Blogs to get resources about films for the Spanish class
Today I'd like to talk about websites or blogs which contain
information about films and how to use them in a class. Some of these
resources were created to teach Spanish as a second language so most of
the films and shorts come from Spanish speaking countries. In other
cases the blogs or websites are from schools and teachers who use the
resources for the subject of cinema studies in Spanish speaking
countries. In the latter, over 50% of the films studied are originally
in a language other than Spanish. However, all the attached resources
are in Spanish and based on the dubbed version of the films.
Todoele.net is a social network which has over 10,000 Spanish teachers as members. Their main goal is to share resources and strategies to teach Spanish as a second language. The website also gives information about courses, masters and even job opportunities. In the section about cinema there is a list of films with lesson plans created by different Spanish teachers. The activities are organized in levels that follow the European framework of reference. Almost all the films are from a Spanish speaking country an the activities focused on linguistic and cultural elements. The lesson plans were created for adult Spanish learners but many of these films and their lessons plans can be used in a Spanish bilingual or IB program.
Redele is an online magazine published by the Ministry of Education of Spain specialized in teaching Spanish as a second language. It's published annually and everyone working with Spanish programs can send an article to be published. The magazine started in 2004 and in the 25 published numbers so far we can find interesting articles about how to introduce films and short films in the Spanish class. All the previous numbers are available and all articles can be accesses easily.
Con "C" de Cine
is a blog dedicated to all the teachers teaching Spanish as a second
language who want to use films in their classes. The blog's author
regularly introduces films that can be used in the classroom with
suggested activities.
Cineele
is another blog that also offers suggestions to use films in the class
and provides us with different lesson plans ready to be used and
organized by levels. The blog also offers a list with links to lessons
plans based on films available online under the section "Actividades en la red".
Cero en conducta
is a social network maintained by a Spanish teacher, which has the goal
of supplying resources and information about the cinema ("the seventh
art") to teachers. Teachers can register and participate on the existing
working groups or start a new one. Some of the existing working groups
are about specific films that can be used in a classroom; some other
groups are exploring themes like how to use short films in elementary
education. This website is a good tool to contact teachers who are
working in similar fields to ours and start a collaboration.
These are some links to find information about films and how to use them
in the Spanish class. Naturally, we all need to build up our own list
of short films and films, create some activities and share them with the
rest of teachers.
Humor for the Spanish class
When someone in Canada asks me about one recurrent feature in many works
of art in Spanish, I always mention black humour and surrealism. Both
appear in every aspect of our daily lives too, we just need to have a
look at the political and economical situation in Spain and how
people are enduring it. It has been a tradition of the Spanish to use
humour to help face hard or painful situations over the centuries. This
vision can be found in the poems of El Libro de Buen Amor or in many of the passages in El Lazarillo,
just to give you some examples. With the current economical
situation, numerous writers and film makers portray today's society with
an acidic sense of humour. It seems that laughing at ourselves is one
of the best remedies at the moment.
Spanish people dread going to government offices to do any kind of
business. It can be a federal, provincial or local office, there is no
difference. We have to deal with apathetic civil servants and in the
end, we will likely need to go back because they will send us home with
more forms to fill out. This is what this short film is trying to
portray.
his surreal approach is very common in publicity. There are many examples but the way a brand of olive oil is advertised in this commercial, is one of my favourites.
Understanding humour will enhance students' appreciation of the target language and its culture. Video clips such as these will help students digest these ideas better because the humour is more "concrete". I encourage you to revisit or find similar clips for yourselves and your students.
Unexpected endings
A technique I like to use in my classes to encourage students to use the
oral language is to show short stories, commercials or even news that
have an unexpected ending. I try to find segments that elicit students'
predictions of the outcomes. This way students can present their
hypotheses and can lead to interesting discussions. Some other times, I
encourage them to invent an ending for the story that we are working
with. Naturally, there is a need to scaffold the language prior to start
with the oral language activities.
