¡No soy un pavo!
November and the cold weather have arrived, and with it so has the excitement for Thanksgiving break. Well, whether you celebrate this holiday or not, the ¡No soy un pavo! activity will surely entertain and engage your students.
I have used this activity with students ranging 4th grade up to my collegiate and adult learners. All you have to do is modify the prompts to their level of proficiency, but all levels showed great excitement and overall engagement.
The main point in this activity is for students to create a disguise so that their turkey can be spared from becoming this holiday's dinner. Students can color, use fabric, crafting materials, OR, with my older students they can even explore digital options of their choice.Once they have completed the disguise portion, it is time to create a story for this unique guest at their Thanksgiving dinner table. In this new identity, students can (according to their proficiency level)
- Give the turkey a new name
- Give them a place of origin (ser)
- Describe their guest (ser + adjectives)
- Places where they go (ir + a) and what to do (ir + a + verb, and different tenses)
For my college students, depending on the semester that I am teaching, options range from preterit and imperfect story telling to subjunctive suggestions this guest shares in order to have the best thanksgiving ever !!! This has also turned into an essay prompt, yielding entertaining submissions.
Students can also be asked to present to the class depending on your time availability. My college students, for example, due to the class of classroom time, are asked to create a Flipgrid submission.
During the new year return, these projects become a great way to review the material previously covered by converting them into a game of guess who! Simply display these around the room or create a Google Slides presentation and have students read descriptions printed and thrown in a hat! It truly is one of my students favorite way to review material.
You could also type the descriptions with some grammatical errors and asked students to correct them.
I hope your students enjoy this resource as much as mine have done through the years.
Thanks for reading.
Profe Botero-Moriarty
Here is the link to the resource. It comes in English and Spanish to accommodate any and all classrooms.
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