Author Archives: jos76

213: Ready for Tomorrow Quick Wins


Are you always looking for better ways to support your language learners? That’s probably why you listen to this podcast—because you care about teaching. But time is limited, and sometimes you just need a quick, practical idea you can try tomorrow. That’s exactly why I created the Ready for Tomorrow Quick Win PD series. In this episode, I’ll walk you through these short, focused courses designed specifically for world language teachers with real classroom strategies that actually stick.

Take a look at the courses!

Topics in this Episode:

What Is the Ready for Tomorrow Series?

  • A collection of 30-minute mini-courses for world language teachers.
  • Focused on quick wins—you can watch today and use it in class tomorrow.
  • Includes: A short, focused audio lesson (like a podcast episode with visuals), Printable note sheet, Planning templates, Proficiency-level examples, Reflection prompts, Certificate of completion

What Makes These Different?

  • Specifically for language teachers. No need to adapt or translate strategies from other content areas.
  • Truly actionable. Not theory-heavy or overwhelming.
  • Efficient and practical. Just 30 minutes each—no fluff.
  • Flexible. Learn anytime, anywhere—at your pace.
  • Made for teachers like you. Focused on your goals, your learners, your classroom realities.

Pricing and Access Options

  • Each course is available individually for $10.
  • Or grab the growing bundle (20% Discount):

Take a look at the courses!

A Few Ways We Can Work Together:

Connect With Me & The World Language Classroom Community:

Follow wherever you listen to podcasts.

Improve Student Writing with Sentence Frames & Scaffolds in Spanish, French & More

Do your students sometimes struggle to get their ideas down in writing because they aren’t sure how to start or how to say exactly what they mean? Writing can feel overwhelming without the right support, but it doesn’t have to be that way.  Sentence frames and scaffolds give students the structure they need to write confidently and accurately, while still expressing their own ideas.

Improve Student Writing with Sentence Frames & Scaffolds in Spanish, French & More

Writing is a skill that many students find intimidating because it requires juggling vocabulary, grammar, and sentence structure at the same time. That’s where sentence frames and scaffolds make a difference. They provide just enough support to help students express meaningful ideas without feeling lost or overwhelmed.  When designed thoughtfully, these tools encourage growth and risk-taking, making writing both accessible and rewarding.

The Goal of Writing

The goal is to support students in communicating clearly and meaningfully while gradually building accuracy over time. Sentence frames and scaffolds are not about giving answers, they’re about guiding students through language production with confidence. By creating leveled scaffolds and reducing them over time, we move learners toward independent writing while strengthening their command of grammar and vocabulary.

Classroom Strategies

Use Sentence Frames to Jumpstart Writing

Begin with simple frames that provide structure but leave space for personal expression.

  • Example: “I like ___ because ___.”

Frames reduce the mental load so students can focus on ideas and meaning.

Create Scaffolds That Balance Accuracy and Expression

Offer vocabulary banks, sentence starters, or checklists alongside frames. Scaffold tricky grammar points like verb endings or gender agreement.

  • Example: Include a list of transition words to help students organize their thoughts.

Gradually Remove Supports to Build Independence

As confidence grows, provide fewer prompts and encourage open-ended writing. Use student samples to identify common needs and adjust scaffolds accordingly. Reflection matters: ask students to notice what helped and what they’re ready to try on their own.

Your Turn

Here’s your challenge :

  • Take a writing task you already use and create a sentence frame or scaffold to support your students.
  • Try it with one group and notice how the added structure changes their confidence and expression.
  • Then, invite students to reflect on how the support helped and where they feel ready to take more independence.

Go Further

If these approaches resonate with you my Quick Win PD Course: Improve Student Writing with Sentence Frames & Scaffolds you the tools and guidance you need to make it happen.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Identify when and how to use sentence frames without limiting creativity
  • Create leveled scaffolds that support grammar, vocabulary, and syntax
  • Encourage meaningful expression while building writing fluency
  • Gradually reduce support to develop student independence over time
  • Use student writing as a feedback loop to inform future scaffolds and instruction

What your $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

Improve Student Writing with Sentence Frames & Scaffolds in Spanish, French & More

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

212: Setting Goals for Students and Teachers


Are your goals for this year focused on what you’ll teach or what your students will be able to do with the language? In this episode, we’re talking about goal setting, for you and your students, in a way that’s centered on language proficiency, not just study habits or behavior. I’ll walk you through a practical framework to set meaningful goals that set you up and your students up for a year that’s focused, communicative, and confidence-building.

