[ola] RE: [ola] Re: Beginning of the year Œreview¹

  • From: Call Daniel <dcall@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • To: "ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx" <ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
  • Date: Thu, 29 Aug 2013 16:19:28 +0000

Thanks, Arnold!  Your way of putting things is so helpful.  I especially like 
your “island in the world of Proficiency” metaphor.

Dan Call
Spanish Teacher
Franklin Pierce High School



From: ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx] On Behalf Of 
Arnold Bleicher
Sent: Thursday, August 29, 2013 8:09 AM
To: OLA Listserve
Subject: [ola] Re: Beginning of the year Œreview¹

I like Darcy's outline of how to deal with these first few days and weeks. 
Grammar instruction at the lower levels (Novice) is pointless. Grammar and 
control of structures play a more important role as the students move up the 
scale of proficiency but at the lower levels it is a hinderance to their 
ability to communicate using the language they have. Remember what John DeMado 
says: "Grammar does not communication. It makes communication accurate." How 
accurate does a Novice have to be? Not very.

Also keep in mind that you are assessing performance, which is an island in the 
world of Proficiency. Without the follow-ups and level checks and probes, one 
can't determine Proficiency. But one can get a good idea of where the student 
is performing on a given task on a given topic. These islands of performances 
grow into continents and then into a world of global proficiency. When you look 
at the totality of their performance it is safe to conclude that their 
proficiency is somewhere near the performance. For example, a student 
demonstrating solid Novice High performance on a variety of topics and tasks is 
very likely to be "proficient" in that range. One showing vacillating 
performance between N-H and listing of the N-M may be a different proficiency 
profile. Same for all other levels. A student showing good I-L performance on a 
variety of tasks and topics will likely be proficient in the N-H to I-L range. 
A student showing good performance on a variety of topics and tasks will likely 
be proficient in the I-L to I-M range. Again, without the benefit of level 
checks and probes it is not really possible to determine the sub level but it 
is possible to get a good idea of the major level (Novice, Intermediate, 
Advanced).

Someone produced a very nice graphic showing how the levels overlap. The 
graphic highlights how it is not a linear progression but an exponential one 
and the N-H shares a good deal in common with the I-L. They both have the same 
functions and text type and accuracy/comprehensibility but the N-H isn't 
sustaining it all the time. They are very similar profiles, much more alike 
than a N-M and a N-H.

I wish you all a good school year.

Arnold



From: Darcy Rogers <rogersdr25@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:rogersdr25@xxxxxxxxx>>
Reply-To: OLA Listserve <ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
Date: Wednesday, August 28, 2013 10:53 PM
To: OLA Listserve <ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
Subject: [ola] Beginning of the year ‘review’

Hello OWLers!!!

As I was thinking about many of you who are just starting OWL, or even those of 
you who have been doing it for a while, and thinking about the role that 
grammar has had traditionally for many us in our beginning of the year, I 
wanted to challenge us all to think about it from a different perspective.

I am guessing that many of us are used to starting each year with a ‘review’, 
and this generally consists of some kind of grammar practice (conjugation games 
or quizzes, vocab quizzes, etc.), which actually tells us nothing about their 
actual language level.  I would challenge you instead to think of the beginning 
of the year as investigative, trying to find out what LANGUAGE your students DO 
have.  There is no need for ‘review’, since your only goal is to identify what 
level they are at so that you can figure out how to move them forward. They 
should be able to talk and write about lots of different topics at whatever 
level they are at (NM, NH, IL, IM, etc.). Our job is to give them exposure to 
as many different opportunities to show us their level as possible.

These are some questions to keep in mind as we lead them through this:
What level are my students at?
What functions can they do?
What kind of language (text type-lists, phrases, sentences, etc.) am I hearing?
What is our content and context, that is how many different topics can they
talk/write about?
Where are they on the ACTFL scale?
What overall language am I hearing/seeing in writing?

