• Cielo grande,  Culture

    Cielo grande in the Spanish classroom

    Last year, I started to look for a new series to show my Spanish 4 students. I was looking for something that came from Latin America since there is a Spanish series shown in Spanish 5.  After trying out a few different ones, I found Netflix’s Cielo grande, also known as Secrets of Summer in English.  The series takes place at a struggling Argentinian hotel that the characters are working hard to keep from closing.  To bring in more income they’ve reinstated their summer wakeboarding competition and are reopening their karaoke bar.  One of the wakeboarders coming to compete is also there searching for secrets about her past.  The first…

  • Culture

    Vidas paralelas

    If you haven’t seen the video Vidas paralelas, watch it here first.  You might even need to watch it again, just to make sure you don’t miss anything.  Now, after you’ve maybe felt a strong wave of emotions, let’s talk about what an awesome video it is for students!  Not only is this an authentic resource, but it is a beautifully put together video that challenges stereotypes and our preconceived notions.  My favorite part is when my students realize the ending of María and Sofía’s stories, it is one of those lightbulb moments we teachers dream of.  Originally when I found this video I was searching for videos for my…

  • Culture

    Día de los Muertos and Sugar Skulls

    When I became the Spanish Club advisor, I wanted to do something different to celebrate Day of the Dead.  My students spent a lot of time learning about Day of the Dead in Spanish 1 and even created digital ofrendas.  But for Spanish Club I wanted something unique from what we did in our classes, something that students could create.  So I decided to try the sugar skull molds from teacher’s discovery.    Before the meeting, I used the molds with candy melts to make fun colored treats for my students.   I also enlisted the help of my Spanish 5 students to create the sugar skulls with me, so they had…

  • Culture,  Online and Virtual Spanish

    Day of the Dead Activities

    Day of the Dead is almost here! Especially since the movie Coco my students are more excited than ever to learn about this holiday.  I use the following activities as an introduction to Day of Dead in my Spanish 1 classes.  My first goal is to make it abundantly clear to my students that Day of the Dead and Halloween are not the same thing, even though they are celebrated so close together.  I want them to learn basic information about the holiday and then connect what they’ve learned to their own lives.  I love that I can set these up as an assignment in Google and then have my…

  • Culture,  Online and Virtual Spanish

    Discover Puerto Rico

    We are nearing the anniversary of Hurricane María again this week and because many of my students are old enough to remember it, I like to spend some class time talking about Puerto Rico.  Last summer, Puerto Rico came out with an 8 mini-episode series called Discover Puerto Rico with Lin-Manuel Miranda, which is great to use with students.  The series is hosted by Lin-Manuel Miranda and each 3-5 minute clip highlights a different aspect of life in Puerto Rico.  While the goal was to draw tourists back to the island after Hurricane María, it really is a celebration of life on the island.  While most of the episodes are…

  • Culture,  Online and Virtual Spanish

    Ready-made Culture Video Activities

    As I plan for the upcoming year, it is more important than ever for me to have ready-made sub plans.  My district is going to all virtual learning to start the year, but all the details haven’t been hashed out yet and we could change to blended or in person instruction beginning second quarter.  Taking those things into account, I want to be prepared in case I’m not able to teach my classes, or at least as prepared as I can be, which is where my ready-made culture videos come in! My first few years teaching, I used a variety of hand me down travel DVDs about Spain and Latin…

  • Culture

    Guacamole Food Day

    It’s a fact, students love food and in the world language classroom they frequently ask for food days.  A few years back I began bringing in fruit typical to Latin America for my students.  I began doing this because many of them indicated they hadn’t ever tried fruits like mangos or avocados as well as to move away from asking students to bring food from home.  In my attempt to simplify the prep for a food day and get away from me having to spend so much time cutting up fruit, I started having my students make their own guacamole in class.   Honestly, I was concerned the whole idea would…

  • Culture,  Games,  Spanish 1 & 2

    Spanish Guess Who?

    This year I finally completed a goal I’d had for many years: to make my own Guess Who? game using important or famous people from Spanish-speaking and Latinx communities.  One of my units centers on physical descriptions and I had already purchased the game boards, so all that was left to do was create new cards, which is easier than it sounds!  It was without a doubt the most time consuming task of my teaching career, but so worth it!  In previous years I had purchased several copies of the original game Guess Who?  and the knockoff version  Who is it? .  There is literally no difference between the game instructions,…

  • Culture

    Tacos and Community

    Tacos have been having their moment for quite some time now.  You can find them on almost every restaurant’s menu and Taco Tuesday is serious business for lots of people.  My students have not been immune to this craz, for years they’ve asked to go to the popular Mexican restaurant in town or suggested Taco Bell.  My easy answer to both was: “Why go somewhere you’ve all already been?”  Last year, I finally found the solution to their begging: walk to the smaller, lesser known Mexican grocery store and restaurant just three short blocks from school, something that easily fit into our block schedule.  The establishment was newer to town…

  • Culture

    Singing in Spanish

    My students love listening to music, it is almost like their headphones are another appendage.  If they had their way, they would leave their headphones in all day, and now with the influx of AirPods and the like, it is even easier to just slip them on.  In response to my students’ love of music, I play a song everyday in class.  My department had been doing this long before I arrived and now with YouTube it is even easier to find songs!   Asking Why? is an important question to ask about everything we do in our teaching practice.  So the question: Why do we sing in Spanish class? is…