District 11 Educational Support Services
Multilingual Education


Images include student artwork from
the 2007 District 11 Hispanic Art Festival
.

 
Images include student artwork from
the 2007 District 11 Hispanic Art Festival
.

Level 2 Beginner Spanish: Overview

Overview

These resources will help students in grades 3-5 to begin developing a comprehensive vocabulary in Spanish. Students will see similarities between the two languages, English and Spanish, through word structure, root words, and cognates (similar words). Through speaking, reading, and writing activities, students will begin building the foundational vocabulary that will prepare them for success in middle school foreign language classes. These resources are available for parents to use with their children, for after school clubs and community organizations.
For Teachers
Quarter 1
Quarter 2
No Prerequisite
Next Course


Enduring Understandings - important ideas that students should carry with them years beyond the instruction received this year.
  • Developing knowledge and skills in a second language helps us better understand different cultures.
  • Languages are built on basic rules that help people communicate with clear understanding.
Essential Questions - most important “big picture” questions students should be able to answer after completing learning activities.
  • Communication - How will learning a language enhance my life?

  • Cultures - How can cultural awareness enhance my language learning and vice versa?  

  • Communities - How does where I live shape who I am?

  • Comparisons - How do I determine the most effective language learning style for me?

  • Connections - How might learning a language open “doors of opportunity”?

District 11 curriculum is designed to prepare and equip students to be successful in the 21st Century. Curriculum resources and lessons included here have been aligned to the Colorado Standards for each content area. In addition, the entire program has been aligned with the knowledge, skills, and learner attributes the Partnership for 21st Century Skills promotes as necessary for success in the 21st Century. You will see the highlighted core values embedded in these lessons and activities.
 
A Academic Preparedness: the foundation required for either higher education, or high-wage, high skills jobs.
C Cultural Competence: the ability to understand and interpret political and cultural events from multiple perspectives in a global society, a core competency in 21st Century Skills.
H High-Functioning Team Member Skills: collaboration is a core competency in 21st Century Skills.
I Innovative Thinking and Problem Solving Skills: a core competency for 21st Century Skills.
E Effective Use of Information Technology: a core competency for 21st Century Skills.
V Vital Participation in Civic Responsibility: "share knowledge and participate ethically and productively as members of our democratic society" Standards for the 21st-Century Learner from American Library Assoc.
E Effective Communication Skills: a core competency for 21st Century Skills.

Foreign Language Standards - Beginning Level

STANDARD I
Students comprehend the foreign language through listening to a variety of sources.
Benchmark A: Students obtain meaning from diverse listening sources.
Recognize memorized common expressions.
Demonstrate an understanding of vocabulary in context in simple survival situations.
Recognize cultural cues.
Recognize different intonation and stress.
Benchmark B: Students demonstrate comprehension of diverse auditory prompts.
Write appropriate responses.
Recall suitable rejoinders.
Respond kinesthetically.

STANDARD 2
Students speak in the foreign language for a variety of purposes and audiences.
Benchmark A: Students communicate in the foreign language in a variety of situations.
Express personal responses to oral, written, or visual prompts in predictable, familiar structures.
Report personal narrative accounts.
Report factual information gathered from a variety of sources in familiar, predictable situations.
Describe, using level-appropriate vocabulary.
List and recall.
Express personal opinions, likes, and dislikes on familiar topics with learned phrases.
Imitate and incorporate culturally appropriate non-verbal behaviors in familiar speaking situations.
Imitate appropriate social register.
Benchmark B: Students speak using a level-appropriate vocabulary, grammar, usage, and sentence structure.
Use basic pronunciation and intonation patterns.
Demonstrate some accuracy in oral situations when reproducing memorized words, phrases, and sentences.

STANDARD 3
Students read and derive meaning from a variety of materials written in a foreign language.
Benchmark A: Students use comprehension skills to understand text.
Employ word recognition skills, reading strategies, and resources to decode.
Increase vocabulary to ensure understanding.
Infer meaning of unfamiliar words in familiar situations.
Benchmark B: Students use information gained from reading.
Create a product.
Anticipate the outcome of highly predictable text.
Make interdisciplinary connections from the ideas presented in the text.

