WEBVTT 00:00:00.066 --> 00:00:02.886 >>Oscar: One time, I went to Legoland. 00:00:04.196 --> 00:00:07.066 >>Noelle: Because our class does storytelling, story acting, 00:00:07.516 --> 00:00:09.866 our students know and respect each other more. 00:00:10.936 --> 00:00:14.846 It's a language and literacy practice, really, but it does so much more. 00:00:15.046 --> 00:00:17.806 It helps the kids with their social emotional development. 00:00:18.056 --> 00:00:20.906 It's really community building within the classroom. 00:00:21.086 --> 00:00:23.096 >>Student: I went to Legoland. 00:00:31.446 --> 00:00:35.556 >>Sarah: Amigos is a two way immersion school for students 00:00:35.676 --> 00:00:36.976 in Cambridge, Massachusetts. 00:00:37.466 --> 00:00:43.736 At Amigos, we look to support biliteracy in the early years by really developing 00:00:43.736 --> 00:00:47.056 and strengthening oral language skills, and the students' ability 00:00:47.056 --> 00:00:51.256 to tell stories, understand the shape of a story, and be able to share 00:00:51.256 --> 00:00:53.696 that with oral language in both Spanish and English. 00:00:54.046 --> 00:00:56.596 >>Student: With my mom, my dad. 00:00:57.456 --> 00:01:02.086 >>Oscar: So storytelling, story acting, we first ask a child to tell us a story, 00:01:02.506 --> 00:01:04.956 and it could be a personal story of theirs, 00:01:04.956 --> 00:01:06.416 or something that they have made up. 00:01:06.946 --> 00:01:09.476 Then when it's time to do the story acting, 00:01:09.616 --> 00:01:15.116 we are actually seeing a visual representation of their story. 00:01:15.166 --> 00:01:16.706 >>And there was petals. 00:01:17.216 --> 00:01:20.166 >>We're actually working with language, but at the same time, 00:01:20.166 --> 00:01:22.176 we're working with elements of a story. 00:01:22.456 --> 00:01:26.686 >>You can use Legos to make a car. 00:01:27.216 --> 00:01:28.836 >>It has setting, characters. 00:01:29.000 --> 00:01:31.356 >>Student: A brother. >>Noelle: Brother. 00:01:31.356 --> 00:01:35.036 >>Noelle: Each day, a different student has a turn to tell a story to me. 00:01:35.576 --> 00:01:36.806 >>It was a family of turtles. 00:01:37.956 --> 00:01:39.046 >>Student: Yeah. >>Noelle: Ah, okay. 00:01:39.906 --> 00:01:41.176 So there was a family of turtles. 00:01:42.006 --> 00:01:44.296 >>I take the story dictation during rest time. 00:01:44.296 --> 00:01:47.436 It's a quiet time, so I call the student over. 00:01:47.456 --> 00:01:49.250 >>Student: The shark. 00:01:49.746 --> 00:01:52.466 >>There's a shark in your story? >>Student: Yeah. 00:01:52.466 --> 00:01:53.766 >>Noelle: It just probably takes five or ten minutes. 00:01:53.906 --> 00:01:54.866 They tell me the story. 00:01:55.100 --> 00:01:59.596 >>Student: Then I [speaks Spanish]. 00:02:01.046 --> 00:02:02.726 >>Noelle: And often because we're a bilingual school, 00:02:02.896 --> 00:02:06.206 it's really a motivator for the kids who are just learning Spanish to try 00:02:06.206 --> 00:02:07.476 to tell the story in Spanish. 00:02:07.676 --> 00:02:10.576 Then we clean up the mats and we get in our circle, 00:02:10.576 --> 00:02:12.976 and then I call the student up to sit next to me. 00:02:13.226 --> 00:02:15.006 >>There was a family of turtles. 00:02:15.396 --> 00:02:16.766 >>I read the story aloud. 00:02:17.296 --> 00:02:19.096 >>Do you want to be the baby? >>Student: Uh-huh. 00:02:20.106 --> 00:02:23.526 >>Noelle: And then they are responsible for choosing who the actors are. 00:02:23.776 --> 00:02:25.066 >>Student: Do you want to be the mommy? 00:02:25.706 --> 00:02:28.896 >>Noelle: We just go in a circle, so it's not popularity contest, 00:02:28.896 --> 00:02:30.146 but more of just whose turn it is. 00:02:30.736 --> 00:02:32.736 >>Do you want to be the sister? >>Student: [speaks Spanish]. 00:02:33.126 --> 00:02:36.056 >>Noelle: And they put them in their places, and then I read the story 00:02:36.056 --> 00:02:38.026 for a final time, and they act it out. 00:02:38.376 --> 00:02:40.456 >>The turtle said "Hi!" to the girl. 00:02:42.106 --> 00:02:45.196 >>Student: Hi. >>I'm not the girl, she is. 00:02:48.686 --> 00:02:51.400 >>Noelle: Oh, so if you're a turtle, then you have to go like that. 00:02:51.556 --> 00:02:55.556 >>For the very shy kids, it gives them a structure and a platform 00:02:55.556 --> 00:02:56.736 and rules to be able to do that. 00:02:57.486 --> 00:03:00.776 >>And then the shark ate all the turtles. 00:03:01.876 --> 00:03:05.476 >>For other kids, it gives them that much-needed like, this is my turn. 00:03:05.476 --> 00:03:06.736 I've been wanting this all day long. 00:03:06.736 --> 00:03:08.666 So it depends on the child. 00:03:09.096 --> 00:03:14.126 But it is very powerful for everyone to have that kind of spotlight on you. 00:03:17.000 --> 00:03:18.000 >>Wow, look at the shark.