Home School Home
Home School News
Home School Info

Homeschool Spanish - 3 Ways to Liven Up Your Lessons

By: Jim Sarris

Homeschool Spanish! 3 simple keys to liven up the lessons Are you interested in making the Spanish learning in your home more exciting?

If your kids are studying outside the home, do you feel they need a more lively approach to keep them interested?

Homeschool Spanish can be tough. Many levels to teach, boring and repetitive materials and no connection to the language all make for a tough going.

The thing is, as a Homeschooling parent, youre used to making things come alive.

You bake a cake and make a math lesson out of it. You walk in the park, discover plants and learn about science.

But fear not. Im about to show you how you can add three tricks to your homeschool Spanish atmosphere that will get your creative juices flowing and help you liven up your lessons.

Key #1 - Bring Spanish to life in your home Any child wants (and needs) to feel connected to what theyre learning. Thats why homeschooling is such a blessing. Those connections are real easy when youre the one in charge.

Well, why not start to incorporate some common expressions into your daily routine and see how things go. Here a starter list of phrases you can use with your child - No me digas! - Youre kidding! - Qué va! - No way! - No quiero - I dont want to (a biggie with the younger ones) - Qué pasa aquí? - Whats going on here?

Naturally there are more but, lets not get ahead of ourselves. One expression every couple of days will be enough to get them involved...and you too.

In fact, the whole family can start creating typical phrases that can be used day in and day and allow your homeschool Spanish experience to grow like a freshly watered plant.

Key #2 - Serve it up in ways your kids like it. Most kids love music, TV or reading. So why not try to include a little of each into your Spanish lessons. For example, for the little ones, there are educational programs (ex. Dora The Explorer) on TV that attempt to use Spanish in a fun and informative way.

If your children are in their teens, you can find Spanish music thats similar to their tastes. You can find any type of music online or ask in your local music store. Then, once you have the music, you can use the lyrics to study the words, the expressions or the tenses.

Reading is no different. You can find bilingual texts of Dr. Seuss series or Clifford the Big Red Dog for the little ones and similar titles for the older kids. Just go online at Google or check your local library.

Key #3 - Find a great idea and copy it This is important because it saves you the most time and money.

If youre the teacher and the material is a little...dry, go out and look for resources that have innovative, "outside-the-box" approaches to learning. They dont have to be language texts. The idea is to find an approach you like and copy it.

Go browse some local bookstores or libraries. Go surfing on the internet. If you like what you see, study it a bit and think of ways to use the same technique in your Spanish lessons.

Heres an example: Vocabulary Cartoons is a wonderful book that uses mnemonics and visuals to memorize SAT words. Well, why not use the same technique to memorize Spanish words? If you think you like the resource, make sure it has a guarantee (the longer the better) so you can try it at home.

This whole process doesnt have to cost any money and will certainly save you time thinking up new ways to inject excitement into your homeschool Spanish lessons.

As a Homeschooling parent, you have options a public school teacher doesnt have. Why not take advantage of them?

And remember, if your kids are learning outside the home, you can find something fun to use with them so that they maintain their interest through the year.

------------------------------------------------------------

Jim Sarris, author of Comic Mnemonics, has created a resource for homeschool families that makes learning Spanish fun and easier using visuals and mnemonics. For free samples and video tutorial, visit www.learnspanishfaster.com/homeschoolspanish.html

Jim Sarris has been teaching Spanish to high school kids and adults for 15 years. He has dedicated much of his time to creating innovative, "outside-the-box" resources that appeal to multiple learning styles. These resources have helped motivate his students, in particular, the ones who find learning Spanish difficult.


More Home School Information...

Homeschool Preschool
While recently doing some research on the preschool learning and preschool homeschool curriculum, and what type of preschool activities would create a positive self motivation preschool learning environment...
Homeschool Scheduling
As you begin to firm up many of the details of your homeschooling plan, one area that you will want to explore is your homeschool schedule. Particularly this will be of higher value if you have decided...
How Parents Can Become Excellent Home School Teachers
Do you enjoy teaching? Do you like to sit with your child and help them learn to read. Do you enjoy putting puzzles together or going on trips to discover something new? For parents who believe that home...
Homeschool Testing
By definition…. Or rather history... the history of testing would indicate that the reason that we test was/is to determine the students level of understanding of the given material that has been presented...
Homeschool Lesson Plans
Homeschool families have an abundance of homeschool lesson plans and programs to choose from. As a homeschooling parent, whether you want a tightly knitted curriculum package or prefer to be able to modify...

 

 

Best-Home-School.com site map home school blog christian home school curriculum