Digitally French

Digitally French

Wednesday, December 14, 2016

The SnapChat Project

A Successful SnapChat Assignment

Technology was not the goal in this project.  I am not teaching my students "how" to use Social Media and I am not requiring them to even "have" a SnapChat account.  However, what this project did accomplish was it allowed students to "start conversations" and "join partners" while using SnapChat as the mode of communicating.



 The project:
1.  Select someone in your group who has a SnapChat account to be the recorder.
2.  Select someone in your group to dress up.
3.  Take their picture and add a caption using the verb 'Porter', mention one color, and mention one other adjective.
4.  Post the picture to your story and then send it to my account: stillingsfrench



 The result?  A lot of fun in the class and a chance for students to improve their writing proficiencies.  I saw a lot of errors in their products.  Reflection:  I took a screen shot of each "Snap" sent to me, errors and all.  I am going to import them into a PowerPoint and use them again as a study guide asking students to fix the errors.  It did give me some great formative feedback and reflection on student progress.  It also gave the students a fun project that kept their minds off Christmas break.










Friday, November 18, 2016

The Trip Spring Break 2018

I made a weebly with all the information.




Fun French Friday - French Waters

Fun French Friday ideas do not have to be elaborate.  I just bought waters and cookies and made a big deal out of it.

I prepared a short (5 slide) power point of various imported bottled waters.  Then I set up tasting stations.


I bought a couple of easy to find French cookies.



Then I made students serve and say "Vous Désirez?"


I also mad the students request their samples with a simple "Je voudrais..."  This was an entry level French class.  Had I done this idea with a French Three I would have made the linguistic goals more rigorous.  

And of course...I love to see their reaction the first time they taste carbonated waters!  He He :)


Sunday, October 9, 2016

Fun French Friday

In a land without attendance policies, encouraging students to come to school everyday feels like a losing battle.  Fun French Friday was created to reward perfect attendance.  When a class has perfect attendance they get a point.  When a class reaches 14 points we schedule and plan a Fun French Friday.  Some classes get 2-3 Fun French Fridays a semester, some never get them.  My justification is that when everyone is here regularly, we can progress through the curriculum faster and can afford losing a day to a Fun French activity.  Otherwise, we need to review too much for those who were not in class.  


Fun French Friday - Crêpe Day





Thursday, July 28, 2016

French Film Festival: Teachers Wanted

First ever French Film Festival!  
Teachers wanted!!

The 2016 French Film Festival for high schools invites each participating school to create an informational video about their school and community.  I will publish all the links on a single page on this blog. Then, we all virtually watch the films together on the same day. It is a collaborative, team building project and will connect students to other learners.  This is not a competition, only a way for students to use memorized words and phrases on familiar topics to interact with communities of learners of the same target language: CMT.1.2 ACTFL

The Due Date will be December 9th and the Viewing Date will be on or around December 16th.  (This has been strategically planned around the holidays to keep students engaged during a distracting period.)  Sign-up by October 3rd.

Video Requirements:

  • 2-3 students introduce the school, city, state, country, with maps or other technology to show the geography of "where you are"
  • Students introduce themselves before speaking the first time. 
  • 4-5 students present features of the school building and mention 1 activity they participate in at school. 
  • 2-3 students present the eating options at school and describe their favorite school foods. 
  • 3-4 students present a feature of their town and one thing they do there. 
  • 2-3 students present different transportation to and from school and how they personally get to school. 
  • 3-4 students should present the school day schedule and some classes offered. 
  • Footage should be shown that highlights your school and your way of life. This can be edited together with fun music. 
  • Video should be at least 4 minutes and no longer than 8 and shared on a browsers that can be easily viewed by any device in any country.


To register, just let me know!  Twitter: @breestillings  Email: stillingsab@rss.k12.nc.us


Participating School                      Teacher                    City                        Class
1. Carson High School                  Bree Stillings             China Grove, NC    French 3
2. American International School     Anna Joujan-Goss    Accra, Ghana        French
3. Apex Friendship High              Brittany Probst            Apex, NC        French 1 & 3
4. James Clemens High            Katie Gilliam              Madison, AL         French 1
5. Mooresville High School      Caroline Hocutt         Mooresville, NC       French 1
6. EPID High School     Marie Bauduin         Dunkerque, France   11th Grade English

Tuesday, June 28, 2016

Snapchat in the Class

Two weeks ago I shared a link from "Education Week Teacher" about using Snapchat in the classroom.  After reading a few more articles, I have decided to use it in 2016-2017.  Then, we will decide whether or not to ever do it again!  LOL.



But first, I still (probably like many of you) need to learn how to use the App.  You can learn how to do anything on YouTube:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8sntEyrviFk
This was a great basic video on how to use the App for someone new to Snapchat - aka ME.

Main Ideas:
1.  Don't add your students!  We don't care what they are doing on Snapchat and our use of snapchat will be more successful if they know we are NOT looking at their stories.   This will be one-way communication.  I believe this is ideal for distancing yourself from potentially inappropriate exchanges.

