Step 3

5

Now the fun begins! It is time to create the curriculum and choose what units to teach. Think about the following as you pick…

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1. Make it relevant to them! This is the most important in my opinion. This blog Thinktank12 has some good points to remember about Generation Y.

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2. Connect to community events. Think about what is important to your community at different times of the year. Our city’s website has a calendar and it can be put in several languages. Bonus! We have a month of celebrations based on the Kentucky Derby, so we teach a “Celebrations” unit in April. Maybe a shopping unit around December? Food around Thanksgiving?

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3. Vertically align your units. This means that you have some topics that are “repeated” in each level. Our goal is to get students to move up in the proficiency levels. If we build on their previous language knowledge, they can get there easily without having to start back at novice mid each time.

Let’s say level 1, unit 2 is a simple restaurant unit where they talk about what they like to eat and order meals (Novice). In level 2, unit 2, expand on that by making the focus describing meals and giving reviews (Intermediate low).

Think about lesson planning and resource gathering. Your cart teachers will love you if they can use the same resources for all the classes. I taught 3 preps from a cart and it drove me crazy having crates piled up and falling off (insert curse word). When I realigned the units, cart life got easier. When it came time to lesson plan, I could use the same resources too, like fresh tweets and magazine ads. I just adjusted according to their proficiency levels. When you have department meetings, everyone can the share ideas and resources, regardless of what classes they are teaching.

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One last consideration is mixed level or ability classes. This is my reality. Two levels in one class. Or sometimes I get a level 2 student that is a wee bit behind the others. It helps them to have a “review” of the previous year so they can catch up.

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4. Culture, culture, culture! Make sure each unit has a strong cultural connection. This helps you teach through culture, and then they can connect to their own lives.

Enjoy this process and remember there will be a little, or a lot, give and take when making these decisions, especially in a large department. Try to keep the topics broad so it can be adapted to the specific students in your class. Focus on the function, not the vocabulary. For example, if you have a shopping unit, don’t focus on clothing vocabulary. Focus on how to buy items. Let the students decide if they are shopping for clothes, electronics, sports equipment, etc. This also allows the teacher to adapt the unit to his/her experiences. Overall, just remember to keep it focused on THEIR interests!

Here is a link to our JCPS curriculum/profiles. It is not vertically aligned, so I switched the order around myself.

5 thoughts on “Step 3

  1. tuthillg says:

    For Level 1, Unit 7 there are no unit stamps. Do you have that file and may I have it? Also, can you explain the “stamps?”

    • Kara says:

      The stamps are explained in the tab under “classroom procedures”. See if that explains it first. If not, I’ll explain more. Let me check on that unit 7 sheet.

  2. Doodlemom says:

    Unit 2 Question
    Is there a particular order that you introduce the concepts? Pronoun, Verb, or Vocab.first?

    Using myself and my students, I acted out physical descriptions “bonita/fea” etc… My students were “glazed over” when I pointed to a picture and asked “is she tall”?

    I only have 2 days with my students. One day for 1.5 hrs. and the other 1 hour. We have 20 weeks to get through year 1.

    I don’t want to go back to introducing grammar – would like them to have an “a ha” moment from the context, but not sure how to proceed.

    Gracias

    • Kara says:

      Reflect on your questioning. Maybe give them “or” questions (Is she tall OR short?). Yes/no could be confusing them. TPRS has a ton of questioning strategies (yes/no, this or that, 5 Ws, opinions, compare (more/less), agree/disagree, etc.). About the teaching order, teach to a goal, not a grammar point (pronouns, vocabulary). I can start with about any goal and modify to their level. Also start with them UNDERSTANDING something before asking them to produce. I have 24 weeks to get through level one and my time is also limited. Every minute of class has to be tied directly to the goal. If you do a warm-up, see if that can be used better. If you go over homework in class, nix that.

    • Kara says:

      Check out the post “Death to PowerPoint” for some ideas about in context vocabulary ideas.

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