After toy manzanas are handed out and an initial song sung, lead instructor Jouveth Shortell explains to the families gathered for a demo class of ABC Spanish in Motion that her program follows Total Physical Response.
“Everything we do is through movement,” she says, holding a little boy’s hands up in the air to demonstrate “arriba.” For “grande,” she spreads her arms wide. For “triste,” she pretends cries, as if she is a distraught opera character, and the students mimic her.
So begins a quick-moving Spanish class for toddlers and other young children, one that focuses heavily on music, with lots of singing in short spurts and hand clapping. Shortell says many words in a lilting, singsong voice, speaking almost completely in Spanish. Most of the children don’t speak the language, but they are immersed in it.
“It’s the only way you can really engage children,” Shortell says of Total Physical Response. “They feel that they’re just playing.”
She says children listen and comprehend language first, not producing sounds; the idea is those will come later. Some youngsters take a few classes, and others a year, before they start saying Spanish words. Or some kids might not “show off” in class, but will speak at home.
| Want to know more? To register for an ABC Spanish in Motion class in Dedham, contact Discover Music & Art, 597 High St., www.discovermusicandart.com, 781-363-2526 or Spanish in Motion, www.abcspanishinmotion.com, 617-676-7680. |
Shortell is also the director and owner of ABC Spanish in Motion, a program for children between 6 months and 6 years, that exposes them to the language and to different cultural elements from across Latin America. Spanish in Motion holds classes around the Boston area, including at the Parkway Preschool Center on Spring Street in West Roxbury; its added offerings at Discover Music & Art in Dedham Square over the summer.
Five boys and four girls, accompanied by parents and caregivers, have come to Dedham Music & Art for the demonstration, taught by Venezuelan native Shortell and Monica Correia of Colombia. The most advanced student is Sophia Levering of Westwood, almost 5, who has been in Spanish in Motion for a year with her brother Ben, who is almost two.
When Shortell asks “¿Cómo estás?,” Sophia replies “Muy bien.” During a section on “calabazas,” Sophia uses a Spanish adjective to explain how one of the pumpkins is angry.