Tuesday, November 2, 2010

Presentations and Commercials

This is the website of an Oberlin College Spanish teacher familiar with levels 1, 2 and 3 (beginner, intermediate, advanced) and it has some good suggestions as to how to go about organizing oral presentations in the classroom. I agree with the author that for lower levels, such activities like describing how to make something or telling the class about a trip are best. This gives the student the opportunity to practice speaking about something that is meaningful to him or her and is a great way to incorporate new vocabulary as well as practice new grammar and  verb tenses in a fluid discourse.

Although it might not be practical for community college learners, high school Spanish students could definitely benefit from some of the games suggested on this website. I especially like the Pictionary game and the “Who am I?” game to get students speaking in Spanish in fun ways.

Another good site that could be used to get students talking is a Dutch site for foreigners learning Spanish called Ver-taal. This video would be good for showing the students the imperative tense. This particular video is from Chile and communicates how people can prevent forest fires. The teacher could show this video in class and then have the students get into groups of three or four and create their own commercial. The assignment could be structured so that it either incorporates vocabulary the students have already learned or new vocabulary the teacher can provide, depending on the topic chosen for the commercials.

Youtube is also a good resource for short videos on various topics in Spanish that could serve as examples for presentations in the classroom. This in-flight movie provides an introduction to the city of Caracas, using simplified Spanish and vocabulary the students will likely be learning in the classroom. One activity the teacher could do with this is have the students work alone or in groups to create a video about their hometown or anywhere they have been. They could use this video as a model of some topics to include in their own presentations, as well as to get an idea of what kind of language is used when describing people and places.

2 comments:

  1. I really like the first website from Oberlin college, some of the ideas are great. I especially like her idea for Spanish 3 to have groups give short, theatrical presentations of a grammar point. Sounds like a great way to incorporate communicative group work into a grammar-based syllabus and you can imagine the students having so much fun "acting out" the differences between the preterite and imperfect, or when to use the subjunctive. Nice link!

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  2. I agree with you both! Wonderful links. The in-flight movie of Caracas is both educaiton and fun! Great culture to bring into the classroom. Thanks for sharing!

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