Tag Archives: language acquisition

Participation That Works for All Students, French Spanish and More

When you think about participation in your classroom, who comes to mind first?

  • The students raising their hands?
  • The ones who speak the most?
  • The ones who are always ready with an answer?

Now think about everyone else. Participation in the language classroom is often defined by who talks the most, but that leaves a lot of students on the outside looking in.

Participation That Works for All Students, French Spanish and More

The Problem with Traditional Participation

Many participation systems unintentionally reward:

  • Confidence over communication
  • Speed over thinking
  • Personality over proficiency

And as a result, students who are…

  • processing more slowly
  • building confidence
  • still developing language

…can easily be seen as “not participating,” even when they’re deeply engaged.

The reality is: participation isn’t just about speaking—it’s about engaging with meaning.

A Shift That Changes Everything

When we redefine participation as evidence of engagement and communication, everything starts to shift.

Participation can look like:

  • Listening with intent
  • Writing a response
  • Reacting to a partner
  • Preparing language before speaking

The key is making participation:

  • Visible (students know what it looks like)
  • Structured (tasks require engagement)
  • Supported (students have what they need to succeed)
  • Purposeful (connected to communication goals)

Even small adjustments in how we design tasks can open the door for more students to participate meaningfully.

A Simple Way to Start

Before your next activity, pause and ask yourself two questions:

  • What do I want students to do with the language?
  • How can students show that in more than one way?

You don’t need to redesign your entire lesson. Often, it’s about adding one more option for students to engage.

Try This in Your Classroom

The “Two Ways to Participate” Task

Take an activity you already use and build in at least two clear participation options.

For example:

  • Students can say their response to a partner
  • OR write their response first and then share

Then:

  • Tell students explicitly what participation looks like
  • Observe who engages—and how
  • Focus on evidence of meaning, not just who speaks aloud

After class, reflect:

  • Did more students participate than usual?
  • Did participation feel more inclusive?
  • Did you notice different strengths from different students?

If this small shift made a difference, you’re already moving toward a more inclusive and communicative classroom.

Why This Is Hard to Sustain

Most teachers agree with this idea—but struggle to:

  • Clearly define participation in a way students understand
  • Design tasks with multiple entry points consistently
  • Align participation with communication goals (not compliance)
  • Assess participation in a way that feels fair and meaningful

That’s where having a clear framework makes all the difference.

Go Further

If you want a practical, repeatable way to make participation work for all students, my Quick Win PD Course: Participation That Works for All Students walks you through exactly how to do it.

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

  • Redefine participation in a way that supports language development
  • Design lessons with multiple, meaningful participation options
  • Align participation with communication and proficiency goals

You’ll also get:

  • 🎧 Audio walkthrough you can listen to anywhere
  • 📝 Detailed notes and examples across proficiency levels
  • 📋 A planning template to use again and again
  • 🧾 A PD certificate to document your learning

This is part of the Quick Win PD Series, designed to give you strategies you can use immediately—without adding to your workload.

Participation That Works for All Students, French Spanish and 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

240: Improve Student Writing with Frames & Scaffolds


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. In this episode, we’ll explore how sentence frames and scaffolds can give students the structure they need to write confidently and accurately, while still expressing their own ideas. Whether you teach novices or more advanced learners, you’ll get practical strategies you can use right away.  So, Let’s jump in.

Topics in this Episode: 

  • Writing is an effective and useful way for students to show what they know, who they are, and what they can communicate in the target language.
  • But writing is also one of the most intimidating skills for learners. Why? Because writing asks students to juggle Vocabulary, Grammar, Word Order, Agreement, Spelling and Organization.
  • That’s where sentence frames and scaffolds come in. They provide just enough support to help students express meaningful ideas without feeling stuck or overwhelmed.
  • Sentence frames and scaffolds are not about giving answers. They are about Reducing cognitive overload, Highlighting patterns, Modeling structure, Making expectations visible
  • Sentence frames and scaffolds are like training wheels. We don’t put training wheels on a bike because we expect students to use them forever. We use them so learners can experience success early and build balance gradually.
  • Ready For Tomorrow Quick Win PD Course: Support Writing with Frames & Scaffolds

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239: Short Writing Tasks that Build Confidence


Do your students sometimes feel overwhelmed or a little hesitant when you ask them to write in the target language? Building writing confidence doesn’t happen overnight. It grows with small, purposeful moments every day. In this episode, we look at how integrating short, focused writing tasks into your lessons can help students process language, express ideas, and build confidence in their writing. Whether you teach novice or advanced language learners, these practical strategies will fit into your teaching routine. 