2.  Have all students with a Snapchat account add you.  They see your story and they can send you assignments without you having to see their stories.

3.  Don't make snapchat accounts a mandatory element to the curriculum.  Group work can still be done and assignments turned in with only one person in the group who has an account.  Viewing your story will therefore be an additional resource to enhance lessons and to review taught material.

4.  If you choose to use Snapchat in the class - make it classroom only.  Leave your family life out of it.  For example:  I personally use Facebook for family, Instagram for my hobbies and blogs, Twitter for my students and my professional development, and now Snapchat for classroom enhancement.



Here is a great link from a Spanish Teacher with ideas that could apply to any curriculum:
http://ditchthattextbook.com/2016/04/11/15-ways-to-use-snapchat-in-classes-and-schools/

My Favorite Ideas: (But read the whole article if you are getting interested in using Snapchat next year)
1.  Use your story for "Test Review."

2.  Use your story for reminders!

3.  The Virtual Study Session:  Create a 10 snaps in your story with the top things to remember before a quiz or test.

4.  10 second Movies: Students can create a 10 second movie about a key concept and then can send it to you.  Great application lesson.

5.  Student Take-Over:  Awesome Idea.  With strict guidelines, allow students to take over your account and create a story to share with all of your followers using only the target language.

6.  Speech Bubbles:  Students can take a picture and add a speech bubble in the target language and send it to you.

And my own idea:
1. Student speaking practice in 10 seconds or less and send to the teacher...not viewable by anyone else...and private!


Need More Ideas:  Just go to PINTREST...holy moly!

Need more convincing:  watch these language learning samples
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZiWLuWlr_5I


There!  
Now, follow me on Snapchat!
stillingsfrench


Tuesday, June 14, 2016

Teachers are starting to use Snapchat...should I?...should You?

Pondering this question during my first week of summer vacation and how it could enhance/hurt, make me better/stress me out more for the next school year.  Read the story and decide for yourself:

http://blogs.edweek.org/teachers/teaching_now/2016/06/teachers_snapchat_guide.html?qs=math


Tuesday, January 26, 2016

Vocabulary Ladder - Game Based LEARNING!

The age-old question:  How do you make learning more engaging?  The answer I support: when learning feels like "play."  Game-Based learning is a curriculum design that I have championed ever since attending a workshop last summer with The Institute of Play.  The hardest new concept for educators to accept  is HOW to make the learning (not the review) feel like play rather than utilizing "teacher input."  There are a couple of concepts advocated by The Institute of Play that I used to design this vocabulary teaching game: Vocabulary Ladder.  Here are the rules to the game in which students LEARN new vocabulary in a fun and engaging manner.



Divide the class into teams of 3-4 students.

1.  It kinda feels like play:  The goal of the game is to be the first team to make it to the end of the  "Candy Land" - like map.

2.  Everyone is a participant: Each member has a role to play.  One person is in charge of writing their answer choice on a personal white board and holding it up when time is called, The Writer.  Another member is in charge of defending and explaining why they chose the word, The Lawyer.  Then someone is in charge of rolling the dice, Dice Roller  The final person (and in groups of three the dice roller can double up and do this) is the Place Mover and travels to the front of the room to move the game piece.

3.  Failure is reframed as iteration:  As I listen to various arguments, I praise their ability to look at loan words or cognates even if their choice is wrong.

4.  Learning happens by doing:  I pick about 15-18 never seen before vocabulary words from a new unit and place them into a Power Point.  I then give them about 5 translations to choose from.  Students have to guess the definition to the new word based on prior knowledge, loan words, perhaps something they have seen before in another class, etc.... and be prepared to defend their choice.




5.  Challenge is constant:  Words must be new so that students are having to rely on cognition skills to learn the vocabulary, rather than just memorize.  This is not a review game but rather a learning game where meaning for the new words is created immediately when their groups try to logically predict and then justify meaning.  To prevent one team from having an advantage, teams with correct answers get to roll a dice to determine how many spaces to move forward.  So, at any time, it is still anyone's game as a perfect 6 could be rolled or a 1 could be rolled.  Also, on the game board their is a ladder indicating a backwards move.  If the team rolls and lands on this block they move back a row.

6.  Feedback is immediate:  The correct answer is revealed after all the Lawyers have presented their case.  Then, only the groups with the correct responses get to roll the dice and move forward the same number of spaces on the game board.

7.  Everything is interconnected:  Students have fun using material they have seen on television, heard in science class, "it looks like this..."  The meaning of the vocabulary is created instantly without any teacher input.


How to Make A Game Board:
Using painter's tape, make a "Candy-Land" like board.  This one was made on a white vinyl table cloth purchased at Walmart.  Once I mapped out the route, I used a sharpie to draw in the boarders.  Include a slide down and a slide up to keep the game interesting and random.


The game pieces (stuffed animals) were purchased at the dollar store along with a pack of dice.  



For more great ideas check out my store:  https://www.teacherspayteachers.com/Store/Digitally-French?aref=6n02igd7