⭐️Using a required textbook Catherine Chasse ⭐️Using a required textbook Catherine Chasse

Using a Required Textbook? Here’s How to Integrate CI Strategies

Making CI Work with a Traditional Textbook
New school, new team, same goal: help students succeed and love Spanish. I’ve found a way to blend comprehensible input with our required textbook—without falling behind or sacrificing key grammar and vocab. Storytelling, shared writing, re-reading games, and creative performance tasks have made it all click.

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⭐️Comprehensible input Robyn F. ⭐️Comprehensible input Robyn F.

An approach to required vocabulary

Flipping Vocabulary for More Input (and Less Stress)
This year, I’ve revamped how I teach vocabulary—blending storytelling, grammar, and vocabulary lists with a flipped classroom approach. Students complete Gimkit homework before taking weekly quizzes, freeing up class time for more input-rich activities. It’s worked so well, I’m now using it with my 8th graders, too.

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⭐️Assessment Catherine Chasse ⭐️Assessment Catherine Chasse

Informal Speaking Assessments for Novice Learners

Should We Grade Speaking at the Novice Level?
I used to avoid novice speaking assessments to keep anxiety low—but I started to wonder if I was missing a chance to build confidence. By making speaking low-stakes and playful for most of the year, then gradually adding informal assessments, students wanted to communicate. The result? More joy, more risk-taking, and real growth.

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⭐️Assessment Robyn F. ⭐️Assessment Robyn F.

Simplify your grading with these four tips

Grading student work is one of those tasks that always seems to pile up, doesn't it? I often find myself putting it off, only to end up with a mountain of assignments to tackle. I'd much rather spend my time creating new materials and activities for my students. Over the years, I've found some strategies that have helped me simplify and speed up the grading process. Here are five tips that might help you streamline your grading too.

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⭐️Assessment Robyn F. ⭐️Assessment Robyn F.

Assessment in a CI Classroom

“But, I don’t know French!”

I used to hear this from students ALL. THE. TIME. especially during a test. I felt so frustrated because that was what all of the flashcards and worksheets were supposed to be adding up to - actually getting to use the language. This is where Acquisition-Driven Instruction, Comprehensible Input, and aligning my assessments to my goals for students came into the picture. Today, my assessments are task-based and reflect how I teach and how I want my students to be able to use the language.

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⭐️Reading Catherine Chasse ⭐️Reading Catherine Chasse

Getting Started with Stories: How to Create Compelling CI Stories Based on your World Language Curriculum

Want to Start Storytelling with CI—But Have a Required Curriculum?
Good news: you can do both! This post offers five easy strategies for weaving compelling, vocabulary-rich stories into your existing units. From anchor charts and cliffhangers to re-reading games and animated slides, these ideas keep students engaged while reinforcing key grammar and vocab naturally—no major overhaul needed.

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A Simple Twist to Gamify “Write and Discuss”

Write and Discuss is our favorite low-prep CI strategy—it’s quick, effective, and easy to implement in Spanish or French classes. Students help create 3–5 sentences using target language structures, then read and analyze them together. Want to boost engagement? Try our Write and Discuss Bingo twist to make it fun and keep kids engaged.

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