I read the proof today! My district participates in PLCs, thus we have common assessments. Since I am the only TPRS in my school (and district) I feel pressure when it comes to common assessments because I worry they don't know how to "play" the game.
Before spring break, our essential learning (per the mandated curriculum) was the perfect tenses. I was feeling up-tight, under pressure and worn down, so I slipped back into the trap of "hammering grammar" (through CI). No, it wasn't a good thing. I stuck to what I had planned, what I had to say, and didn't give the students enough CCCI... in my first and second hour classes. In my fifth hour, however, I always seemed to be in a more laid-back, student-centered mode and my fifth period blew the assessment away. We had wonderful, student-centered, compelling, contextualized, comprehensible input... and they learned the perfects much better than my other classes.
As if that weren't enough, this class sometimes struggles more than my other classes because their background knowledge of the language has some gaps. I was so proud. It really set me straight.
I even changed my original lesson plan today because of what I had learned from them. Instead of using fill in the blank sentences with por and para, we talked about what we will do this weekend, when we are leaving for it, how we will get there, why we are going there, etc. The students were much more engaged in the conversation than in some sentences on the board. Much more worth our time.
CI wins again.
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