WHY THIS WORKS
This marks the beginning of the class. It brings everyone together and sets the tone for the next 45-minutes of time you’ll be spending together. It’s the ice breaker that gives everyone an easy movement and the most basic word hello in the second language that they can easily repeat in a fun, exciting way.
Keywords: hola (hello)
PREPARE:
- Explain to the class that it’s time to begin.
- Invite the class to sit on the ground in a circle.
- Say, “Friends, today we are going to learn some Spanish”.
- Say, “Let’s start by saying hola” and wave you hand to the children sitting in the circle.
- Translate that hola means hello.
PERFORM
- Invite the class to stretch their arms up into the sky, wave them from side to side while saying hola three times.
- Encourage the class to do this two more times with you.
- Each time you invite them to wave their arms in the air and repeat hola, add a slight variation such as saying it a little faster, in a higher register in your voice, or making a funny face.

HELLO WAVE VIDEO

TRANSITION
Hello Wave to Good Morning Chant
If it’s the very first class, then right after the Hello Wave say, “Now we’re going to say good morning to everyone, but first I need to know your names.” Then ask each of them their names and write them down on a piece of paper. Once you have all their names, start teaching the keywords for the Good Morning Chant. Feel free to adapt the keywords to good afternoon if the class takes place in the afternoon.
Buenos Días Chant (Good Morning Chant)
WHY THIS WORKS
This is your first opportunity to connect with each child individually which is very empowering for them. Also, drumming has been used across cultures and time to bring people together, so be sure to use the hand drum. Invite everyone to repeat the keyword good morning in the second language using this simple, catchy rhythm. They’ll remember it for years to come!
Keywords: buenos días (good morning)
PREPARE:
- Be sure that you have a list of everyone’s names in the class in front of you if you do not have the names memorized yet.
- Say, “¡Buenos días! Good morning! In Spanish, good morning is buenos días”.
- Say to the class, “Ok class, repeat after me, buenos (pause for them to repeat), días (pause for them to repeat)”. Repeat three times. When you leave space for the children to respond you should also say the keyword silently as a prompt.
- Start patting your lap. Instruct everyone to imitate you patting their laps and wait until there is a unison rhythm.
- Once there is a rhythm instruct the class to repeat after you, “Buen, buen, buen, buenos días” and pause to let the children respond.
PERFORM
- Chant “Buen, buen, buen, buenos días” two to four times and begin with your name. Say, “Buenos días (your name), buenos días (your name)”.
- If the children are seated in a circle, call a child’s name, followed by the child seated next to them.
- After chanting for three names in the class, modulate your voice up a half step and repeat “Buen, buen, buen, buenos días” twice before going on to three more names.
- Once all the names have been called, accelerate the rhythm and say, “Ahora aplaudiendo”. Repeat all names starting with yours, but this time do it clapping.

TRANSITION
Good Morning Chant to Puppet Section
For the end of the Good Morning Chant lead everyone in a celebratory applause. Immediately turn your head to the side and make a bird sound as if a special birdie guest is chirping from behind you and is about to join you.
Myla Tiene Hambre (Myla Is Hungry)
WHY THIS WORKS
All the puppet routines have been designed to foster social emotional development in young children. Each week the puppet shares emotions that mirror what children experience. The puppets create a safe space for the children to begin to identify their feelings and approach sensitive subject matters.
Keywords: tengo hambre (I’m hungry), uno (one), dos (two), tres (three), cuatro (four), cinco (five), seis (six), siete (seven), ocho (eight), nueve (nine), diez (ten)
PREPARE:
- Be sure that you can easily access Myla in your bag. Check before class to make sure the puppet is clean and review what you’ll be teaching.
PERFORM:
- Make a sound like a bird.
- Ask the class, “Did you hear something? I think I heard Myla! Can we call her out?”.
- Instruct the class to repeat Myla Birdie with a fun rhythm as you prepare your hand in the puppet inside of the Bilingual Birdies bag.
- Myla enters with an exciting melody or gesture.
- Instruct the children to repeat “¡Hola Myla!”.
- Looking at Myla say, “¿Myla, Cómo estás?”.
- Myla responds, “¡Tengo hambre!”.
- Explain to the children that Myla is hungry. Invite the children to repeat tengo hambre with Myla three times.
- Explain that the class is going to get some apples for Myla to eat. Look up and pretend to see an apple tree.
- Instruct the children to reach their hands up and repeat after you as you pick ten apples for Myla to eat.
- Count to ten in Spanish saying each number twice and encouraging the children to count with you. “Uno, dos, tres, cuatro, cinco, seis, siete, ocho, nueve, diez”.
- Invite children to hold out their hand and pretend to feed Myla.
- Go up to each child and have Myla eat apples out of their hands.
- Explain that Myla is so full from all of the yummy apples she ate and she is going to take a nap now.
- Encourage the children to repeat, “¡Hasta luego Myla!”.
- Myla exits with the same melody or gesture.
CHALLENGE:
- Once the children are confident counting to ten, have them count to twenty.

PUPPETRY VIDEO

TRANSITION
Myla is hungry to Hello Song
Encourage the class to tell the puppet that they’ll see them later. Put the puppet back in the bag, get the shakers, and pass them out. Invite the class to “wake up the shakers” by shaking them up high and down low together so that the children have a moment to play with the new instrument you just gave them.