I have actually never heard of the
flipped classroom before this. It was
interesting to learn about and to see how easy it can be to incorporate into
the classroom. I wish that my teachers had
used something similar to this when I was in high school so I know my students
must be thinking the same thing. I can
see myself using this in my classroom in the future, and I want to try to incorporate
it. Her vocabulary method would be
phenomenal in my classroom for additional words not on the vocabulary list but
would be beneficial to know. I think it
would be a great way to review the grammar points like how to conjugate a verb
in a certain tense or a reminder of the placement of indirect object
pronouns. I definitely will not be
trying to reinvent the wheel, but I want to look into more ways to flip my
classroom. If the students will be more engaged and take more away from the
activities and lessons, it is worth it.
I don’t know quite yet how I plan to do this, but slowly integrate it
into class.
Some positives from a flipped classroom
are the constant access to the information.
If they have a question or forget the main point of the lesson, the
video is always at their fingertips where they don’t have to wait until the
next day to ask the teacher. Another
positive is the amount of time freed in the classroom to do activities to
practice what they learned, and they can never have enough practice
talking/speaking/listening/writing in Spanish.
A negative would be not every student has access or the means to watch
the video at home due to financial reasons, being grounded, Internet went out,
and all the many reasons why they would not be able to watch it. Tucker pointed out the negative that some
kids will just not watch the video and then instruction time is lost outside of
class, but in the classroom as well. Her
solution works well for her classroom, but I don’t know how I could incorporate
that in a Spanish setting.
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