Story-Based Countdown to Halloween – Resources in German!

I am happy to share something I have been working on: a German adaptation of Cécile Lainé’s Story-Based Countdown to Halloween! Six stories, suggested extension activities, and a reading assessment! They are easy to adapt to different levels, too. Just make sure you preview the videos ahead of time. 🙂

Cécile made these materials available at no cost, but she put a lot of love into them. If you want to support her great work, donate what you can at PayPal (cecileflaine@gmail.com) or Venmo @Cecile-Laine.

Story-Based Countdown to Halloween Resources

And if you are my student Sofie, who sometimes reads my blog, don’t look ahead at the resources or else class will be boring for you next week!!!

For the German Teacher Stretched Paper-Thin: The German Club Ideas List

Many German teachers teach multiple levels of German, and/or are the only German teacher at their school. Added to that, with the pressure to “advertise” their programs so that they “get the numbers” such that their programs don’t fold, German teachers take on a lot of additional roles and activities to increase their “reach” within the school community, including international travel with students, German-themed events and festivals on weekends, honors societies, outreach clubs at other schools, culturally-themed events after school hours, making t-shirts and posters…the list goes on. It can feel like the individual teacher is the reason a program lives, or dies. That is a lot of weight to bear.

Advising a German Club can feel like Just Another Thing in that list of Extras, even if the students are wonderful and it increases your “reach” at your school. (This is the case for me – my officers this past year were incredibly fun, dedicated, and enthusiastic! And I was still very tired at times in trying to help make German Club happen.) Also, ask any German teacher who has hosted a Spaghettieis-centered event how it went and you will watch their eyes unfocus as they travel to a dark, ice-cream-sticky place. If you have to do Just Another Thing alone, in addition to everything described above, it can be all the more frustrating and draining.

So, fellow German teachers, maybe you shouted “FELT THAT!” at the previous 2 paragraphs. Let’s put our heads together and make German Club easier for us all so that we can endeavor to put control over the club into students’ hands and just enjoy it with them. With some guidance, ideas, and inspiration from colleagues across the world who have already made some German Club Magic happen, we can streamline our planning, reduce our stress, and maybe even learn some new stuff about the cultures we are interested in.

In April of this year, I put together a Google Doc that listed ideas for German Clubs I had culled from various teacher groups and websites. They are categorized into “Anytime” ideas, “Month/Day-Specific” ideas, and then full curricula. (Shoutout to Amanda Beck for the excellent year-long German Club curriculum that she shared!) There are already six full pages of ideas, and I feel like we’re just getting started.

Take a look at the doc linked below, and if you have any ideas that aren’t on the list, click the link at the top of each page to submit the idea for inclusion in this master German Club idea list. I thank you, and your colleagues thank you. Here’s to a less stressful year of German Club fun! ❤️🌈🇩🇪

German Club Ideas List

Small Talk / Chit Chat in the Language Classroom – Free Resources for German and Spanish Teachers!

Every language teacher knows that relationship building is essential to making the language classroom a place where students can lower their Affective Filters and acquire tons of language. This is easier said than done – so we have to be on the lookout for techniques that can intentionally make this happen. And if they accomplish two goals – both building relationships AND giving students personalized input – all the better!

Why not just start each class with some Small Talk or Chit Chat in the language? Nothing groundbreaking, nothing curricular, just asking good questions and following up on the answers! Through these conversations, we can learn about opinions, experiences, and life circumstances of our precious little flowers, and also fill them up with tons of input. Boom.

Here is a free resource: a set of slides for starting Small Talk conversations in your virtual or in-person classroom! Lots of visual support for your learners, and I can imagine they would be easy to “annotate” on Zoom or turn into a workspace for Jamboard!

Huge shoutout to Bill Langley, who created the Spanish version that I then turned into German! (Any comments / suggestions for the German versions are welcome – I am a lifelong learner myself!)

German Small Talk / Chit Chat Slides

Spanish Small Talk / Chit Chat Slides

Do you just…chat with your students at the start of class? How else do you intentionally build relationships? Leave a comment below and let me know!

