activities for christmas in spanish class

Using Stations in Spanish Class

Keeping students engaged for an entire class can be a challenge, especially with block scheduling.  One way I like to keep students actively engaged for 87 minutes is with stations.  Depending on your class size and length of class period, you may need 3-6 stations per class.

Here are my suggestions for implementing stations:

  • Make sure each station will take the same amount of time.  You don’t want students to have a lot of downtime at one station and then be so overwhelmed at another, they can’t even finish the task.
  • Have a culminating ticket out the door (two options)
    • Prior to starting the stations, give every student a paper with either blank boxes for each station or a specific question for that station.  As students rotate through each station, they will respond to the question or you could follow a more generic format and have students write their favorite part of that station or what they learned.  Discuss and then collect this reflection.
    • Take the last five minutes of class to have students reflect on which station was their favorite and their least favorite.  Discuss and then collect this reflection

  • Try to incorporate all 3 modes of communication.  Each station should focus on one mode, since you won’t have much time at each station.  There are some ideas below for each mode.

Ideas for Interpretive

  • Read a short story, answer questions (really short story!)
  • Look at a news article, answer main idea questions
  • Watch a short video/listen to audio; answer questions (have an individual chromebook set up)

Ideas for Interpersonal

  • Pull questions out of a hat and talk with group members
  • Board games with questions on each space
  • Provide students with images, they can generate questions and comments

Ideas for Presentational

  • Watch Mr. Bean videos (my students’ favorite!) and write what he does
  • Give students a few pictures.  They will put them in order and then write a story about their images
  • Use Tell Tale cards (give them 3) and create a story with the images they received

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¡Hola, I'm Courtney!

I am a high school Spanish teacher from Pennsylvania. I create authentic and engaging resources for the Spanish classroom.  On my blog, I share practical tips and strategies for teaching world languages.

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