STANDARD 4
Students write in the foreign language for a variety of purposes and audiences.
Benchmark A: Students use a variety of modes.
Write personal responses to oral, written, or visual prompts, using familiar, memorized vocabulary.
Write to provide and/or obtain information in familiar, predictable situations.
Report factual information gathered from familiar sources to predictable settings.
Benchmark B: Students use a process approach to written communications.
Identify purpose and audience.
Use a variety of planning strategies.
Revise content through multiple drafts.
Self- and peer-edit.
Create a final product.
Benchmark C. Students write using level-appropriate vocabulary, grammar, usage, sentence structure, punctuation, capitalization, and spelling.
Use correct grammar.
Reproduce correct register-level usage.
Reproduce a variety of sentence types and structures.
Reproduce correct punctuation and capitalization.

STANDARD 5
Students acquire and use knowledge of culture while developing foreign language skills.
Benchmark A: Students use the foreign language and culturally appropriate behavior patterns to convey meaning.
Identify everyday cultural characteristics.
Identify culturally appropriate gestures and expressions in personal interaction.
Recognize components of the foreign cultures’ social patterns.
Benchmark B: Students access cultural information available only in the target language.
Use foreign information via technology.
Use library materials in foreign language (e.g. periodicals, literature, reference, tapes, videos, etc.)
Identify signs and symbols in foreign cultures.
Benchmark C. Students analyze social, political, economic, and/or historical aspects of the foreign cultures.
Identify similarities and differences among cultures.
Identify geographical locations relevant to the language.

Vocabulary Lessons 1-60 (Vocabulario Lecciones 1-60) - includes audio lessons in English and Spanish available in mp3 format.   

Sound_iconCD One: Yo deseo aprender inglés. (I desire to learn English) Lessons 1-27  Download Disc One in a .zip file. Sound_iconCD Two: Yo deseo aprender inglés. (I desire to learn English) Lessons 28-60  Download Disc Two in a .zip file.
1. Welcome! Bienvenidos 15. Opposites Game Lecciones 28, 29, 30, 31
2. Vocabulario Lecciones 1, 2, 3 16. Vocabulario Lecciones 32, 33, 34, 35
3. Historia: Getting To Know You 17. Historia: Choosing a Bank
4. Vocabulario Lecciones 5, 6, 7, 8 18. Vocabulario Lecciones 36, 37, 38, 39, 40
5. Vocabulario Lecciones 9, 10, 11, 12 19. Historia: The New Student
6. Historia: Packing For A Trip 20. Vocabulario Lecciones 42, 43, 44, 45, 46
7. Vocabulario Lecciones 13, 14, 15, 16 21. Historia: Doctor’s Appointment
8. Historia: Touring The City 22. Vocabulario Lecciones 47, 48
9. Vocabulario Lecciones 17, 18, 19, 20 23. Historia: Entertainment 
10. Historia: Moving Day 24. Vocabulario Lecciones  49, 50
11. Vocabulario Lecciones 21, 22, 23 25. Historia: Sports
12. Historia: Preparing Dinner 26. Vocabulario Leccion 55
13. Vocabulario Lecciones 24, 25, 26, 27 27. Historia: Car Inspection
14. Historia: Everybody Works 28. Historia: Building Maintenance Vocabulario 56, 57, 58
  29. Vocabulario Leccion 59
  30. Historia: Choosing a Career

Decks of Vocabulary Cards - includes playing cards for each of Vocabulary Card Lessons 1-60. (Used in Grades 1-2)

1. Common Phrases (1-2) 16. Which One? 31. Words Telling Where 46. Hospital
2. Ask Questions (1-2) 17. House Things 32. Money Words 47. Entertainment
3. Being Verbs 18. Bedroom and Bathroom 33. How Many? How Much? 48. Emotions
4. Pronouns and Possessives 19. Kitchen Things 34. Numbers 1 - 13 (1-2) 49. Gym
5. Time and Seasons  (1-2) 20. Utility Room 35. Numbers 14 - 100 50. Athletes
6. Months of the Year  (1-2) 21. Refrigerated Food (1-2) 36. School Things 51. Geography
7. Days and Holidays (1-2) 22. Words Telling How 37. Classroom Things 52. Weather
8. Words That Tell When  23. Pantry Foods 38. Backpack Things 53. Plant Parts
9. Colors (1-2) 24. People in the Family (1-2) 39. Teacher's Jobs 54. Animals
10. Men's Clothes 25. Careers 40. Students' Jobs 55. Car Parts
11. Women's Clothes 26. Job Words 41. Math Words 56. Garage Things
12. Baby's Things 27. Opposite Verbs I 42. Body Parts (1-2) 57. Toolbox
13. City 28. Opposite Verbs II 43. Human Face (1-2) 58. Home Repair
14. Describing People and Things 29. Opposite Verbs III 44. Things That Hurt 59. Home Jobs
15. What Kind of Place? 30. Opposite Words 45. Things That Heal 60. Department Stores