Topics in this Episode: 

  • Many learners equate writing with grades, red ink, and getting it “right.” That pressure alone can shut down risk-taking.
  • But writing confidence and skill grow best through frequent, low-stakes practice that feels doable and purposeful. 
  • Frequent, low-pressure writing is one of the most effective ways to help students develop both confidence and communicative ability.
  • Short writing prompts give learners space to:
    • Reflect on input
    • Organize thoughts
    • Rehearse language
  • Communicate meaning without the pressure of perfection
  • The key is thoughtful management:
    • Clear purpose
    • Appropriate length
    • Defined time limits
    • Meaningful follow-up
  • When writing is framed as practice—not performance—you create a classroom culture where students are willing to try, revise, and improve.
  • Classroom Strategies:
    • Keep Writing Tasks Short and Purposeful
    • Align Tasks to Proficiency Levels
    • Manage Time, Space, and Follow-Up
  • When students write often, briefly, and with purpose:
    • Proficiency develops naturally.
    • Fluency increases.
    • Anxiety decreases.
    • Confidence grows.
  • Ready For Tomorrow Quick Win PD CourseShort Writing Tasks That Build Confidence and Proficiency 

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238: National Board Certification for Language Teachers with Erin E.H. Austin and Lisa Bartels


Do you want to deepen your practice as a world language teacher and sharpen your skills around proficiency?  In today’s episode, we’re exploring a way to do just that through the lens of National Board Certification. I’m joined by Erin E.H. Austin, a French teacher in Colorado, and Lisa Bartels, a French teacher in North Carolina. They are both National Board Certified Teachers.  Together, we’ll break down why the process is especially beneficial for language teachers and what it actually looks like to go through the process, step by step.

Topics in this Episode:

  • what National Board Certification is and how it is different from state certification
  • why world language teachers should consider pursuing National Board Certification and the  professional benefits
  • how the certification process impacts teachers and their classroom practice
  • who a good candidate for National Board Certification is
  • what the National Board Certification process look like for a world language teacher and the  part of the process that tends to feel most challenging for language teachers 
  • what teachers can realistically expect in terms of timeline, time commitment, and cost and how teachers can plan strategically so the process feels manageable 
  • Erin and Lisa’s Book: Achieving National Board Certification in World Languages, Proven Strategies and Tips for Accomplished Teaching20% discount code : 25AFLY4 (valid through the end of March 2026)

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237: Promoting and Sustaining Language Programs with Ann Leclair-Ash


What keeps students coming back to your language program each year?  Especially when graduation requirements, scheduling and competing electives are pulling them in other directions? This is the second episode in our advocacy series.  Last week I looked at local, state and national efforts. Today we are in the classroom. I’m joined by Ann LeClair-Ash, a National Board Certified French teacher in Milton, Georgia. We move beyond “convincing students to stay” and dig into designing programs students want to be part of. We look at what advocacy looks like in daily practice in our classrooms. If enrollment trends have you worried, this conversation offers practical steps and genuine hope grounded in real classroom experience.

Topics in this Episode: 

  • factors that influence whether students choose to continue with a language beyond the required level
  • classroom practices or program-level decisions that make a real difference in helping students feel connected, successful, and excited to keep going
  • what advocacy for retention looks like when it’s embedded in classroom culture, student voice, and everyday interactions
  • mindset shifts or actionable steps that help teachers build momentum for their language programs
  • designing learning experiences that students want to be part of
  • JNCL (Joint National Committee for Languages) and NCLIS (National Council for Languages and International Studies)
  • Language Advocacy Days
  • ACTFL’s Advocacy Resource Center

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Quick Win PD For Language Teachers: Participation That Works For All Students

You look around your classroom and see the same few students raising their hands and speaking up. Meanwhile, others stay quiet and you’re left wondering: Are they disengaged, or just participating in ways I’m not noticing?

Too often, participation is measured by who talks the most or volunteers first. The problem? That definition leaves many learners out and can unintentionally reward compliance over communication. In a proficiency-focused classroom, participation should reflect engagement with language, not just volume.

This 30-minute PD course will help you redefine participation so it supports language development for all students. You’ll learn how to:

  • Define participation as evidence of engagement and communication, not just verbal output
  • Design lessons with multiple participation options so every student can engage at their proficiency level
  • Create clear participation expectations that reduce ambiguity and increase equity
  • Align participation practices with assessment systems that prioritize learning over compliance

This is a supportive, no-fluff course led by me, Joshua Cabral, host of the World Language Classroom Podcast, and it’s designed to help you create a classroom culture where participation is accessible, meaningful, and aligned to communication goals.

By the end of this course, you’ll have a practical framework for planning and recognizing participation in ways that increase involvement, lower anxiety, and support proficiency growth. Your classroom will feel more inclusive and your students will have clearer, more attainable ways to engage with language every day.

