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Back to Spanish Class: Getting Started With Interactive Notebooks
Sometimes you just need to see an idea in action. We’ll start off with some videos showing interactive notebooks from different teachers.
Videos of Spanish Interactive Notebooks
Interactive Notebook Flashcards from Sherry at World Language Cafe
Online Resources for Spanish Interactive Notebooks
PBL in the TL for Spanish 1 Interactive Notebooks Lugar Para Pensa r
Prepping Interactive Notebooks for the School Year
3. Think through your teaching philosophy and anticipate your needs. The idea is to create a notebook that fits easily with your style of teaching and your specific goals.
- If you teach with IPAs, you may like to do sections by units, with can-do statements at the beginning of each unit. Each unit section might front-load vocabulary.
- If you do storytelling, figure out a system for recording target structures and attaching printed stories, embedded readings, etc.
- If you follow a textbook, perhaps label your sections to align exactly with the book, so that students move easily between the INB and book.
4. Decide on how you will grade the notebooks (if at all). Some teachers have rubrics in the notebooks, and do periodic checks. I only grade on content, but other teachers count creativity and appearance as well.
5. Decide whether the students will take them home or leave them at school, and if so– where.
Since I teach without a textbook, we do lots of acting, storytelling, talking, listening to music, and reading. Having all the essentials in one place helps give that cohesive feeling to our learning, and is helpful to show to inquisitive parents or administration. I don’t always know where the year will go, as classes vary so much. It’s been helpful to have something we can tailor entirely to our interests and needs.
I would love to hear what other resources and ideas you have found helpful!
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This comment has been removed by the author.
I love this post! Where do I find spiral notebooks like the one in Angie's videos? Thanks!
I will ask Angie and let you know!
Thank you for an excellent post!
Thank you so much. I'm excited to see the children's reaction to this great idea.
This is absolutely fantastic! We are finishing the school year here in Australia and I started to think about 2020. We have a book that so far is divided in some sections (teachers before I started there introduced this), but I struggled to really utilise them properly, I feel I had students kind of jumping from section to section and it did not help much students that struggle with organisation. I started to wonder how to use sections better for next year and luckily I came across this post. Thanks for sharing!
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How to Use Spanish Interactive Notebooks in Your Classroom
If you’re a teacher, odds are that you have heard about Spanish interactive notebooks before. But, have you made the decision to use them in your classroom?
In this post I’ll explain what Spanish interactive notebooks are and why they’re useful for your students. Then, I’ll give you a few ideas on how to use them in your classroom and clever strategies to make the most of them. Finally, I’ll show you how to make your Spanish interactive notebook a digital one and take your Spanish learning process to the next level.
What Are Spanish Interactive Notebooks?
Interactive have seen a boom in recent years and teachers used them in a wide variety of languages, Spanish included. Basically, interactive notebooks are “ spiral or composition notebooks where students can organize their notes .”
However, they go much further than simple note-taking tools. Personally, I loved this definition: interactive notebooks provide “ a space where students may take what is inside their brains, lay it out, make meaning, apply it, and share it with their peers, parents, and teachers .”
Usually, the right side of the notebook is reserved for notes, handouts, discussions, and every other piece of information given by the teacher, while the left side is where students personalize that information, with their own wording, drawings, charts, comics, and the sort. The left side is the student’s opportunity to make sense of what they have just learned.
Why Are Spanish Interactive Notebooks Useful to Students?
Spanish interactive notebooks are great tools to help students to organize their ideas and accommodate different learning styles into a single place. They are also useful to allow students to express their own ideas, enhance their creativity, and process information.
This interesting way of learning allows students to take ownership of their own learning and give them agency to explore more and dig deeper. Finally, Spanish interactive notebooks work as a portfolio of the student’s learning process, and strengthen the student-teacher-parent interaction .
How To Use Spanish Interactive Notebooks in Your Classroom
Spanish interactive notebooks are, among other things, creativity tools for your students. So, my piece of advice is to get creative with the way you use them in your classroom. The following are just a few Spanish interactive notebook ideas to apply with your students.
Sell the Idea to Your Students
Just because interactive notebooks are somewhat common these days, that doesn’t mean that everybody has heard of them or knows how to use them. Students get motivated when they buy the idea of a new project. If you catch their attention with the interactive notebook concept, you’ll see their creativity flourish. If they aren’t on board, you’ll end up with a lot of notes on the right side of the notebook, and very little to show for on the left side.
