Describing Childhood with the IMPERFECT

Childhood goes hand in hand with the imperfect tense. Here is a spin on the typical classroom activities!

Last week I explicitly taught the Imperfect past tense to my Spanish 2 students. It was not the first time they had been exposed, but it was the first time I explained the various verb endings.

This week was a difficult one with state testing. I needed something light and entertaining. Over Spring Break, I gave my students the homework of sending me a picture from their childhood. So, this week, I put those pictures to use.

My goal for this activity is for the students to be able to answer the questions ¿Cómo era? and ¿Qué hacía? (What were they like? and What did they do?). So, to start the activity, I write those two questions on the board. Then I ask students to Think, Pair, Share adjectives that especially describe childhood personalities. After time to think and time to share with a partner, I tell students to just shout them out and I write them on the board as fast as I can.

The next question pertains to activities in the past. Once again, students Think, Pair, Share childhood activities. I tell them to keep the activities in the past, and they do well remembering what verbs in the imperfect should sound like based on last week’s lesson. I also write these on the board.

I use the @ symbol to remind my students that these adjectives will end in ‘o’ when describing a boy and ‘a’ when describing a girl.

Now comes the fun part. Remember those pictures of my students? I organize them in folders for each class period. Then, I project them on the board.

First we try to guess who it is in the picture (some are obvious and some are more difficult – especially the baby photos). Then, I start describing them. I completely make it up, flying by the seat of my pants. If you have trouble improvising on the spot, you may consider writing a short description for the pictures you want to spotlight.

Project the photo and make up a story about it! Write words on the board that the students might need to make your story comprehensible.

I like to have fun with it. If I have a shy student, I talk about how social she or he was as a child. Her parents had to tell her to be quiet so often that now she is just quiet! If I have a loud student, I expound on how annoying he or she was, how they stomped and yelled all the time.

In the pictures, I try to take the opportunity to teach words like pesad@ (annoying), mimad@/consentid@ (spoiled), egoísta (selfish), and bien/mal educad@ (well/poorly mannered). I add these words to the board as I use them.

After each story, I would ask students to answer the two target questions of the day. Then I would ask the whole class the questions and get a choral response from them. To keep students awake, after each picture, they had to change seats and sit by someone new.

My students were impressed at times with how spot-on some of my impromptu stories were and they laughed at the ones that were obviously out in left field. At the end of it all, the most fun part was seeing classmates as kids and remembering our childhoods.

I did this lesson for two days that were divided by a day of state testing. It was a nice break from sitting and testing. I got through 8-10 pictures each day, depending on how much I elaborated. I didn’t get through all of the pictures, but that’s okay! Next week I will use them to review the target questions and possible have them as options for a timed write.

Author: Camilla Given

I'm Camilla! I teach at the high school and college level in a small town in western Colorado. My goal is to teach the world Spanish through stories. I truly believe that stories make learning Spanish easier - and even fun! Feel free to contact me at smalltownspanishteacher@gmail.com

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