Among Us – The Game Your Students Are Obsessed With Right Now

Surely, at some point this year, a student in one of your classes has mentioned the mobile game “Among Us.” It is a social deduction team game where a group of brightly-colored astronauts is hurtling through space, attempting to keep their spaceship intact and complete ship maintenance tasks. Among the crew mates, a couple “imposters” sneak around the ship, sabotaging the work of the crew members and taking them out of the game. The goals of the crew mates are either to identify all the imposters and vote them out of the game during an emergency meeting, or complete all the tasks on the ship. The goals of the imposter(s) are either to irreparably sabotage the ship’s systems, or take out enough of the crew mates such that the imposters have taken over the ship.

I think students love it because it is very fun to debate who saw what, who has actually been completing tasks for the good of the ship, and who is acting “sus” – that’s “suspicious.” I personally love social deduction games (like One Night Ultimate Werewolf, or Mafia), so I totally get it when my students want to talk about their strategies, the tricks they have played on friends and strangers, and their frustrations when no one believes them when they knew the truth all along! It’s intense, and so much fun.

But how can we talk about it during class? Just now, I happened upon a post in the iFLT / NTPRS / CI Teaching Facebook group by a teacher named Christan. They had created a template with vocabulary for talking about the game in Spanish, and another teacher named Christy quickly offered a French translation. I’m here to offer the German one I whipped through real quick!

How might we use these? It sounds to me like a great brain break. Maybe we just want to show the students the vocab so that students can have it for themselves – they LOVE talking about this game. Christan suggested displaying the vocab, and then actually playing a game as a class! (This is possible if you make your own private game room within the game, as far as I know.) Students who have the game will obviously be very involved, but students who are not playing can follow along as the teacher or a chosen student plays, and the teacher can narrate the whole time in the L2. Students could even give input on what the teacher should do, or who to vote for during the emergency meetings, based on what they have seen from the projected game or their classmates’ reactions!

I think we could all use more play generally, and also specifically this year. I think I’m going to try this out, and I’ll try to report back, too, about what worked! For now, check out these chat mats for the very popular mobile game “Among Us:”

Spanish – “Entre nosotros”

French – “Entre nous”

German – “Unter uns”

Have you ever played “Among Us”, or talked about it in class? Comment below and tell us how you utilized this very popular game for fun and language gains!

AP German / Spanish Resource: Digital Culture Notebook

This summer, I participated in an AP Summer Institute (virtually!) in preparation for my very first group of AP German students this coming fall. Gulp. I’m actually very excited for this first group. I will only have two students (last year’s level 3 was smaller with many seniors), but they are dedicated and so much fun. Plus, the AP Exam – intimidating and intense as it is! – is a great opportunity for them to show off what they CAN do with their Intercultural Communicative Competence.

One big question that came up in our group discussions during the APSI was how to incorporate the seeming mountains of cultural information and reflection that students need to navigate the Exam with ease. Culture shows up everywhere in the exam – no task on the exam is “purely language skill-based.” (Not to mention that language and culture are inextricably linked!)

I was wondering to myself throughout the training if it would be wise for students to compile a reflective cultural notebook of sorts that would document their growing cultural awareness, while also helping them gather useful vocabulary. This could potentially help me as the instructor to identify where I wasn’t providing cultural input to students, pushing me to flesh out my instruction to be even stronger. I also wondered about introducing the cultural notebook even as early as level 2 as a Pre-AP strategy to make visible students’ growing cultural awareness.

According to the ACTFL Intercultural Can-Do Statements, students grow from simply being able to recognize Products and Practices that help them understand Perspectives, to being able to compare them and interact at a functional level in the target culture(s). As students move closer to Advanced language proficiency and Advanced Intercultural Communicative Competence, they are more able to explain how and why there is diversity within a single “culture.” That (ambitious) goal requires a depth of cultural knowledge and skills that won’t be reached by only having Culture Fridays. How can we give students lenses through which to assess and grow in their Intercultural Communicative Competence, and visibly document that growth? How can we make sure that they are most at ease when confronting the AP Cultural Comparison?

Enter Bethanie Drew. Bethanie’s blog is a treasure trove of structures and strategies to simplify, clarify, and enrich the learning experience for both students and teachers. And just the other day, Bethanie shared an excellent digital notebook that does exactly what I was dreaming about!