Think of yourself as an investigative reporter trying to collect as much 
‘information’ as possible about each student. Between all the activities in 
class and the written journals and/or pre-assessments within the first two 
weeks, you should have a solid idea of where students are. If you are still 
unsure of certain students, pull them aside to do oral interviews and determine 
better where they are. You could also do oral pre-assessments for all if you 
felt so inclined.

I keep track of all their levels and they set goals based off what level they 
think they are, with proof (their journal, pre-assessment, conversations, etc.) 
I compare where I have them at with where they placed themselves. If any 
discrepancies arise, it leads to some wonderful conversations and possible goal 
re-setting. It’s very empowering to have the language and conversation be about 
their language level and what they CAN do and what they need to do to get the 
next level instead of how well they can or can’t conjugate or what vocab they 
don’t remember from the previous year.

What other ideas are out there?! What specific things do you do? I would love 
to hear some different ideas around transforming those first two weeks of class 
and creating an investigative, fun, community building space!!!! :)

Darcy Rogers
Organic World Language (OWL)
Phone: 541.601.4509
Fax: 541.776.4099
Website: olaed.com
Facebook: tinyurl.com/organic-language-facebook


________________________________
De: JoAnna Coleman <joannac@xxxxxxx<mailto:joannac@xxxxxxx>>
Para: "ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>" 
<ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>>
Enviado: Miércoles, 28 de agosto, 2013 6:49 P.M.
Asunto: [ola] Re: Songs!

We sing everyday in class -  I incorporate the daily song into the OWL format 
sometime during the class period - sometimes we play musical chairs while 
singing, or use the song for Smoosh! or sing  in a circle while doing something 
(ie. send the clap, swaying, moving in and out like the tide), we play "don't 
forget the lyrics" or combine singing with gestures.
We'll also watch the video without sound and one partner will describe what 
they see to another who isn't looking at screen, then watch all together and 
sing. Dance offs can be fun, too.
I am going to try a modified version of the embedding literacy activity we did 
with Annie with songs this year as well


JoAnna Coleman
Spanish Teacher
Wilson High School
503-916-5280 ext. 75231
joannac@xxxxxxx<mailto:joannac@xxxxxxx>
http://profecoleman.wordpress.com/

________________________________
From: ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx> 
[ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola-bounce@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>] on behalf of Harris 
levinson [hlevinson@xxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:hlevinson@xxxxxxxxxxxx>]
Sent: Wednesday, August 28, 2013 1:50 PM
To: ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx<mailto:ola@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Subject: [ola] Re: Songs!
I think the key is to make sure that everyone practices singing it as a class. 
They need to risk singing aloud even though they fear they can't sing or "don't 
have a voice." Singing in a group is powerful, fun, and can help build 
community. You might give one quarter of the class verse 1, another verse 2, 
another verse 3, and another the chorus. Or let everyone join in on the chorus.
Perhaps you ask one of the dancers in class to choreograph some moves and then 
teach the class his/her steps.
You might also ask them to develop a storyboard for their own music video to 
the song, or to craft a lyrics book, puppet show, live theatrical presentation, 
lo que sea.
Singing with my class has become one of the greatest joys of teaching for 
me...and I am not one who looks to sing solo or even in public, but with 
students in the classroom it's a real pleasure.

Suerte con las canciones.
Harris

2013/8/28 Heidi Hewitt <hambrozaitis@xxxxxxxxx<mailto:hambrozaitis@xxxxxxxxx>>
Hi everyone,

I'm doing my música miércoles (music Wednesday) this year with OWL... AH! This 
morning I had one tough class and one decent one with a Juanes song and am 
wondering what kinds of things people have tried.

Thanks!!!

Heidi

P.S. First day was GREAT! :) Thank you all for being so supportive.



--
Harris Levinson
Teacher, Adviser
Vashon Island High School

Tel:  206.463.9171 x141


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