listening Reading reflections Video

Story Listening, almost

Good story listening is reaching “the soul of the reading”

peto-cangrejosWe are reading the classic short story Un señor muy viejo con unas alas enormes by García Márquez in my heritage learners class. I have been feeling guilty that I have not planned anything lately for the higher ability learners in class (about 30% of the students in a very differentiated class) so I pulled out some challenging but truly rewarding reading. Higher ability kids in the past have really warmed to this tale, so I thought that I would buckle up and fly through this beautiful story the best I could. Looking through old lesson plans I found a myriad of pre and post-reading activities that we could work through as a class so that, hopefully, every student would find some success. You can find a lot of those materials here, in a post that I published two years ago.

The funny thing is… wow those first two days felt horrible. I could feel the joy withering in my artless hands as together we read the first, basic embedded reading. My intention was to get straight to the good part but instead I had a humorless story skeleton that focused merely on plot.

At night I have been reading about the story listening technique developed by Beniko Mason, who questions whether “reading activities” are more efficient or more effective at developing language than simply providing more interesting/comprehensible reading and listening. That is when it occurred to me that my reading activities, meant to scaffold the reading of a specific version of the story, are putting the brakes on enjoying the soul of the text. My ah-ha moment: maybe difficult texts should always be presented orally first so that the storyteller can closely tune the telling of the tale to the audience.

quoteI use reading activities to make comprehensible a text that otherwise would be incomprehensible. Why am I seeking to push incomprehensible texts down the throats of my students? Because the reading is beautiful to my mind, because it occupies a central place in the target language culture, because I want my students to gasp at the mind-blowing creativity of a writer like GGM. All of these objectives can be reached through an oral retelling of the tale, so I dropped all of my canned reading activities mid-week and decided to meet my students where they were through story listening.

Once I looked at the story with new eyes… not to prepare students to read the quote2original text but rather to enjoy the most marvelous moments of the tale, it changed everything. I realized that I can tell this tale to my non-heritage learners. And I did, in one period. As I was reviewing the video of my teaching I heard for the first time the voice of one of my students who sits next to the camera. He was muttering, midway through the story listening session, “This is getting serious… I am so invested in this story!” Although it sounds planted, it was not. There were 37 juniors crammed into that room but, by their silent attention, one could be mistaken to believe it was just me and that one kid. Here is a link to that video. The first few minutes are boring as I set up the class but the story picks up after a few minutes.

I did stray in one important way from the ethos of story listening: I had my students illustrate the story as I told it, and when I was finished I had them go back and write in text to their cartoon versions. I just could not trust that they would listen to me for 36 minutes straight without daydreaming or outright snoozing. I am honestly not sure if this lack of faith reflects my own uncertainty in my skills as a storyteller, recognition that school has taught them to play the accountability game, or simply if the activity, the illustrating, helps them maintain the thread of a complicated story in their own minds. Maybe a bit of all three.

Here are some of the cartoon panels that they passed in (all non-heritage speakers):

6 comments

  1. Hi Mike,
    I am a French teacher with a little Spanish background. I understood your story perfectly! Thanks for sharing this. Also, I appreciate that you did not feel compelled to draw out all the details of the story. I will experiment with SL this year and not worry so much about the drawings.

  2. Awesome Post Mike. Yes, the accountability factors in like fear of some admin coming in midway through a lesson. It totally changes my energy. Anyway, I believe that Dr. Mason had mentioned that in the beginning, students tolerate less time with storytelling but can eventually hang on for even longer once they are accustomed. This week I am doing a synopsis of the original episode 1 of Star Wars: A New Hope for my French classes to break up my block periods. I had them write a summary in English. Going slow and drawing completely helps me pay attention to see who’s with me or not. I used Jillane’s summary worksheet and it gets the admin boxed checked because it is a measurable data point I can get from *all* students. That is one way to get some sort of assessment.

  3. You are a hero to me for all the work you do, your continuous innovation and generous sharing. I am definitely going to try this. I love your storytelling!

Leave a Reply to Carla TariniCancel reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Discover more from My generation of polyglots

Subscribe now to keep reading and get access to the full archive.

Continue reading