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Art box project! ¡Proyecto de la caja de arte!

SUPPLIES NEEDED

  • printed activity sheets
  • crayons or colored pencile
  • scissors; glue stick

WHAT TO PRACTICE

Make an art box where you can store all your paper artwork! Color in and cut out the sign for your art box. Pick a box that is big enough to lay your papers flat, like a large shoe box. Make sure you always put your completed artwork away in the box for safe keeping.

Weekend Project: Find a way to make a fun game out of cleaning. It might be using a timer to try to beat-the-clock, rolling dice to find out what chore each person gets, or doing it as imaginative play.

Included in this lesson:

Art box activity sheet

NOTE TO GROWN UPS

Once you create a game that works well for your family, stick to it! Consistency is key in building new routines at home.

TAGS

Animals
Art
Customs
Food
Geography
History
Music & Dance

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Ask a Bilingual Expert

Raising a bilingual child? On this page, our very own Director of Learning Design and Efficacy, Sophia Espinoza, addresses some of the most common questions, concerns, and curiosities around the benefits of bilingualism. Get the scoop below!

Sophia Espinoza is a career educator and curriculum designer with seven years of experience teaching in private and independent schools across the country. She is an expert in 21st-century education, including technologically-powered personalization, multilingual and multicultural curriculums, and social-emotional learning.

Sophia began teaching in Chicago Public Schools through Chicago Teaching Fellows, learning to support both English Language Learners and students with neurodiverse needs. Among her proudest accomplishments is launching the AltSchool Spanish Immersion Program, with the mission of creating bilingual global citizens who are socially conscious and environmentally aware. Sophia holds a B.A. from Northwestern University and M.A.Ed. from Dominican University.

Benefits of Bilingualism (FAQs):

Any advice on managing two Spanish dialects in the household? Does this cause confusion for kids?

What do you recommend if I’m not completely fluent and my child’s school doesn’t have an immersion class?

Do you recommend teaching different subjects in different languages? For example, the solar system in English and the days of the week in Spanish? Or is it better for kids to try to learn in both languages all the time?

We speak Spanish and English in our home but my child almost always answers or talks back in English. How can I go about encouraging her to respond and speak more in Spanish?

Should I set aside time or create activities for each language or is it okay to mix them both together?

Any advice for households where one parent speaks Spanish and the other English? Can this be confusing for children?

How can my child learn language through play?

What are the social and cultural benefits of bilingualism?

What are some of the cognitive benefits of bilingualism?

What are some strategies for raising bilingual children?

What are some common misconceptions about raising bilingual children?

What are some of the cognitive benefits of bilingualism?