The first example that I would like to comment on is a commercial from
Argentina. I am a great lover of commercials and particularly
Argentinian commercials. Before watching this short clip, we can ask our
students to reflect on some commercials and try to find some features
of the language of publicity, the settings, the characters. Do we
expect a crying person trying to convince us about buying something? We
can watch the man crying and ask what they are trying to sell us. After
some discussion we can continue with the part about the soccer and
discuss about its role in many Spanish speaking countries. Finally, we
can talk about the unexpected ending and find out if anyone thought
about the product they are advertising.
Capicúa is a short film by Roger Villarroya that deals with a very serious topic, how fragile human beings are, especially at the beginning and at the end of our lives. Capicúa is a number that can be read the same left to right as right to left. For example, 2112 is a capicúa number and when children, I remember that we were on the search of these numbers because they were like lucky charms. And our life is capicúa, we are as helpless and we need as much care at the beginning as at the end of our lives. We can start asking our students what babies' needs are and then they can compare the list with what the old people also need. This is the trick the director uses for an unexpected ending and to make us reflect about our own fragility.
The third example shocked me so much that I still don't know what the main purpose of the director is. The first time I watched it, I thought it was real people talking about their real experiences. I thought that the main purpose of the short film was to show how vulnerable we are and how our life and our dreams hang from a thin string. But after watching the totally unexpected ending, some new theories came to my mind and I think this is what we can use to trigger discussions and opinions.
It is always challenging to engage students to use the language orally. Using short clips with open or unexpected ending can be a good tool to convince students to speak using the target language. We will need to scaffold the language, give them some warm-up tasks before watching the clips...the results can be very outstanding!
Destinos. What is it? Well, I really recommend you just read the Wikipedia article on it, but in short: Destinos is a TV show consisting of a series of 52 episodes, each about half an hour long, that was specifically designed by Professor Bill Van Patten who was, at the time, Professor of Spanish and Second Language Acquisition at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, to help teach Spanish to beginning and intermediate learners. The Spanish used in the series is very clearly spoken at a rate of speed that I would classify as being at the low end of normal for native speakers (that is, it’s slow, but not abnormally slow), which makes it very easy to understand even for beginning learners (and with the addition of the subtitles, nobody should have a problem quickly and easily determining what was said). The story and acting are pretty good (regarding special effects and such: it was 1992 and this was a low-budget educational film, cut them some slack, eh? haha), and I really like that the whole story is spread across 4 different Spanish-speaking countries (they did this intentionally so you would be exposed to a variety of dialects and accents, very clever and an excellent educational technique in my opinion): Spain, Argentina, Puerto Rico, and Mexico.
To watch the entire series online just go to the Destinos homepage, select which series of episodes you’re on from the bottom, then select the specific episode once you’re on that series’ page. To turn on the Spanish subtitles, wait until the video loads (I’ve found this can take a bit, like 10-30 seconds or so) and then just click “CC” in the bottom right hand corner of the video window.
BBC’s Mi Vida Loca – This is a fantastic little show put together by the BBC specifically intended for the sole purpose of teaching Spanish to complete beginners. It’s filled with drama and action, it’s very interesting and entertaining, you learn a lot about Spanish culture, and it is absolutely not boring. Also, they’ve got numerous tools and activities to help you learn Spanish in addition to offering Spanish and English subtitles for the whole thing (you can have both turned on at the same time! note the screenshots I took below), such as an interactive (human) phrasebook that pops in here and there to teach you important vocabulary and grammar rules that you’re about to see used, as well as quizzes and exercises you can do. This is really a wonderful resource, especially if you’re a beginner, I can’t recommend it enough.
English and Spanish subtitles:
Interactive phrasebook:
News
1. EuroNews – Fantastic site, they provide videos in one of several available languages and then there are transcripts directly below each video. My link goes to the Spanish version of the site, the main homepage is here where you can select from various languages using the menu at the very top left of the page, the default is English.
2. United Nations Multimedia Page for Spanish – Here you can find videos and radio broadcasts in Spanish, all of which have transcripts with them, plus the videos have subtitles in Spanish, just click the little “CC” button at the bottom of the video. Their YouTube channel is here, they have about four pages worth of videos. Not bad, not the most riveting stuff in the world, but it works and you’ll learn about some things going on in the world.
