Sitting under a redbud tree in Tennessee at age eleven, I read this line for the first time: “the grey rain-curtain turned all to silver glass and was rolled back, and he beheld white shores and beyond them a far green country under a swift sunrise.” I’ll never forget the ache that sentence produced in me, the picture of peace those words from Tolkien conjured in my mind. I’ll remember the line forever. That’s where I truly learned the power of alliteration, imagery, and metaphor.
What I don’t remember are the grammar-drill sentences that tried to teach me those terms explicitly. The explicit lessons only confirmed what I had already internalized through compelling input. Without knowing it, all the reading I did as a child was building an intricate mental map of language in my brain.
My teaching style grows from that same truth: compelling, comprehensible input forms lasting language. I center my resources around interesting, fun, or downright ridiculous stories and songs that spark conversation and emotional connection. I believe we have the best job in the world because language teachers can teach about absolutely anything and still stay aligned with the science of acquisition. Now, as a mom of three little ones, I’m watching language develop naturally in real time. Given the right conditions, you truly cannot prevent a student from acquiring language. My hope is that my resources help you create those conditions in your classroom.