Author Archives: jos76

From Vocabulary Lists to Communicative Tasks in Spanish, French & More

Have you ever taught a unit where students knew all the words, but when it came time for a conversation or writing task, they weren’t able to use it? Or maybe they tried to speak, but it came out like puzzle pieces, just isolated vocabulary, no grammar, no flow, no real message.

From Vocabulary Lists to Communicative Tasks in Spanish, French & More

It’s not that the vocabulary list was wrong. The problem is stopping at memorization, rather than designing activities that push students to use that vocabulary to communicate. A lot of curriculum and pacing guides are built around thematic word lists. But our goal, especially if we’re teaching for proficiency, is to get students talking, writing, and interacting.

How de we bridge this gap?

Vocabulary as the Vehicle, Not the Destination

Here’s the mindset shift:  Instead of asking, “How do I teach this list of words?”, ask: “What communication can these words support?” This flips the focus from memorization to expression. If you’re teaching a food unit, your goal isn’t just for students to know apple, bread, and soup. Your communicative goals might be:

  • Express likes and dislikes (Me gusta el pan. Je n’aime pas la soupe.)
  • Describe a typical meal (Para el desayuno, como…)
  • Compare eating habits across cultures (En España, la cena es más tarde que en los Estados Unidos.)

Now, the vocabulary is the tool students use to reach those goals, not the end goal itself. This shift also aligns with ACTFL proficiency guidelines. Novice learners are expected to:

  • Identify words and phrases
  • Use memorized chunks
  • Communicate with formulaic language

So yes, we teach vocabulary. But we teach it through tasks that require message creation, even at the novice level.

Strategies

Chunk the List into Functions

Instead of introducing all 30–40 words at once, group them by communicative function.  In a clothing unit, group words into:

  • Describing what someone is wearing
  • Talking about preferences
  • Planning what to pack for a trip

Then frame activities around those functions. Here’s how it could look. You’re going on a fictional trip. Students choose what to pack and explain why:

  • I’m bringing a jacket because it’s cold.
  • Je n’apporte pas de shorts parce qu’il pleut.

They’re still learning the words, but in context, with a purpose.

Turn the List into a Task

Take your vocabulary list and ask: “What could students do with these words that feels real?” Example from a school supplies unit:

Instead of “What’s a pencil in Spanish?” try: “You forgot your backpack. Ask a classmate if you can borrow three items.Now it’s an interpersonal task. Even novice students can do this with sentence frames:

  • Can I borrow a ___?
  • ¿Me prestas un lápiz?
  • Est-ce que je peux emprunter un crayon ?

You’re still teaching the words, just through communication, not recall.

Why This Works

These shifts don’t require you to rewrite your curriculum. They just require you to reframe how you use your vocabulary list. When you design tasks instead of drills, students move from knowing words to using words. And that’s where proficiency grows.

Your Turn

Look at the next vocabulary list you’re going to teach.  Ask yourself:

  • What can students do with these words?
  • What communicative purpose could these words support?

Even if you try one new task, just one, you’ll see the difference in engagement and proficiency growth. You don’t have to overhaul your whole curriculum—you just need a system for making vocabulary lists work for communication.

Go Further

If this approach resonates, my 30-minute Quick Win PD course, From Vocabulary Lists to Communicative Tasks, gives you the tools to make it happen.

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

  • Identify the characteristics of communicative tasks.
  • Distinguish between engaging vs. truly communicative.
  • Evaluate and adapt existing activities.
  • Design activities with meaningful language use at the center.
  • Create tasks that promote interpretation, interaction, and expression.

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: From Vocabulary Lists to Communicative Tasks; 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

Communicative Activities for Spanish, French & More

You know the feeling. You’ve just wrapped up a fast-paced, high-energy class. Students were laughing, moving around, working in teams. Maybe they were playing a game, doing a relay, or solving a challenge. You felt the energy. You saw the excitement.

But then you pause and wonder: Did they actually communicate in the target language? Were they practicing meaningful communication in Spanish, French, or any other language or just doing whatever it took to win the game?

