TeacherWeb

Ms. Birkemeier



Top Divider

 

2/3 Grade Spanish

 


The bulk of student classroom work for this years second and third grade 
class is pulled from a teacher source book of lesson plans, worksheets, and 
classroom activities that work together to provide students with variety 
(Teach Them Spanish!, By Winnie Waltzer-Hackett, grade 4).  Supplemental 
material is added either from the grade 5, or grade 3 book, depending on the 
individual students needs.  An outline of the year’s lesson subjects is as 
follows:

2/3 Grade
Year at a Glance
Essential grammar and vocabulary 

1)	The Spanish alphabet vs. the English alphabet
a.	Identify the additional letters in the Spanish alphabet.
2)	Pronunciation of vowels & consonants
3)	Word pronunciation
4)	Greetings & feelings
5)	Age and titles
6)	Phrases
a.	Say: Please, thank you, & you’re welcomes.
7)	Verbal question recognition
8)	Verbal command recognition
9)	Numbers 0-100
10)	Definite and indefinite articles 
11)	Masculine and feminine nouns
12)	Colors and Shapes
13)	Extended family
14)	Calendar (days, months and seasons)
15)	Classroom
16)	Food
17)	Clothing
18)	Face & body
19)	Adjective & noun agreements
20)	Animals (farm and zoo)
21)	Places and directions
22)	Question words (who, what, where, when, and why)
23)	Written accent marks; in association with question words and general 
        vocabulary.
24)	Verbs: infinitives vs. conjugates
        Verb: is/are, I like, I go.

There will be no formal testing in 2/3 grade Spanish.  Grades are based upon 
the following classroom priciples and contributions; behavior, participation, 
positive attitude, self discipline, and respect for themselves, their 
classmates, and teacher.  Students are at such different places within their 
language acquisition, it would be very difficult to test the group in any 
uniform manner.  Furthermore, the atmosphere of the classroom is most 
conductive to learning if all students prioritize the principles listed 
above. 

     *At home, to help your child make connections between what they’re 
learning in class, and “the real world”, you can continue to bring Spanish 
out of the classroom and into the home.  Ask them to sing you their Spanish 
songs.  Maybe they could give you a lesson on vocabulary in front of the 
calendar (numbers, months, days), or teach you Simon Dice (Simon says) in 
Spanish.  They have worked on basic conversational skills in greeting and 
saying goodbye, so encourage them to teach you what they know.

Bottom Divider

TeacherWeb
Last Modified: Monday, April 27, 2009
©2009 TeacherWeb, Inc.