Educational Videos (lectures and documentaries)
1. Spanish-language TED Videos (44 pages of them) – First contribution by a reader, and only a day after I first posted this–awesome. Thank you, Dally. TED, as many of you know, records and publishes free educational lectures and talks online. The talks are in many different languages, their search function allows you to search by language, and most of their videos have subtitles, however…I did a little investigating before posting this and found that some videos had English subtitles, some videos had good Spanish subtitles (such as this one), some videos had crappy Spanish subtitles, and some videos had no subtitles at all. So, you’ve been warned, you’re going to have to do some sifting.
Random Video Collections
Here is where there’s more sheer quantity than anything else. Three of the sites I’ve found so far do something very similar: they just take random videos from wherever (usually YouTube) and then the users do subtitles for them for free. Fantastic sites, they’re adding new videos all the time, and, of course, the biggest benefit is that they’re completely free. The other two sites are run by educational institutes. You will, with all of them however, have to sift through them and pick out what you want to watch (I, for one, am really not that picky since the primary purpose is for me to learn Spanish, so as long as it’s at least mildly interesting, I’m happy).
1. Amara aka UniversalSubtitles.org – Wow. I just found this one the other day, they currently list 2,396 videos in Spanish with Spanish subtitles (note that you can search and sort by language of the speakers and subtitle language using the search bar on the videos homepage, just pull the menu down and select your languages). Again, these are just videos that people have found on YouTube and decided to do the subtitles for. Note that you can sign up for an account and help subtitle videos of any language you speak.
2. Edustation.me’s Video Section – You’ll need to sign up for a free account to use this one, I believe. Once you’ve done that, look at the menu at the top right and select the language that you’re learning where it says “Idioma para aprender”, then go to the homepage and click “Peliculas” on the bottom left hand side of the screen (between “Artículos” and “Fotos”). They have a ton of videos there with subtitles, but again these are just YouTube videos that Spanish-speaking users have selected and elected to write up some subtitles for, the community does all the work (again, just like with Amara you, too, can sign up and help out by doing some subtitles in whatever languages you speak).
3. Rhinospike Spanish Transcriptions – Again, these are just a bunch of random videos and audio files that the users have decided to do transcripts for. There appear to be about 70 transcriptions total.
4. Catálogo de voces hispánicas by the Cervantes Institute – This isreally cool in my opinion, this is a collection of videos of native speakers from all over the Spanish-speaking world speaking their dialect of Spanish, so you can hear and compare how people speak in Buenos Aires, Argentina; Guadalajara, Mexico; Bogotá, Colombia; and Barcelona, Spain; etc. Each video sample includes a transcript, a list of linguistic characteristics of this particular type of Spanish, and some information about the location.
5. Spanish Proficiency Exercises from the University of Texas at Austin – As best I can tell this is part of their Spanish program. They have a lot of these videos, all of which have transcripts. From the website: “A complete index of video interviews and podcasts, as well as related grammar, vocabulary, and phrases contained in this site is listed below. A topical grammar index and podcast help are also available.” Each video not only has a transcript, but it also has an accompanying explanation of all the grammar and vocabulary used as well as an associated podcast of it. This is essentially an entire Spanish course based on videos of native speakers speaking…which is actually pretty good, to be honest, and it’s free–you can’t argue with free.
6. YouTube Subtitler – Subtitles in Spanish – This is one sent to me by a language exchange partner in Colombia–thanks, Diana! It’s the same thing as the first few, a community of people who subtitle YouTube videos for free in their spare time, basically just helping each other out by subtitling videos in their native language so that people who speak other languages will do the same for videos in theirnative language. They have 20 videos per page and 500 pages of Spanish videos as of right now, so that means that they currently have right around 10,000 Spanish-language videos with Spanish subtitles. This is probably one of the largest, if not the largest, of these sorts of sites that I’ve found yet.
Learn Spanish with comics! Do you like Garfield, Calvin & Hobbes, Cathy, Foxtrot, Marmaduke, etc.? I’ve got something for you!