Topics in this Episode:

  • why student goal setting is important
  • SMART goals and proficiency-based goals
  • why teacher goal setting is important
  • choosing a focus area for setting teacher goals
  • suggestions for keeping goals active throughout the school year
  • Student Goal Setting Sheets

A Few Ways We Can Work Together:

Connect With Me & The World Language Classroom Community:

Follow wherever you listen to podcasts.

Short Writing Tasks to Build Confidence & Proficiency in Spanish, French & More

Writing assignments can feel intimidating for many students. When faced with writing assignments can get anxious, have trouble getting started or be unsure how to get their thoughts together in a cohesive and understandable way.

Short Writing Tasks to Build Confidence & Proficiency in Spanish, French & More

As you will in the examples below, writing confidence doesn’t come from tackling big assignments, but rather through short, purposeful tasks that feel doable and meaningful.  These small moments give students the chance to process language, express their ideas, and steadily build proficiency. Whether you’re teaching novices or advanced learners, short writing tasks can fit seamlessly into your routine and spark real growth.

BUild Writing Confidence with Small Steps

Too often, students view writing as high-pressure and perfection-focused. But frequent, low-stakes practice helps them see writing as a natural way to use language.

When students write briefly about one clear idea, work at a level aligned to their proficiency, and share or revisit their writing over time, they grow in both proficiency and confidence. You don’t need to carve out huge chunks of class time. These writing moments can be just five minutes, woven naturally into the lessons you already teach.

Classroom Strategies

Keep Writing Tasks Short and Purposeful

Prompts should be focused on one idea or skill.

Examples:

  • “Write 3 sentences about your favorite hobby.”
  • “Describe your morning routine in 5 words or less.”

Keeping the task small makes writing approachable, while still giving students valuable practice.

Align Tasks to Proficiency Levels

Writing success depends on setting clear, level-appropriate expectations.

  • Novice learners: Stick to familiar vocabulary and simple sentence structures.
  • Intermediate/advanced learners: Encourage more complex ideas, opinions, or reflections.

This way, every student feels challenged—but not overwhelmed.

Manage Time, Space, and Follow-Up

Short writing tasks don’t need to take over your lesson. A quick 5-minute prompt can become a daily routine.

You can:

  • Give students space to share their writing with a partner.
  • Invite them to revise or expand later.
  • Use their work to guide future prompts and scaffolding.

This cycle reinforces learning and helps writing feel like a natural, ongoing process.

Why This Matters

Writing is challenging skill for language learners, but it’s also one of the most rewarding. Short, frequent writing tasks reduce overwhelm, encourage risk-taking, and build real proficiency over time.

Instead of seeing writing as an intimidating event, students begin to view it as a normal, and even enjoyable, part of class.

Your Turn

Choose one lesson you’re already teaching  and add a short writing prompt.

  • Keep it focused and manageable—just a few sentences or even a list.
  • Let students share or reflect afterward.

Watch how these small, purposeful writing moments help students process language and grow more confident expressing themselves.

Go Further

If these approaches resonate with you my Quick Win PD Course: Short Writing Tasks that Build Confidence and Proficiency gives you the tools and guidance you need to make it happen.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Design listening tasks that engage students before, during, and after listening.
  • Use prediction, summarizing, and focus tasks to increase comprehension and retention.
  • Create proficiency-aligned listening activities at the novice, intermediate, and advanced levels.

What you $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

Short Writing Tasks to Build Confidence & Proficiency in Spanish, French & More

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

Build Strong Listening Skills in Spanish, French & More

Listening is one of the most essential skills for language acquisition. It’s how students connect input to meaning, acquire vocabulary, and internalize structures. But for many learners, listening activities quickly become overwhelming.

Build Strong Listening Skills in Spanish, French & More

You press play, and instead of engagement, you see frustration. Students get lost, tune out, or only catch surface-level meaning. The problem isn’t their ability, it’s that they have not honed their skills in how to listen. With a few intentional strategies, you can transform listening from a passive activity into an active process that builds comprehension and confidence.

Listening Should Be Active, Not Passive

Too often, students think listening means sitting back and hoping they’ll “catch enough” to get by. But real listening requires engagement.

When students predict what they might hear, listen with a clear purpose, and summarize afterward, they move from passively hearing sounds to actively processing meaning. You don’t need to throw out your current activities. These strategies can be layered onto what you already do, whether it’s a song, a short video, or an audio clip in your curriculum.

Classroom Strategies

1. Prediction Before Listening

Help students get ready by activating their background knowledge. Show them an image, preview a few key words, or give a short description and ask them to predict what they might hear.

Example: Show a picture of a busy market and ask, “What items might people mention?”

This primes their brains to listen for meaning instead of panicking about every unknown word.