Define Your Table of Contents
Having a well-defined Table of Contents before you start using your Spanish interactive notebook, allows you to have your course organized and scheduled, and your students to know beforehand what they will be learning in the coming weeks and months.
The Table of Contents also helps your students to design their Spanish interactive notebooks with a cohesive look and to prepare for their classes.
Follow a Rubric
State very clearly to your students what’s expected from their Spanish interactive notebooks and how you plan to grade them. Top grades may be given to complete notebooks, with neat and clean work through its pages. Make sure to include concepts such as quality work, organization, and visual appearance.
If you want general items to be included such as date and title, page numbers, or a specific number of charts, drawings, tables, or Venn diagrams make sure that your students understand this and they can even glue the rubric to their notebooks just after the Table of Contents.
Number the Pages
Do you notice a patron here? A Table of Contents, a rubric, and numbering the pages of your students’ Spanish interactive notebooks are simple strategies to keep the notebooks well-organized. Yes, they’re creativity enhancing tools, but you can guide that creativity to flourish in a positive way.
Using Spanish interactive notebooks can get messy at times, there’s a lot of glue involved, and plenty of cutouts. By numbering the pages of your students notebooks, you make sure that everybody is in the same channel and that they don’t get lost searching for specific pieces of content.
Use Different Learning Tools
The best thing about Spanish interactive notebooks is that you can use a wide array of learning tools and facilitate the inclusion of different learning styles . Use that flexibility and make the most of it.
Some learning tools that your students can and should use in their Spanish interactive notebooks include:
- Concept maps
- Venn Diagrams
Spanish Interactive Digital Notebook
Can you have a digital Spanish interactive notebook? Yes, but the dynamic is completely different and the challenges it presents are diverse. Your students can create a Spanish interactive digital notebook opening a Google Drive folder and keeping all the documents from a specific unit in that folder.
Then, you can include a variety of apps that you have used in your classes and your students are familiarized with. For example, Quizlet , Duolingo, Kahoot , or a specialized YouTube channel .
Introduce Spanish Interactive Notebooks in Your Classroom and Improve Your Lessons
Spanish interactive notebooks are smart learning tools that a series of studies have found bring a lot of benefits to your students’ learning process. Try introducing them into your Spanish lessons and see how your students get engaged in the creation of their own notebooks and learning.
Remember that Spanish is a primary subject that most students begin studying in elementary school. By high school students find that Spanish is both an Advanced Placement course and available as an SAT II subject test. Using a series of learning tools such as Spanish interactive notebooks to learn the language, give your students a strong foundation to deal with these courses in a successful way. Do you need support in your classroom? Homeschool Spanish Academy provides 1-on-1 or 2-on-1 online Spanish classes for K-12 students. We can help alleviate the difficulty of having many students of varying levels of performance. Sign up for a free class to give us a try today!
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Spanish 1 Handouts - Worksheets, Assignments, & Projects
Choose a unit:.
- Comic Strip: [ PDF | .docx ] Preliminary Chapter Comic Strip Instructions
- Schedule Assignment: [ PDF ] Unit 2 - Schedule Assingment
- Telling Time Worksheet: [ PDF | .docx ] Practice with Telling Time
- Ir, Ser, Estar, Tener Drawing Worksheet: [ PDF | .docx ] Practice with the irregular verbs
- Unit 3 - Project: [ PDF | .docx ] Unit 3 Project Rubric - Story
- Unit 5 - Comic Strip: [ PDF | .docx ] Unit 5 Comic Strip Rubric
- Unit 6 - Project Rubric: [ PDF | .docx ] Unit 6 Project Rubric
Assignment Notebook (In Spanish) Libreta de Tarea
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assignment notebook
- Thread starter Pecosita5015
- Start date Nov 13, 2009
Pecosita5015
Senior member.
- Nov 13, 2009
Hola otra vez! Por favor - como se dice : assignment notebook? "assignment notebook" es un cuarderno que es usado para estudiantes anotar sus tareas.
In my sons' schools they call them either "control de tareas" or "cuaderno de tareas" or "libreta de tareas."
