Earlier today I read an interesting post by Ben Slavic earlier this morning that made me really analyze how I'm doing this year with my professional development of TPRS. I know that my TPRS is nowhere near perfect and likely it won't be for a very long time. I do know that I'm doing the best that I can with the support that I have. I know that "Bad TPRS is better than no TPRS." But I don't want to practice "bad" TPRS.
At the beginning of the year I did it. I made the "switch". I'm happy with that decision. I am passionate about students, Spanish, and this method. It's a powerful mix. Thus I bought a couple of books on TPRS to help my development. The problem has been, however, that I'm also going to graduate school full time; so I've had little time to reflect or put as much effort into developing my skills.
I do know that my students are progressing. Just yesterday they surprised me and powerfully translated "¿QuĂ© te gusta hacer?" for me when my students last year couldn't remember that question for the life of them while it was a "vocab term" let alone months later as my students this year did. I know that what they are learning is long term. Thank goodness.
So today I had a break through (for me). I've been struggling with creating interesting details and parallel characters. My students loose interest. Today I realized two important things: I need to refocus on PERSONALIZATION and GOING SLOW. We also successfully added a detail to a written story, which we haven't done before. We added that Alicia is in fact 103 years old. It's not as exciting for others. But it's a step for me. We also had a good PQA in my 6th period Spanish 1 class. We saw spirits/ghosts in our classroom today. And we wanted them there! :) We also learned that myself and one other boy are the only ones scared of ghosts. It was a great class. Why can't all classes be like that?
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