Communicative Activities for Spanish, French & More

If you’ve ever asked yourself that, you’re asking the right question. Because yes… fun matters. Joy matters. Engagement matters. But in the world language classroom, communication is the ultimate goal.

Participation Isn’t Always Communication

Just because students are participating doesn’t mean they’re communicating. But, with just a few tweaks, your favorite activities can become truly communicative and drive proficiency growth. You don’t need to ditch your go-to games. You don’t need to make everything serious or formal. But you do need to ask: Does this activity give students a reason to use the language with purpose? It’s not just about keeping students busy and on task, but guiding them to use the language meaningfully.

How do we do this?

Add Purpose and Personalization

Let’s take a classic: Find Someone Who. Traditionally, students walk around asking questions like:

  • ¿Tienes una mascota? (Do you have a pet?)
  • Aimes-tu le chocolat? (Do you like chocolate?)

It’s interactive and it’s fun, but without a follow-up, it can slide into box-checking.

Here’s the tweak:

  • During: Students still ask and record answers.
  • After: Students choose two classmates and create a short written or spoken summary:
    • Aprendí que Mateo tiene dos perros y los pasea todas las mañanas. Ana no tiene mascota pero quiere un gato.
    • J’ai appris que Camille adore le théâtre et qu’elle y va tous les mois. Lucas n’y va jamais, mais il regarde beaucoup de films.
  • After: Comparisons
    • Mateo and I both have pets, but Ana doesn’t.
    • Camille et moi aimons le théâtre, mais Lucas préfère le cinéma.

Now you’ve got interpersonal communication (asking, answering) feeding into presentational communication (summarizing, comparing) and the game has a clear linguistic goal.

Use the “Does It Build Proficiency?” Checklist

Before launching any activity, ask yourself these 4 questions:

  1. Are students using the target language to express meaning?
  2. Is there a real-world connection or purpose?
  3. Are students interpreting, negotiating, or producing language?
  4. Will this support what they’ll do on an upcoming assessment?

If you answer “yes” to three or four you’re in great shape. If not, there’s and easy fix.

Small tweaks that help:

  • Add a real-world hook (“Find someone who celebrates a holiday in March—then compare it to your own.”)
  • Provide scaffolded sentence frames.
  • Include a reflection piece at the end.

Your Turn

This week, take one activity you alike and fo through the checklist above.  Is you answer no to any of the questions:

  • Add a purpose.
  • Add a personal connection.
  • Create space for negotiation of meaning..

Go Further

If you want a clear framework for making any activity communicative, my Ready for Tomorrow Quick Win PD course: Design Activities That Are Fun and Communicative will walk you through it.

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

  • Identify the characteristics of communicative tasks.
  • Distinguish between engaging vs. truly communicative.
  • Evaluate and adapt existing activities.
  • Design activities with meaningful language use at the center.
  • Create tasks that promote interpretation, interaction, and expression.

What your $10 gets you:

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

Quick Win PD For Language Teachers: Design Fun and Communicative Activities; 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

Planning for Proficiency in Spanish, French & More

Have you ever sat down to plan a lesson and thought, “Okay, we’ll do this reading, then a speaking activity, maybe a vocabulary game, and a quiz at the end of the week…” but still wondered, “What exactly are my students able to communicate in the end?”

Planning for Proficiency in Spanish, French & More

How can we move from piecing together disconnected activities to designing lessons that intentionally build communication skills from the first moment of input all the way to the final assessment?

Communication First

When we plan with communication as the end goal. This means not just covering grammar points or  vocabulary lists, but making sure that activities connect more naturally, creating a purposeful learning flow.

How does this work?

  • The reading isn’t just “a reading,” it’s meaningful input that feeds directly into communicative tasks.
  • The speaking activity isn’t just fun, it’s a bridge toward the real-world assessment.
  • The assessment isn’t random, it’s directly aligned with what students have practiced.
  • This is the essence of backward design in the language classroom. And when every piece is aligned around proficiency, you start to see consistent, purposeful growth.