- Sep 17, 2010
Lo que no entiendo es la diferencia entre cuaderno de tareas (assignment notebook) y (notebook)???? no es lo mismo? o es "notebook" otra cosa que un "cuaderno". Aprecio la aclaracion.
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How to Organize Your Foreign Language Notebook
When you hear “the notebook,” what do you think of?
A shirtless Ryan Gosling?
Well, we’re here to forever change the meaning of “the notebook.”
A foreign language notebook is your own personalized repository of all the most valuable knowledge you gain on your road to fluency, so why not fall in love with the best notebook of all?
Here are 9 tips to make it happen!
1. Find the right notebook for you
2. write down your language learning goals, 3. divide your notebook into logical sections, 4. leave enough space for each section, 5. always do a test page, 6. add lots of color coding, 7. make your notebook visually appealing, 8. use sticky tabs to organize, 9. keep a list of creative writing ideas, why use a foreign language notebook, resources to help you organize your notebook, and one more thing....
Download: This blog post is available as a convenient and portable PDF that you can take anywhere. Click here to get a copy. (Download)
The beauty of keeping a foreign language notebook is how customizable it is!
You can choose what kind of notebook you want to use and then set it up however you’d like. Your language notebook can be as simple or complex as you desire, with a strict design and lists or a loose structure.
Planning is an important part of choosing the right notebook. Your first consideration should be how big or small you’d like your notebook to be.
You can use a plain lined notebook , a classic composition notebook or you could simply repurpose an old binder and fill it with notebook paper.
Or, if you just want to give this a try without too much effort, you can find language worksheets and house them in a notebook for an easy, low-maintenance start.
See the Resources section below for more notebook options and examples of successful language notebooks.
Once you have your notebook, I recommend writing down your goals as soon as possible. These can simply be a page, or your goals can have a whole section in your notebook (see the next step for more info!).
Think about what you want to achieve. Ask yourself questions like:
- How many sentences do I want to be able to write?
- What kind of writing do I want to do?
- What new words do I want to learn to use?
- Which grammar concepts do I need to master?
Ideally, you’ll set up a series of goals, each one getting bigger or harder as you go along. Writing them down will help you track your progress and success.
For example, every couple of weeks, challenge yourself to write for a longer period of time without using a dictionary. This helps you learn to be imaginative with the language and see where your weaknesses are.
Of course, you can also create a system to reward yourself when you reach a goal, too.
Writing down your goals in your notebook means it’ll be very clear when you achieve them, so why not plan to recognize your progress?
A reward could be something as simple as fun stickers or new stationery. Maybe you’re keeping a list of foreign movies to check out, so now would be a great time to watch one.
Completing a goal and moving on to the next one means you’re moving forward with using your target language. Let it motivate you to keep going!
This is an important component of a successful notebook. Having designated sections will make it easier to navigate and cut down on wasted time and space.
Some possible sections you might want to include are:
- Language goals: Helpful for remembering what you want to work on and tracking progress.
- Grammar: Provides a clear reference for important rules and concepts.
- Vocabulary: Track new words and reinforce old ones; don’t forget to include example sentences!
- Idioms and phrases: Especially useful for note-taking during listening practice sessions.
- Writing practice: Dedicated space for using your vocabulary and grammar.
Of course, sections can vary based on personal preference.
Take some time to brainstorm what you plan to work on, what reference materials you want handy and what would be fun to include—a list of books, songs and podcasts you want to look into, for instance.
If you’re really unsure, I recommend three equal sections for your first foreign language notebook: vocabulary, grammar and writing. Those will cover the most important basics without being overwhelming.
Once you know your sections, you’ll need to decide how many pages each one needs. Consider this carefully—you don’t want to cram too much information onto one page or (gasp!) have to start a new notebook from scratch.
The trick is to consider your page layouts ahead of time because the amount of space you need depends mostly on your organization.
For instance, if you plan to organize your vocabulary words thematically (i.e., medical vocabulary, business words, etc.), you’ll likely need a page or more for each major theme. Verb conjugation charts take up even more room.
You might even choose to separate sections like grammar and vocabulary into entirely separate notebooks to allow yourself as much space as possible to spread out!
You also want to ensure that you have room to:
- Include helpful details. Do you like copying a lot of example sentences? Do you want in-depth grammar instructions? Leave space for these.
- Add more information later. There’s always the chance of learning something new about a vocab word or grammar rule. Try to keep your margins clear for this purpose.
