Tag Archives: ci

180: CI Activities You Can Do Today


Do you have particular activities and procedures that you use to engage students in your classroom? Many of us have these tried-and-true go-to CI (Comprehensible Input) activities. They get talked about a lot on social media, in language teacher circles and even on this podcast. In this episode I’m going to walk you through 15 CI activities. Be sure to download the free CI Toolbox that includes all 15 Comprehensible Input (CI) activities with descriptions, suggestions and tips. 

Topics in this Episode:

Be sure to download the free CI Toolbox that includes all 15 Comprehensible Input (CI) activities with descriptions, suggestions and tips. 

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.

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Facilitating Target Language Comprehensibility

Making language comprehensible is the cornerstone of effective language teaching. When students understand what they hear and read, the language acquisition process begins. This not only enhances their proficiency but also builds their confidence, encouraging participation and risk-taking in language use. Let’s explore practical strategies for facilitating target language comprehensibility, creating an environment where students thrive.

Facilitating Target Language Comprehensibility, French, Spanish, CI, Comprehensible Input

Why Target Language Comprehensibility Matters

Target language comprehensibility refers to the extent to which input is understandable to learners. Inspired by Stephen Krashen’s Input Hypothesis (i+1), comprehensibility means providing input that’s slightly above students’ current proficiency. This fosters engagement, retention, and deeper learning.

Facilitating comprehensibility is also a High Leverage Teaching Practice (Glisan & Donato, 2020), directly impacting student learning and engagement. It helps us create classrooms where students confidently acquire and use the language.


Five Key Strategies for Facilitating Comprehensibility

1. Use Visuals and Realia

Visual aids and real-life objects make abstract concepts tangible, bridging the gap between the unfamiliar language and students’ knowledge.

  • Tips for Implementation:
    • Integrate images into lessons to provide context and cues.
    • Use realia—authentic objects like food or household items—to create connections.
    • Encourage students to bring items that connect to the target language.
  • Example: For a lesson on household vocabulary, show pictures or bring items like spoons and books. Ask students to name and describe them in the target language, making vocabulary meaningful and memorable.

2. Scaffold Language Learning

Scaffolding involves breaking learning into manageable chunks and providing temporary support.

  • Tips for Implementation:
    • Simplify complex sentences to match students’ levels.
    • Provide sentence starters or frames (e.g., “I think that…”).
    • Gradually increase language complexity as students grow comfortable.
  • Example: Start a conversation with “What is your favorite food?” and scaffold responses with “My favorite food is…” Progress to more complex questions like “Why do you like this food?”

3. Contextualize Vocabulary

Teaching vocabulary in context helps students understand its function in real communication.

  • Tips for Implementation:
    • Introduce words through stories or real-life scenarios.
    • Connect vocabulary to students’ experiences and prior knowledge.
    • Use thematic units that embed vocabulary naturally.
  • Example: For a unit on weather, write a short story using weather terms. Discuss the story together, reinforcing vocabulary in a meaningful context.

4. Incorporate Interactive and Communicative Activities

Interactive activities engage students in meaningful language use.

  • Tips for Implementation:
    • Use pair and group work to encourage collaboration.
    • Simulate real-life situations with role-plays and interviews.
    • Facilitate games and interactive tasks that require language use.
  • Example: Create a role-play where students practice ordering food at a restaurant. Provide menus in the target language and alternate roles as customers and servers.

5. Provide Comprehensible Input

Comprehensible input exposes learners to slightly challenging language.

  • Tips for Implementation:
    • Gradually incorporate new vocabulary and structures.
    • Repeat and rephrase information to ensure clarity.
    • Use listening activities with varied difficulty levels.
  • Example: Play an audio recording with some new vocabulary. Ask students to summarize and discuss the dialogue, rephrasing as needed to ensure comprehension.

Your turn

By integrating these five strategies—using visuals and realia, scaffolding language, contextualizing vocabulary, incorporating interactive activities, and providing comprehensible input—you can create a supportive, effective language learning environment.

166: Building Community Through Comprehensible Input (CI)


Community. Is this a word that you would use to describe your classroom?  Do you and your students feel like you are a part of a supporting and encouraging community each time you and they walk in your classroom? How do you create this type of learning environment?  Today, Elodie Channa, a French teacher in British Columbia, Canada, joins me to bring us into her classroom community. We discuss how she uses CI (Comprehensible Input) techniques and methodology to support the classroom community and assure that her students feel valued, seen and understood.

Topics in this Episode:

  • what CI is and why it’s important for language learning
  • how CI can be used to build community in the language classroom
  • examples from Elodie’s experience where CI significantly enhanced community and engagement in her classroom
  • strategies and activities that you can use to ensure your students are receiving CI while also fostering collaboration and connection among them
  • adapting CI approaches for different proficiency levels and diverse classroom settings

Connect with Elodie Channa:

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

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CI Toolbox; Activities for Your Language Classroom

CI Toolbox; Activities for Your Language Classroom; French, Spanish

Download 15 Comprehensible Input (CI) activities for your language classroom to support comprehension and authentic engagement.

These suggestions are a compilation of ideas shared on the World Language Classroom Podcast by Joshua Cabral and his guests. 

95: Curriculum and Structure in the CI Classroom with Adriana Ramirez

What does curriculum look like in a classroom that puts comprehensible input at the center of the language acquisition experience? Is it possible, in fact, to follow a curriculum, in either a traditional or reinvented way? In this episode, we look at this very question with Adriana Ramirez, a Spanish teacher in Canada. Adriana helps us to see what curriculum looks like in her classroom as she implements a CI approach to language teaching and learning.

Topics in this Episode:

  • the key aspects of a CI (Comprehensible Input) classroom that are a departure from some more legacy approaches
  • “curriculum” in a CI classroom and how do we plan for and document the learning
  • the structure of a lesson and the student experience
  • why  CI is ultimately more beneficial than a vocabulary and grammar-focused curriculum
  • some misconceptions and critiques about CI

Connect with Adriana Ramirez:

Work with Joshua either in person or remotely.

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Teachers want to hear from you and what you are proud of in your classroom.
Join me on the podcast.
We record conversations remotely, so you can be anywhere.

52: Revisit Using Music & Doing Picture and Movie Talks


In this episode of the Summer Headspace series I revisit episode 30 with Alison Weinhold,who talks about using music in the language classroom and episode  31 with Sarah Moghtader who speaks about doing movie and picture talks.

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