Computer Review Games - includes vocabulary review games that can be played alone or with a partner.

Unit 1 Unit 2 Unit 3 Unit 4 Unit 5 Unit 6
Unit 7 Unit 8 Unit 9 Unit 10 Unit 11 Unit 12

Video Lessons for Grades 1-2

Unit 1: Lesson 1 My Body Greetings
Unit 1: Lesson 2
Unit 1: Lesson 3 Donde Vives
Unit 1: Lesson 4 Family Members
Unit 1: Lesson 5 Donde Vives Review Game
Unit 1: Lesson 6 Rooms in House
Unit 1: Lesson 7 Family of Tigers Hide and Seek
Unit 1: Lesson 8 Goldilocks and Three Bears 
Unit 1: Lesson 9 Review Bingo
Unit 1: Lesson 10 Test
Unit 2: Lesson 1
Unit 2: Lesson 2 Holidays
Unit 2: Lesson 3 Parts of the Body

Unit 2: Lesson 4 Arms, Legs Hands Feet
Unit 2: Lesson 5 Hair, Eye Color
Unit 2: Lesson 6 Numbers
Unit 2: Lesson 7 Count Body Parts
Unit 2: Lesson 8
Unit 2: Lesson 9
Unit 2: Lesson 10 Test
Unit 3: Lesson 1 Days, Months
Unit 3: Lesson 2 Review Days, Months
Unit 3: Lesson 3 Days, Months Birthdays
Unit 3: Lesson 4 Seasons
Unit 3: Lesson 5 Review Days, Months, Seasons
Unit 3: Lesson 6 Review Days, Months, Seasons
Unit 3: Lesson 7 Review Days, Months, Seasons
Unit 3: Lesson 8 Holidays in Countries
Unit 3: Lesson 9 Review Calendars, Birthdays and Seasons
Unit 3: Lesson 10 Test
Unit 4: Lesson 1 Fruits Vegetables
Unit 4: Lesson 2 Fruits Vegetables Colors
Unit 4: Lesson 3 Review Fruits Vegetables Colors
Unit 4: Lesson 4 Fruits Vegetables Colors Game
Unit 4: Lesson 5 Fruit Vegetables Review Game
Unit 4: Lesson 6  NA
Unit 4: Lesson 7 NA
Unit 4: Lesson 8 NA
Unit 4: Lesson 9 NA
Unit 4: Lesson 10 Test
Unit 5: Lesson 1 Food Colors
Unit 5: Lesson 2 Review Colors Numbers
Unit 5: Lesson 3 Review Colors Numbers
Unit 5: Lesson 4 Review Colors Numbers Seasons
Unit 5: Lesson 5 Review Seasons Times of Day
Unit 5: Lesson 6
Unit 5: Lesson 7 Review Foods Numbers Colors
Unit 5: Lesson 8 Review Seasons Times of Day
Unit 5: Lesson 9
Unit 5: Lesson 10 Test

Sample Units


Parents

Benefits of Knowing a Second Language
Colorado children need second language fluency in order to be competitive in the 21st century.  Students of foreign language score statistically higher on standardized tests conducted in English.  Students who average 4 or more years of foreign language study scored higher on the verbal section of the SAT than those who had studied 4 or more years on any other subject area. (1992 report consistent with College Board profiles of previous years.)  Students of foreign languages have access to great number of career possibilities and develop a deeper understanding of their own language and other cultures.  Children who receive second language instruction are more creative and better at solving complex problems.  Coloradans fluent in other languages enhance U.S. economic competitiveness abroad, improve global communication, and maintain national, political and security interest.

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