2. Focus Tasks During Listening

Instead of asking students to “understand everything,” give them one or two clear purposes for listening.

Example for intermediate learners: “Listen for two reasons the speaker likes this restaurant.”

This reduces cognitive load, builds confidence, and helps students experience success while engaging with authentic input.

3. Summarizing After Listening

Once students have listened, help them consolidate understanding by summarizing the big ideas. This can be oral or written, simple or more developed depending on their level.

Example for advanced learners: Summarize the speaker’s opinion and supporting points in three sentences.

Summarizing reinforces comprehension and turns input into output, deepening the learning.

Why This Matters

When students learn how to listen, by predicting, focusing, and summarizing, they build the confidence to keep going, even when the text feels challenging. These strategies don’t simplify the input, they empower students to work with authentic language in meaningful ways. And when you use this framework regularly, students begin to approach listening tasks with purpose instead of overwhelm.

Your Turn

Take one listening activity you already use ( a song, a video, an audio clip) and try out the framework:

  1. Before listening: Give students a prediction task.
  2. During listening: Add one clear focus question.
  3. After listening: Ask them to summarize the main idea in their own words.

Notice how these small shifts turn “just listening” into active, engaged comprehension.

Go Further

If these approaches resonate with you my Quick Win PD Course: Build Strong Listening Skills Through Prediction, Summarizing and Focus Tasks gives you the tools and guidance you need to make it happen.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Design listening tasks that engage students before, during, and after listening.
  • Use prediction, summarizing, and focus tasks to increase comprehension and retention.
  • Create proficiency-aligned listening activities at the novice, intermediate, and advanced levels.

What your $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

Build Strong Listening Skills in Spanish, French & More

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

Boost Interpersonal Speaking Skills at Every Level in French, Spanish & More

Do your students engage in partner conversations with confidence and ready to take a few risks with the target language when needed? Or, do they mostly rely on memorized phrases and default to their native language? If so, just know that it’s not just your students, and likely not about their ability. More often, the issue lies in how the speaking task is structured.

 Boost Interpersonal Speaking Skills at Every Level in French, Spanish & More

We can help support students and with the right scaffolds and you can get students talking, really communicating, no matter their proficiency level. Let’s look at how to design interpersonal speaking tasks that are spontaneous and supported. You’ll learn a simple framework you can apply right away, so unscripted speaking feels safe, doable, and even fun.

Why is Interpersonal Speaking a challenge?

Here’s the thing, students don’t need more vocabulary lists or more scripted dialogues. What they need is support for real-time interaction. And that doesn’t mean making things easier, it means making them doable.

Helping students speak more, and with more confidence, at every level comes down to how we design the tasks.

A shift in thinking and approach

Think about this for a moment: Spontaneous speaking doesn’t mean unprepared. It means unscripted.

Too often, we think of “spontaneous speaking” as something students either can do or can’t. But like reading or writing, it’s a skill that can be scaffolded. When we break it into manageable pieces, even true novices can participate in real-time conversation.

The essentials are simple:

  • Align the task with students’ proficiency level
  • Scaffold the interaction just enough to encourage risk-taking
  • Create meaningful reasons to talk

You don’t need to scrap your curriculum. You just need to make space for structured, supported conversation that builds communicative confidence.

A Few Things to Try in Your Classroom

Frame the Conversation with Can-Do Statements

Anchor each task with a clear, level-appropriate Can-Do statement.

Instead of: “Have a conversation about the weekend.”
Try: “I can ask and answer questions about weekend activities.”

This small shift sets a realistic target and helps students understand what success looks like.

From there, adjust the scaffolds based on proficiency:

  • Novices might use visuals, question stems, or sentence starters.
  • Intermediates can be pushed to add follow-ups, share opinions, and sustain longer exchanges.

The structure stays the same, but the expectations grow with students’ abilities.

Use a Repeatable Framework

Consistency builds confidence. When students know what to expect from a speaking task, they’re more willing to take risks. Try this simple 4-step framework:

  1. Set the Purpose – What’s the Can-Do? What are students trying to accomplish in the exchange?
  2. Prep the Language – What supports (frames, visuals, prompts) will help them succeed?
  3. Create the Conditions – Will they interview a partner, do a mingle, or role-play a scenario?
  4. Reflect and Repeat – Afterward, reflect briefly: What worked? What was tough? Then try again with a new partner.

The more you use this structure, the easier it becomes—for both you and your students.

Your Turn

Here’s your challenge for the week:

  1. Choose one upcoming lesson.
  2. Write a Can-Do statement that fits your students’ current level.
  3. Build a short speaking task around it—just 3–4 minutes.