I just love this so much, it’s so much fun and to me that is by far the most important factor when learning a language: it must be fun! If it’s not fun then you, regardless of how determined you initially were, eventually get bored, lose focus, and give up. And what could be more fun than some goofy comics like Garfield (my favorite) or Calvin and Hobbes or something like that, right? Hmmm, can you find Spanish versions of these comics? You can. Online? Yes. It…costs money, doesn’t it? …..Nope! That’s the best part: online and free, so you’re just all out of excuses now aren’t you? Ok, here’s where to find them:
Additionally, there’s this very cool online comic series that I particularly like because it’s designed for language-learners and clicking the speech bubble gives you the English translation, very nifty.
Formative Assessment and Online Games
Teachers have created some at http://www.equizshow.com and found that other teachers in other places who also use Realidades for Spanish are posting quizzes that anyone can use. Here is one athttp://www.equizshow.com/play/12895
Google Apps
Many people are catching on to Flubaroo http://www.flubaroo.com/. With Google forms you can make a quick multiple choice and fill-in-the-blank quiz. Once the students take the quiz (for practice or a grade), the teacher adds the correct answers as the key then runs the self-scoring tool. You can email the grades to students. The teacher can look at results per questions as well as student success. The teacher can quickly find out what needs to be retaught.
Presentation Tools with Audio
Brainshark http://www.brainshark.com/
Emaze http://www.emaze.com/
Knovio http://www.knovio.com (Upload a Power Point, then talk about it. Your face appears next to the PPT in the movie that is created.)
Powtoons for Education http://www.powtoon.com/edu-home/
Prezi for Education http://prezi.com/prezi-for-education/ (Sometimes described as Power Point on steroids. Going from one slide to the next is a journey up, around, in or out. The wonder of Prezi is that you can add audio to each slide.)Educreations works on ipads as a whiteboard to capture voice and handwriting (like the SmartBoard Notebook 11 videorecording tool). Create your own videos.
Knovio http://www.knovio.com (Upload a Power Point, then talk about it. Your face appears next to the PPT in the movie that is created.)
Powtoons for Education http://www.powtoon.com/edu-home/
Prezi for Education http://prezi.com/prezi-for-education/ (Sometimes described as Power Point on steroids. Going from one slide to the next is a journey up, around, in or out. The wonder of Prezi is that you can add audio to each slide.)Educreations works on ipads as a whiteboard to capture voice and handwriting (like the SmartBoard Notebook 11 videorecording tool). Create your own videos.
Free Languages Games
Engaging interactive tasks and printable worksheets that introduce, reinforce and recycle vocabulary. Activites are self-paced and self-correcting and include recordings by native speakers.Download these free programs and create your own interactive games and activities. Follow the simple steps to add your own text, pictures or voice recordings. Suitable for all languages!
http://www.education.vic.gov.au/languagesonline/default.htm
Content Generator
Their programs allow anyone to generate their own e-Learning quizzes, games and applications through our custom software - no coding required.http://www.contentgenerator.net/
Hot Potatoes
The Hot Potatoes suite includes six applications, enabling you to create interactive multiple-choice, short-answer, jumbled-sentence, crossword, matching/ordering and gap-fill exercises for the World Wide Web. Hot Potatoes is freeware, and you may use it for any purpose or project you like. It is not open-source. The Java version provides all the features found in the windows version, except: you can't upload to hotpotatoes.net and you can't export a SCORM object from Java Hot Potatoes.http://hotpot.uvic.ca/
Blubbr is a neat quiz creation service that you can use to create
video-based quizzes. Using Blubbr you can create interactive quizzes that are
based on YouTube clips. Your quizzes can be about anything of your choosing.
The structure of the quizzes has a viewer watch a short clip then answer a
multiple choice question about the clip. Viewers know right away if they chose
the correct answer or not. To create a quiz on Blubbr start by entering a topic for your quiz. After entering your topic
enter a search for a video about that topic. Blubbr will generate a list of
videos that you can select from to use in your quiz. When you find a video that
works for you, trim the clip to a length that you like then write out your
question and answer choices. Repeat the process for as many video clips as you
like. Click here to try a short Blubbr quiz about the human heart.