Strategies for Planning with Communication as the Goal

 “I Can” Statements

  • Before you plan anything, write your target “I Can” statement at the top of your lesson plan.
  • Examples:
    • I can describe what I do after school and compare it to someone else’s routine.
    • I can understand a short text about holiday traditions in another culture.
  • Then ask yourself:
    • Does my input (reading, audio, video) directly support this outcome?
    • Will students encounter the vocabulary, structures, and cultural context they need?
    • Does my task require them to do exactly what the “I Can” statement says?

Align the Input, Task, and Assessment

  • Example: Your goal is for students to compare their daily routine to someone else’s in writing.
  • Input: A short video or blog post about a teen’s daily routine in the target culture.
  • Task: Students highlight similarities and differences (graphic organizer, paired discussion).
  • Assessment: Students write 4–6 connected sentences comparing their own routine to the teen’s.
  • Notice what’s missing?
    • No random worksheets,
    • No unrelated vocabulary game.
    • Just focused, intentional practice that builds toward the communicative goal.
  • Fun still has a place—but make sure your games and interactive activities are connected to the vocabulary and structures students need to meet that “I Can” goal.

Your Turn

Backward Plan a Lesson:

  1. Pick a topic and write your “I Can” statement first.
  2. Choose input that directly supports that goal.
  3. Design one communicative task that bridges input to output.
  4. Make your assessment match what students have practiced—exactly.

Afterward, take a step back and ask:

  • Did the lesson flow more naturally?
  • Did students know what was expected of them?
  • Did it feel more purposeful?
  • If yes—you’ve just experienced the power of intentional planning for proficiency.

Go Further

If you’re ready for a clear, repeatable framework you can apply every time you plan, my Ready for Tomorrow Quick Win PD course: Intentional Planning for Proficiency:  From Input to Assessment is designed for you.

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

  • Use backward design to plan with real-world communication goals in mind
  • Choose input that supports your target proficiency outcomes
  • Create communicative tasks that bridge input and assessment
  • Design assessments that reflect exactly what students practiced

What you $10 gets you:

  • An audio walkthrough—listen anywhere, anytime
  • A note sheet to keep you organized
  • A planning template you can use for every unit
  • Real classroom examples for novice, intermediate, and advanced levels
  • A certificate of completion for your PD hours

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: Intentional Planning for Proficiency; 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

Engaging Reading Activities in Spanish, French or Any Language

Have you ever noticed that when students see a reading passage—whether it’s in Spanish, French, or any other world language—some immediately feel overwhelmed? Maybe they skim quickly to find answers to comprehension questions, missing the rich vocabulary and cultural details along the way.

Engaging Reading Activities in Spanish, French or Any Language

Reading doesn’t have to feel intimidating. In fact, it can become one of the most engaging, communicative, and culturally rich parts of your language classroom. With intentional before, during, and after reading strategies, you can guide your students to approach texts with purpose, curiosity, and confidence.

Why Reading Matters in Language Acquisition

Reading in a target language is more than a comprehension check. It’s a gateway to vocabulary growth, cultural exploration, and authentic communication.

When reading is approached as an active process,  with support before, scaffolding during, and extended after, it supports language acquisition. Whether you teach novice Spanish learners reading “La casa” vocabulary, French students exploring “Les traditions de Noël”, or advanced learners tackling news articles, these strategies will work.

Pre-Reading: Set the Stage for Success

Before students even see the full text, activate prior knowledge and spark curiosity. This primes their brains for the content, lowering the affective filter and setting a clear purpose for reading.

Ideas to try:

  • Show images related to the text and have students make predictions:
    En français: “Regardez cette photo. Que pensez-vous que cet article va raconter?”
    En español: “Miren la imagen. ¿De qué creen que va a tratar el texto?”
  • Introduce key vocabulary that will appear in the reading, having students guess meanings from context.
  • Share the title or a key sentence from the text and brainstorm possible themes.

Example: Before reading an article about Spanish tapas, show a picture of patatas bravas and tortilla española. Ask students to predict what other foods might be mentioned.

During Reading: Focus Their Attention

Students need a reason to keep reading with a manageable, motivating goal for each section. This turns reading into an active process rather than a passive one.