Then reflect:

  • What supports did your students need?
  • What made it feel like a real conversation?
  • Try it. Tweak it. Repeat it.

Because here’s the truth: students don’t get better at speaking just by talking more. They improve by doing the right kind of talking—structured, scaffolded, and supported in the right way.

Go Further

If these approaches resonate with you my Quick Win PD Course: Boost Interpersonal Speaking at All Levels gives you the tools and guidance you need to make it happen.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Design interpersonal speaking tasks that align with ACTFL Can-Do Statements
  • Scaffold real-time conversation with supports that reduce fear and build proficiency
  • Create classroom conditions that invite authentic, purposeful interaction
  • Use a repeatable planning framework to manage, reflect on, and improve speaking tasks

What you $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

 Boost Interpersonal Speaking Skills at Every Level in French, Spanish & More

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

211: A Simple Way For Students to Understand Language Proficiency

211: A Simple Way For Students to Understand Language Proficiency; French, Spanish
Do your students know exactly what they can do in the target language? If you asked them right now, could they tell you their current proficiency level and the specific skills they’re working toward? In my experience, when students understand the proficiency path, they take ownership of their progress in a very meaningful and personal way. In this episode, I share how I help students visualize and track their growth using a Path to Proficiency Wall and how you can do the same in your classroom.

Topics in this Episode: 

  • make  proficiency levels clear and student-friendly
  • how to use text type and functions to explain growth
  • design a Path to Proficiency Wall for your classroom
  • help students self-assess and set goals
  • use the wall to guide family and student conversations
  • how shift feedback toward leveling up instead of grades
  • See an example and get your own Proficiency Path 

A Few Ways We Can Work Together:

Connect With Me & The World Language Classroom Community:

Follow wherever you listen to podcasts.

Using Authentic Texts at Every Level

You’ve seen the value of authentic resources. A real Instagram post. A café menu from Buenos Aires. A flyer for a festival in Senegal. And you think: This is gold. This is what language is really about.mBut then you pause. Can my students handle this? Especially my novices? Won’t they be overwhelmed?

If you’ve ever hesitated to use authentic materials because you thought students weren’t “ready,” this post will help shift your thinking. The truth is: authentic resources are not the reward for reaching proficiency—they are the pathway to proficiency.

Using Authentic Texts at Every Level; French, Spanish

The idea isn’t to simplify or rewrite the text. The key is in how we select and scaffold the resource so that learners at any level can engage meaningfully.

Authentic Resources

Authentic resources shouldn’t wait until students “know enough.” Students don’t need to understand every word. They need structured opportunities to interpret real-world texts at their level. When we adjust the task instead of the text, and when we lean into scaffolds like visuals and chunking, students begin to see themselves as capable of understanding authentic language. even at the novice level.

Strategies for Using Authentic Texts

Here are two practical, repeatable frameworks you can use to bring authentic resources into your classroom with confidence.

Adjust the Task, Not the Text

Same text, different expectations depending on proficiency level:

  • Choose an authentic text that fits your unit theme or cultural context (menu, schedule, ad, social post, etc.).
  • Identify tasks at different proficiency levels.
    • At lower levels, design tasks that rely on recognition or identification.
    • At higher levels, build tasks that require interpretation, decision-making, or personal response.
  • Keep the text intact. Students all work from the same real resource, but the way they engage with it shifts to match what they can do.

This keeps the authenticity of the resource while making the work accessible and purposeful for every learner.

 Visual Context and Chunking

Make authentic resources approachable by breaking them into manageable parts:

  • Select a text with built-in supports—visuals, labels, clear sections, or familiar structures.
  • Chunk the text into smaller pieces. Instead of presenting the whole thing at once, zoom in on one part at a time.
  • Sequence tasks. Start with the most accessible feature (dates, times, visuals, recognizable cognates), then build toward deeper interpretation or comparison.
  • Return to the whole text. Once students have confidence with the chunks, bring it back together so they see how those pieces fit into a meaningful whole.

This framework helps students move from “I can’t possibly understand this” to “I actually can make sense of this step by step.”

Your Turn

Find one authentic resource, such as a menu, a social media post, a sign or a song lyric. Then ask yourself:

  • What can my students do with this, at their current level?
  • How can I adjust the task, or break the resource into chunks, so it feels doable?

Then use it. Even just one task. One resource. One moment where your students see that they can understand real language from real people…at their proficiency level.