The digital notebook looks like it will be immensely useful for AP students, and could even be used in Pre-AP courses. It is divided into 8 notebook “tabs.”

  • The first tabbed section reminds students of the three Ps of culture, as well as how students can draw on the different levels of culture that exist within their social environment (from just their own family, all the way up to their national identity).
  • Tabs 2-7 are divided up by the six themes of the AP course. Each section begins with a page for students to make general notes of vocabulary and cultural ideas that are related to the overall theme. Then, each of the unit Essential Questions are listed on a separate page, so students can consider their cultural knowledge through the lens of the Essential Questions. (E.g. “What constitutes a family in German-speaking societies?” “What are some important aspects of family values and family life in German-speaking societies?” etc.). Finally, sample questions from previous AP exams aligned with the theme are listed, and extra space is given for any additional notes.
  • The final tab is called “Resources” and includes a flow/structure for the comparison (with accompanying useful phrases) and a place to brain dump about individual cultural topics in a more general way (“Education system,” “Sports,” etc.).

I intend to use this digital notebook this year with my AP students as an early formative assessment of their cultural knowledge, as well as their control of vocabulary related to the different course themes. Over the course of the units, we can start with a brain dump into the organizers in the “Resources” tab, then move some of those vocabulary words and ideas into the tabs for each of the units, then refine our ideas through the use of the Essential Questions. In the end, students will have a resource that they created themselves to study with, as well as one that makes clear where they may have gaps they want to fill with further investigation! Score!

I am also contemplating using parts of this notebook with my level 3s this year to build their confidence with the AP themes and to reflect on their growth and learning throughout the German program. I will probably leave out the Essential Questions for my 3s, and stick more to the organizers in the “Resources” tab (and maybe organizing some of that topic knowledge under the related themes). I’m even thinking of doing an even more watered down reflection like this with my level 2s toward the end of the year…this resource is the gift that keeps on giving!

It is so important for us as teachers to incorporate culture into every lesson, and help students reflect on their growth and learning. This tool might help us do just that! Many thanks to Bethanie for her work, which you will find at her original blog post here.

Finally: here is the resource in German and Spanish! Feel free to make a copy and modify as you like. (And any corrections to the German are welcome!)

AP Grundsatzfragen und der Kulturvergleich

AP Preguntas esenciales y la comparación cultural

How do you feel you do at growing and assessing students’ Intercultural Competence? And how do you tackle the AP Cultural Comparison? Let me know in the comments below!

Kultur: Ramadan 2020

Hallo, meine lieben DeutschlehrerInnen! My perception is that there are so few resources for Teaching German with CI (especially compared to Spanish and French). I’m going to make it a goal of mine to share things I have created for my students that might be helpful to you.

Today, I am sharing a document that introduces students to the Muslim celebration of Ramadan. It is very basic: it describes how Muslims celebrate Ramadan, why, and when. While I am no expert, I think it is important to ignite students’ curiosity about different cultures. Also, Ramadan 2020 began yesterday, April 23rd, 2020!

There are two versions of the text in the document. The first is a bit simpler, with emojis to support comprehension and a glossary of lower-frequency vocabulary. The second is slightly more complex in sentence structure and vocabulary. On the third page of the document, you will find an infographic about the fact that how long a person fasts during Ramadan is dependent on where they are on the globe – the length of your day is determined by what latitude your home is on! Finally, I included some phrases for how to wish others a blessed Ramadan.

How am I using these texts with my students? Well, during this period of online learning, I am using these as “extra credit” texts, though I plan on assigning them to my Level 2s later when we do a bit of study on “Feste und Feiertage.” As extra credit assignments, I’m just instructing students to read version 1 until they are comfortable with it, and then move onto version 2 if they want a challenge. Then, they answer in a Google Form four things they learned. This could be new vocabulary in German, cultural information, or questions that they continue to have after reading the text. Simple!

Here is the document in docx format!

Here is the document in PDF format!

Here is a nice video in German that goes great with the text! (Brief mention that sex is forbidden during the fasting time of Ramadan.)

Ich wünsche euch einen gesegneten Ramadan!

Let me know if you end up using the text, and how students respond to it! What are some other German resources that you would like to see? They could be about cultural topics, short stories, etc.!