Ideas to try:

  • Highlight every food item mentioned in a French restaurant menu.
  • Underline persuasive phrases in a Spanish opinion article.
  • Jot down every time a character in a story changes their opinion.

Example: While reading “Un voyage à Paris,” ask students to underline all forms of transportation mentioned (le train, l’avion, le métro) and note which one the character prefers.

Post-Reading: Extend the Learning

Move beyond “answer the comprehension questions” and guide students into meaningful language use. This is where interpretive reading transitions into interpersonal and presentational communication.

Ideas to try:

  • After reading an article about travel in Latin America, have students plan their own trip using details from the text.
  • Turn a French short story into a comic strip with captions.
  • Debate a topic mentioned in the reading in small groups.

Example: After reading about El Camino de Santiago, students create a 3-day itinerary including cities, activities, and meals—then share in pairs or groups.

YOUR TURN

Take a reading you already use—whether it’s from your textbook, a Spanish folktale, or a French cultural blog—and add:

  1. One quick pre-reading task (prediction, vocabulary, image analysis)
  2. One during-reading focus question (highlight, underline, find patterns)
  3. One short post-reading communication activity (plan, create, discuss)

I’m sure you will see how these small changes can transform a static text into dynamic learning.

Go Further

If you like these strategies and want a ready-to-use system for applying them at different proficiency levels, my Ready for Tomorrow Quick Win PD course: Engaging Reading Activities That Build Proficiency is for you.

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

  • How to design pre-, during-, and post-reading tasks that build language skills and confidence
  • How to align those tasks with proficiency levels and ACTFL Can-Do Statements
  • Ways to turn any text, whether in Spanish, French, German, or any language, into a springboard for communication

What you $10 gets you:

  • A step-by-step audio lesson you can listen to anywhere
  • A printable planning template and specific classroom examples at novice, intermediate and advanced proficiency levels
  • Detailed notes and reflection guide for easy implementation
  • A personalized certificate of completion to document  your PD hours

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: Engaging Reading Activities; 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

French Level 1 Reading, Writing and Speaking Units

Many beginner activities stop at basic recall or translation, but students need more than that to build proficiency. Without engaging tasks that go beyond the surface, it’s hard to develop true communication skills.

Do you want your level 1 students to actually use the French they’re learning to read with purpose, speak with confidence, and write creatively?  These units give them the support they need to do just that.

French Level 1 Reading, Writing and Speaking Units

 

These 3–4 day units help students grow as communicators through an engaging story and a sequence of scaffolded activities that target reading, speaking, and writing that is designed for novice mid to high learners. Students interact with the story through visuals, partner talk, and creative storytelling, using sentence starters, vocabulary supports, and opportunities to personalize content along the way.

Take a look at all the units HERE.

Students build toward writing their own version of the story, keeping the structure but adding their own invented details, which gives them a sense of authorship, purpose, and real confidence in their French.

What’s Included in Each Unit:

  • A story
  • Pre-reading questions and vocabulary preview
  • Vocabulary list with space for new words
  • Comprehension questions with answer key
  • Visual retell drawing activity
  • Interpersonal speaking questions with sentence frames
  • Creative writing prompts (before, after, new ending) with sketch space
  •  Final story rewrite using invented details
  •  Full teacher notes with scaffolding tips, sentence starters, and pacing suggestions

French Level 1 Reading, Writing and Speaking Units

Students aren’t just doing isolated tasks—they’re building toward something meaningful. By the end, they’ve read, spoken, written, and created with Spanish they understand and can truly use.

Perfect for Spanish Level 1 or novice mid–high learners (ACTFL) / A2 (CEFR). Use as a communicative mini-unit, assessment, or sub-plan that builds proficiency.

Take a look at all the units HERE.

Spanish Level 1 Reading, Writing & Speaking Units

Many beginner activities stop at basic recall or translation, but students need more than that to build proficiency. Without engaging tasks that go beyond the surface, it’s hard to develop true communication skills.

Do you want your level 1 students to actually use the Spanish they’re learning to read with purpose, speak with confidence, and write creatively?  These units give them the support they need to do just that.

