required supply list (related to the notebooks) were:
  • Regular size 100-sheet notebook (200 sheets) - if you aren't specific, you'll get notebooks of all different shapes, sizes, and page counts that throw a wrench into your plans!
  • Glue stick

These two supplies have been essential and we've used them at least a few times per week.  Sure, it takes a week or two for students to get the RIGHT notebook (even with being specific, people still brought in the wrong size of notebook) and sometimes kids don't have their glue sticks, but they figure it out.  Keep checking supplies the first two weeks of schools and reminding students they need to get these!

Classroom Setup
I encourage students to keep their notebooks at school and provide study materials online in place of their notebooks.  This way, they always have their notebooks when they need them.  So. I needed a storage system that allowed easy access to the notebooks but wouldn't create a mess.  I am also using personal white-boards this year, so whatever I figured out had to store them, too.  My solution came in the form of the plastic hanging file folder boxes - they were perfectly sized to fit the white boards AND the notebooks for all of my periods!  Keep in mind, I have my desks in groups of four, so with three periods of Beginning Spanish I had to fit 5 white boards (I always keep an extra), an eraser or two, and 12 notebooks.  The crates are quite big to put on the desks - I have them sit on the floor next to the group, but out of any traffic.  The system is working beautifully - I can quickly move everything out of the way if needed, students have quick access to everything that they need, and there's minimal mess as students *attempt* to keep their basket semi-organized.

Notebook Setup
Rather than taking a day to set up notebooks, we did it as we went.  On the first day of school, I had students number their notebook to page 20 as soon as they walked in to the class and then start doing the warm-up on page 4.  The students without notebooks simply completed the activity on a separate sheet of paper, but were also put on notice that they NEED their notebooks!  For homework, students had to number the rest of their pages by the end of the week.  On the third day of school, we were working on pages 21-24, so students who had not yet numbered their pages quickly did so through the pages we needed and continued working.  Nearly everyone had their pages numbered by Friday, when we did a culture activity on page 153.  We added section dividers (Vocabulary and Culture) as we used them rather than all at once.  It worked out well and didn't use up a lot of time.

Students glued in pages as we talked about them - I handed out the syllabus in half-sheet form toward the end of the week since most students had their notebooks by then (I posted the syllabus online as well so most parents had already read and sent in the signature page by Friday).  Plus, we'd already gone over most of the information throughout the week, so students didn't need to sit and read the syllabus - they just needed to put it in their notebooks.  I think I will do this a little earlier in the future (probably mid-week) so we don't' just forget about the syllabus in their notebook.

During Teaching
When I hand out a worksheet, I first tell students which page it goes on (and how to glue it in if it's a foldable) and what to title the page.  Then, as I'm handing out the paper, students are already gluing the paper into their notebooks and are looking over it.  The entire glue-in process takes about 2 minutes and students are very good about sharing glue sticks when needed.  For other notes, I simply tell them which page to take notes on and begin.  Students are very good now about asking which page they need to put information on (and getting better at looking at the board to see which page) - they know information can't go just "anywhere"

Keeping Notebooks Updated
I do a notebook check about once every 2-3 weeks.  Basically, I wait until there is enough new information since the last check to merit a new check.  I may throw on a few items from previous notebook checks that I notice aren't completely done and then check every new item we've added that students should have completed.   I also do not check the notebooks myself - I give students a simple rubric and they check one another's notebooks, then turn in the rubric to me!  They are pretty honest and very quick about completing these notebook checks - usually I can have my fastest quiz/test-takers check all the notebooks by the time the entire class is done with the test.  Other times, I just have them swap notebooks and the whole process is done within 3-4 minutes.

In order to facilitate keeping the notebooks updated, I update a Google Doc with the pages students should have, pictures of what the completed pages look like (courtesy of an excellent student's notebook), and links to any hand outs that students may need to print out.  Absent students can check the online notebook to get their notebooks caught up AND students can check the notebook at home if they feel the need to look at the notes.  It all works nicely as long as I do my part to keep it all updated!

*****

In summary, I'm very pleased with how the notebooks worked out this year.  I know we will continue to use them consistently throughout the year (which hasn't happened in the past) as we use them basically every day.  I don't use them in my higher classes at the moment, but they are definitely a valuable resource for my middle school students still learning to organize materials and who must have ready access to their notes.
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  • Home
    • About Us >
      • Jillane Baros, Ph.D. >
        • Blog >
          • NBCT
  • Spanish Courses
    • Pre-K and Kindergarten
    • Elementary Spanish >
      • Teacher's Guide
      • Lesson Guide
      • Lección 1.1 - FREE PREVIEW!
      • Lección 1.2
      • Lección 1.3
      • Lección 1.4
      • Lección 1.5
      • Lección 2.1
    • Independent Study
    • Additional Languages
    • Storify Me!
  • SpeakEasy Podcast
    • Free Podcasts
    • SpeakEasy Spanish PLUS
  • Student Travel
  • Contact