Comics in the Classroom
Disclosure: Storyboard That is an advertiser on Free Technology for
Teachers.
Some of my favorite uses of comics include
using them as story prompts, having students create them to tell personal
stories, and to illustrate key ideas in a book as an alternative to writing a
traditional book report.
Creating a
storyboard can be a good way to organize a story and plan a video project.
Apps to Help Students
Speak It is
a Google Chrome extension that enables you to have the text on most webpages
read to you. With Speak It installed just highlight the text on a the page
you're viewing then right-click to activate Speak It. Then click the play
button to have the text read to you. The voice is very digitized, but it is
clear. Installing Speak It takes
just a few seconds. To install it go to Speak It's page in
the Chrome Web Store and click the install button. Restarting your browser is
not required in order to activate Speak It. If you decide that you don't want
to use Speak It any longer you can uninstall it by right-clicking on the Speak
It icon in your browser and selecting uninstall.
New Features Come to Google Documents in the Form of Add-ons
Google Drive has
supported 3rd party apps for quite a while now and many of those apps are quite
helpful to students. Beginning today Google Documents and Google Sheets now
contain a new way for students to add even more functionality through 3rd party
services. Add-ons for Google Docs and Sheets allow any Google Drive user
to add new functions to their documents and spreadsheets. To access Add-ons
just open a new Google Document and open the new "Add-ons" drop-down
menu to browse for add-ons.
Good Alternatives to Google Image Search
The Morgue File photo collection contains thousands of images
that anyone can use for free in academic or commercial presentations. The image
collection can be searched by subject category, image size, color, or rating.
You will find a mix of images that don't require attribution along with some
that do require attribution so pay attention to the labels that come with each
picture. Morgue File is more than just a source for free images.
The Morgue File also features a "classroom"
where visitors can learn photography techniques and get tips about image
editing.
Every Stock
Photo is a
search engine for public domain and Creative Commons licensed pictures. When
you search on Every Stock Photo it pulls images from dozens of sources across
the web. If you click on an image in your search results you will be taken to a
larger version of the image, a link to the source, and the attribution
requirements for using that picture.
Pixabay is currently my go-to place to find and
download quality public domain images. You can search on Pixabay by using
keywords or you can simply browse through the library of images. When you find
an image you can download it in the size that suits your needs. Registered
users do not have to enter a captcha code to download images. Users who do not
register can download images, but they do have to enter a captcha code before
downloading each picture.
Each time that I visit it the Flickr
Commons collection
seems to have grown. The Commons contains images that have been contributed by
more than five dozen libraries and museums around the world. The images are
mostly historical in nature.
The Wikimedia Commons houses thousands of images that you and your students can re-use.
Searching in the Wikimedia Commons isn't the most intuitive process which is
why I don't recommend it for younger students. Search the Wikimedia Commons by
keyword or browse it by category and topic.
Earlier
this year the Wellcome Library made more than 100,000 drawings, photographs, paintings, and advertisements available to the world under Creative Commons
licensing. The images available through the Wellcome
Images library are
primarily of a historic nature. You can browse the galleries or search for
images by keyword.
Unsplash is
a Tumblr-hosted site that adds ten new, free, high-resolution images every ten
days. I scrolled through the site for quite a while today and found a lot of
nice images. The downside to Unsplash is that the site does not have a search
function.
You
can find more than 85,000 free images through the Getty Museum's Open Content Program. You can download and re-use the images as long as
you give proper attribution for the source of the image. Use the Getty Search Gateway to find images in the Getty Museum's Open
Content Program. The Getty Search Gateway allows you to filter your search according to
material type, topic, name, source, and location. Once you find an image, click
the image's title to be taken to its landing page where you can learn more
about it, get the required attribution information, and learn more about the history
of your chosen image.
Creating Infographics
InfoGraphic making websites
like Piktochart and easel.y offer templates and graphics
for making InfoGraphics, students need to register with these sites to
create.







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