Spanish Level 1 Reading, Writing & Speaking Units

These 3–4 day units help students grow as communicators through an engaging story and a sequence of scaffolded activities that target reading, speaking, and writing that is designed for novice mid to high learners. Students interact with the story through visuals, partner talk, and creative storytelling, using sentence starters, vocabulary supports, and opportunities to personalize content along the way.

Take a look at all the units HERE.

Students build toward writing their own version of the story, keeping the structure but adding their own invented details, which gives them a sense of authorship, purpose, and real confidence in their Spanish.

What’s Included in Each Unit:

  • A story
  • Pre-reading questions and vocabulary preview
  • Vocabulary list with space for new words
  • Comprehension questions with answer key
  • Visual retell drawing activity
  • Interpersonal speaking questions with sentence frames
  • Creative writing prompts (before, after, new ending) with sketch space
  •  Final story rewrite using invented details
  •  Full teacher notes with scaffolding tips, sentence starters, and pacing suggestions

Spanish Level 1 Reading, Writing & Speaking Units

Students aren’t just doing isolated tasks—they’re building toward something meaningful. By the end, they’ve read, spoken, written, and created with Spanish they understand and can truly use.

Perfect for Spanish Level 1 or novice mid–high learners (ACTFL) / A2 (CEFR). Use as a communicative mini-unit, assessment, or sub-plan that builds proficiency.

Take a look at all the units HERE.

209: Revisit Calendar Talk and Special Person Interviews


This is episode 5 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 August 26th, you will see new episodes with exciting new topics every Monday.  For today we take a look back at a few CI strategies. In episode 170 I speak with John Sifert about calendar talk and in episode 170 I discuss special person interviews with Bryce Hedstrom.

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.

208: Revisit the Leveling Up Coaching Episodes


This is episode 4 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 August 26th, you will see new episodes with exciting new topics every Monday.  For today we take a look back at 3 Leveling Up Coaching episodes.  Episode 165 about supporting target language, episode 169 about student choice and episode 174 about cohesive lessons and flow in the classroom.

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.

207: Revisit Working Smarter and AI Tools


This is episode 3 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 August 26th, you will see new episodes with exciting new topics every Monday.  For today we take a look back at episode 163 where I talked about working smarter and not harder with Amy Marshall and episode 183 where I talked with Noemi Rodriguez about supporting students with AI tools.

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.

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: Engaging Reading Activities

You assign a reading, but students rush through it looking for the answers to the comprehension questions. You’re left wondering: Did they even understand it? And more importantly… Did it help them grow as language learners?

Too often, reading is treated as a standalone task with a check for comprehension, then we move on. Without intentional support, students miss out on the full power of reading as a springboard for communication, culture, and proficiency. How can we approach reading more effectively?

Quick Win PD for Language Teachers: Engaging Reading Activities; French, Spanish

This 30-minute PD course will show you, for the small price of $10, how to design engaging,  communicative reading tasks that go far beyond basic comprehension. You’ll learn how to:

  • Understand the role of reading in building interpretive and productive language skills.
  • Design effective pre-, during-, and post-reading tasks aligned to proficiency levels.
  • Use reading texts as input sources that lead to communication and acquisition, not just comprehension.
  • Create engaging activities that make reading relevant and motivating for students.

This is a practical, no-fluff course led by me, Joshua Cabral, host of the World Language Classroom Podcast. I will help you turn any reading into a rich language learning experience.

By the end of this course, you’ll be equipped with a flexible framework and a toolbox of strategies to transform reading into one of the most impactful parts of your instruction. Your students will not only comprehend, but they’ll also with the text connect.

What’s Included in This Quick Win, 30-Minute Course for only $10?

  • Audio to Listen to All Material – perfect for on-the-go listening
  • Detailed Note Sheet to follow along and refer back to
  • Reflection Activity to deepen your understanding
  • Examples at the novice, intermediate, and advanced levels
  • Planning Template to design your own engaging reading activities
  • Additional Resources to go further with the topic
  • Personalized Certificate of course completion

If you’re ready to move beyond “read and answer the questions” and make reading a powerful, communicative part of your language classroom this course is for you.

Click Here to Get Started