Go Further

If these approaches are inspiring you to dive deeper, my 30-minute Quick Win PD course, Quick Win PD course: Using Authentic Documents at Every Level gives you the tools and guidance to ensure that you are implementing authentic resources effectively in your classroom.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Identify what makes a text authentic and appropriate for novice, intermediate, and advanced learners.
  • Design interpretive and communicative tasks that align with ACTFL proficiency levels.
  • Use a simple planning framework to select and scaffold authentic texts effectively.

What your $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: Use Authentic Documents at Every Level; French, Spanish

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started

 

210: Revisit CI Activities and Planning for Proficiency


This is episode 6 in my 2025 summer headspace series. This is a chance to revisit episodes from the previous school year during the summer months when you may have a little extra time. Beginning next week on August 26th, you will see new episodes with exciting new topics every Monday.  For today we take a look back at some activities that you can use as you begin the school year.  In episode 180 I tell you about lots of CI activities that you can use tight away and in episode 202 I talk about the free guide I created for planning and teaching toward proficiency.

Episodes:

Work with Joshua either in person or remotely.

Teachers want to hear from you and what you are proud of in your classroom.
Join me as a guest on the podcast.

Follow wherever you listen to podcasts.

First Steps in Teaching Grammar in Context in Spanish, French & More

Teaching grammar in context makes sense in theory, but putting it into practice often feels messy. Maybe you’ve tried weaving grammar into communicative tasks, only to see students slip back into memorizing rules or asking for charts. You’re not alone.  Let’s look at some practical first steps and scaffolds that make grammar instruction feel more natural and effective so that students build accuracy while staying focused on communication.

First Steps in Teaching Grammar in Context in Spanish, French & More

The foundation to teaching grammar in context starts with this:

Grammar instruction should be anchored in communication, not separated from it.

When students learn grammar in the context of meaningful input and purposeful output, it becomes more than rules on a page. It becomes a tool that they use to understand and to be understood.

So instead of asking, “How do I teach this rule?” try asking:

  • Where does this structure show up naturally?
  • How will learners use it to communicate?

That’s the essence of teaching grammar in context.

2 Ways to Teach Grammar in Context

Here are two practical, beginner-friendly pathways to make the shift to teaching grammar in context.

The “Grammar-First” Pathway

Here is a framework to follow:

  • Choose a grammar focus: Decide which structure you want students to notice and practice (e.g., future tense, adjective agreement).
  • Select a text that features the grammar: Use an authentic or teacher-created resource where the structure occurs naturally. Students and teacher read and engage with text with the focus on comprehension.
  • Engage students in understanding the text: Focus on comprehension first: meaning, gist, and key details.
  • Highlight the Grammar Structure: Highlight the grammar structure.
  • Guide students to notice patterns: Draw attention to how the structure appears naturally in the text.
  • Reinforce through communication: Have students use the grammar in tasks that mirror or extend the text’s communicative purpose.

Students still learn the form, but they’re using it to describe, interact, and communicate, not just filling in blanks.  They also see the structure modeled in a communicative context.

The “Text-First” Pathway

This pathway flips the order: start with meaningful input and let the grammar emerge from it.  Here is a framework to follow:

  • Select a meaningful text: Choose a short reading, listening, or viewing resource rich in communicative value.
  • Identify essential grammar: Highlight structures that are crucial for making sense of the text (e.g., past tense for a story, comparisons in a description).
  • Engage students in understanding the text: Focus on comprehension first: meaning, gist, and key details.
  • Highlight the Grammar Structure: Highlight the grammar structure and guide students into finding the pattern.
  • Guide students to notice patterns: Draw attention to how the structure appears naturally in the text.
  • Reinforce through communication: Have students use the grammar in tasks that mirror or extend the text’s communicative purpose.

Here, grammar is discovered, not delivered and it sticks because it’s embedded in context and meaning.

Your Turn

If you are starting with a grammar point, most likely at novice and lower intermediate levels, you will use the grammar-first framework and find or create a text.  With more advanced students you will likely begin with a text on the unit theme and then use the text-first framework.

Go Further

If these approaches resonate with you, my 30-minute Quick Win PD course: First Steps in Teaching Grammar in Context gives you the tools and guidance you need to make it happen.

In just 30 minutes (and only $10), you’ll learn how to:

  • Define what “grammar in context” means and why it supports communication
  • Explore two practical entry points: grammar-first and text- first
  • Use a planning template to align grammar, text, and communicative tasks

What your $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere
  • note sheet to guide your thinking
  • Examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced classes
  • reusable planning template
  • PD certificate to document your hours

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: First Steps in Teaching Grammar in Context; French, Spanish

You can get the individual course or the Quick Win PD Growing Bundle, which gives you all 10 current courses plus all future ones.

Click Here to Get Started