
Languages • Year 10 • 50 • 26 students • Created with AI following Aligned with Common Core State Standards
This is the activities: 1. The teacher will begin by first putting students into groups of 3-4, giving them a whiteboard, marker, a towel, and the handout “No Es Justo- Samantha Leyva” that they will need to play the Unfair Game. 2. After that, the teacher will read to the students the instructions in the handout, and go over how the game is played. 3. The game is played when one group comes up with an answer to the question, and then they decide if they give the points to the other group without knowing if they’ll receive negative or positive points. Then the next group answers the next question, and after we have gone over the 17 questions, we’ll know who the winner is. 4. The class will then say ¡Felicidades! to the group that won. 5. If there’s time, the teacher will go over the handout, especially the vocabulary part to make sure that students have all the information correct. It’s like checking for understanding. include bell ringer please
This lesson focuses on engaging Year 10 students in a Spanish language session using an interactive activity known as "The Unfair Game." The activity is designed to practice vocabulary, comprehension, and context-based learning while fostering teamwork and critical thinking. The selected handout, "No Es Justo - Samantha Leyva", and the unconventional scoring method are meant to immerse students in the language while keeping the atmosphere lively, competitive, and fun.
By the end of the lesson, students will:
Curriculum Area: Spanish Language: Comprehension and Vocabulary Development (aligned to Level II/V ACTFL standards for communication, connections, and comparisons).
Task: Write on the front board ¿Qué significa justo? ¿Qué significa injusto? (What does "just" mean? What does "unjust" or "unfair" mean?).
Scoring Tip: Add an "unfair" element by occasionally doubling or halving certain point values, justifying it as part of the game's theme (¡Así es la vida injusta!).
This approach takes a commonplace classroom activity (the Unfair Game) and roots it firmly in age-appropriate, engaging material that encourages language use, collaboration, and cultural reflection. It’s lively, unpredictable, and scaffolds language learning in an unconventional way. By the end of the lesson, your students won’t just say “¡No es justo!”—they’ll understand why.
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