What’s Included in This Quick Win, 30-Minute Course for $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 for for your planning and tracking participation
  • Additional Resources to go further with the topic
  • Personalized Certificate of course completion

If you’re ready to move beyond “who raised their hand?” and toward participation that truly supports communication and proficiency this course is for you. Let’s create classrooms where every student has a meaningful way to engage.

Click Here to Get Started

236: Advocacy for Languages and Programs


Curious how language programs thrive even with tight budgets and shifting graduation rules? In this episode, I share insights from conversations at the Klett World Languages booth at ACTFL. We’ll explore why language learning matters, from building communication and literacy skills to preparing students for future careers. I  share practical, actionable strategies teachers can use to advocate for their programs locally, at the state level, and even federally.  Stick around for tips you can put into action this week.

Topics in this Episode: 

  • JNCL (Joint National Committee for Languages) and NCLIS (National Council for Languages and International Studies)
  • Language Advocacy Days
  • Why Language Learning Matters
    • Communication skills
    • Cognitive and academic benefits
    • Student confidence and engagement
    • National and workforce relevance
  • Themes from ACTFL Conversations
    • Challenges
    • Success stories
    • Attitudes and mindsets
  • Concrete Advocacy Strategies
    • Local advocacy
    • State and Federal-level
  • Supporting Professional Associations
  • Overcoming Common Obstacles
    • Language isn’t core content
    • Small enrollment / low demand
    • Advocacy feels like extra work
  • Here’s what you can do this week:
    • Visit ACTFL’s Advocacy Resource Center and pick one tool to use.
      Identify a program goal — graduation requirement, Seal of Biliteracy, or enrollment growth — and start building a local coalition.
    • Share your program’s successes with administrators, parents, and policymakers — focus on outcomes and skills, not ideology.
    • Consider joining or renewing membership in professional associations to support advocacy efforts at the state and national level.

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235: Support Students in Feeling Motivated & Confident with Martha Cox-Stavros


What actually motivates our students? Today we explore that question through the lens of Self-Determination Theory with teacher Martha Cox-Stavros, a middle school Spanish teacher in Massachusetts. Whether this theory is brand new to you or something you’ve heard mentioned in passing, this conversation breaks it down in clear, classroom-ready ways. We dig into how competence, autonomy, and relatedness show up in real language tasks and how small, sustainable shifts can help students feel successful, motivated, and confident in your classroom.

Topics in this Episode:

  • what Self-Determination Theory is and how it applies to the language classroom. 
  • how teachers can design tasks so students consistently feel that sense of progress and success?
  • practical, manageable strategies teachers can use to give students real choice and agency without losing focus on required content
  • low-stress, high-impact ways teachers can foster relatedness and connection among students
  •  how can teachers can begin to build sustainable practices that lead to competence, autonomy, and relatedness

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234: What You Can Learn When You Reflect On Your Teaching


When did you last speak with a colleague about what really worked in your lesson? Or reflected on what helped students communicate, not just what they covered? In this episode we look at how small, intentional habits, such as weekly reflection or purposeful collaboration, can build a shared culture of growth. You’ll walk away with actionable ideas to implement tomorrow, whether you’re working solo or surrounded by a full team.

Topics in this Episode:

  • “We don’t rise to the level of our goals. We fall to the level of our systems.” -James Clear, Atomic Habits
  • Growth happens when teachers pause to reflect. Not once a year during an evaluation, but in small, consistent moments.
  • Take 10 minutes once a week to reflect on your teaching: 1.) “What helped students communicate today?” 2. )“What would I repeat? What might I tweak?” 3.) “What was challenging? Was it student specific?”
  • Collaboration doesn’t have to mean full-blown PLCs. One conversation, one shared lesson, or one observation can shift practice.
  • We grow the most when the PD we choose is relevant to our classroom realities, not trends.
  • Reflection fuels improvement; Collaboration builds confidence; PD is most powerful when it’s chosen, not just assigned.

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233: Techniques to Get Students Talking with Christina Margiore


Do you want your students to feel more confident and eager to share their ideas in the target language? In this episode, we’ll explore strategies that help learners move beyond words and phrases and into real discourse and communication. I’m joined by Christina Margiore, a Spanish teacher in New York, who brings practical routines and low-prep techniques that create a supportive environment and spark authentic conversations. You’ll get simple ways to increase student talk time right away.

Topics in this Episode:

  • barriers or obstacles that keep students from speaking in the target language and how to support students
  • routines and strategies that create a safe, low-pressure environment for student talk?
  • technique that support hesitant students
  • designing tasks that lead to authentic, meaningful interactions
  • strategies teachers can try right away
  • Christina’s Free Chat Mats

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