It may seem like an unnecessary step, but a test page can save you headaches down the road.
Testing your layout will save you the trouble of redoing the journal or ripping out the page if you realize your scheme doesn’t work.
Test pages are particularly useful for very visual pages, like thematic vocabulary pages—especially if you intend to have several similarly-formatted pages throughout your notebook.
First, consider what you want on the page. You might be including vocabulary words and drawings, verb conjugation charts or something else that takes up a lot of room.
Now, try blocking off the space that you would reserve for each component. Even better, try drawing out the layout on a separate paper of the same size. Look over it carefully and consider points like:
- Does it work well?
- Is it logical and easy to read?
- What could be improved?
- Does the spacing need to change?
- Are the colors and decorations ideal?
Doing this will make it much easier to see what does and doesn’t work before you commit to a language notebook full of pages you don’t quite love.
Color coding your foreign language notebook is more than just pretty—it can also communicate key information at a glance.
Whether you use colored pens, highlighters, sticky notes or some combination, good color coding will make your notebook easier to use and more enjoyable to study from.
You can color code parts of speech, or use different colors for words in your native language and your target language. Color coding by gender works for languages like French or Spanish, while coding by tone works for Mandarin Chinese.
Not only will this help visually organize your notes, but it’s also thought that color coding helps you retain and recall information !
Regardless of what scheme you choose to use, it’s helpful to jot down your color coding key at the beginning of your notebook so you can refer back to it if necessary.
Beyond color coding, truly committing to making your foreign language notebook visually appealing will help you out even more.
You can use things like headings, diagrams, stickers, borders, boxes and more to help you organize your information and present it clearly.
For instance, use drawings to represent the meanings of vocabulary terms. As you draw, think about the word to help reinforce it. Besides making your notebook more interesting to look at, it also helps you associate the word with its actual meaning rather than the English translation.
In this video , language learner Bia shows off her clean, color-coded journal pages. For another take, check out the notebook of Abigail from Polyglot Progress . Both are full of great ideas and inspiration!
Sticky tabs are any organization junkie’s best friend.
They protrude from a page so you can easily find any section. You can put them at the top, side or bottom of the page depending on your preference and design aesthetic. You can label them if you desire, or leave them blank.
Using sticky tabs will make it easy to flip between sections, which is important when you want to add information or refer back to something.
Your notebook will feel infinitely more useful and you’ll save time thumbing through pages. Plus, sticky tabs look super professional and polished, so that’s satisfying in and of itself.
That writing section of your notebook seems like a great idea at first, but there will probably come a time where you find you’re struggling to come up with what to write.
Of course, you can write whatever you want, but it’s a good idea to keep it varied. It’s like using different equipment at the gym—working different muscles makes you stronger overall.
So, writing creatively makes your language skills stronger in general. Here are some ideas to jump-start your practice:
- Write a letter or email to a friend.
- Write a diary entry.
- Review a book, movie, show, recipe or restaurant.
- Plan a dinner menu.
- Write a magazine article.
- Create a make-believe travel journal.
- Write a dialogue using new vocabulary or grammar.
You can find even more ideas in this post .
You can also use any native language content you consume to inspire your writing practice.
For instance, if you’re using the language learning program FluentU , you can learn vocabulary, grammar and pronunciation from authentic videos. This multimedia experience can provide plenty of content to write about.
FluentU takes authentic videos—like music videos, movie trailers, news and inspiring talks—and turns them into personalized language learning lessons.
You can try FluentU for free for 2 weeks. Check out the website or download the iOS app or Android app.
P.S. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)
Try FluentU for FREE!
And no matter what you write about, don’t forget to go back and review. This will help you figure out what else you need to improve on, and eventually, it will show you just how far you’ve come.
One key reason to use a foreign language notebook is that writing things down makes them easier to remember. As PBS’s NOVA Next reports , taking notes with pen and paper helps improve students’ conceptual understanding of that material.
For language learners, the benefits of using a foreign language notebook to aid memory are obvious. It could improve your retention of vocabulary words and help you better understand grammar rules. That’s a lot of awesome packed in one little notebook!
Second, maintaining your own reference resource is often more useful than relying on outside materials. After all, it’s customized to you, so it should be easy for you to use. Plus, you can return to your notebook down the road if you forget the language at some point.
Additionally, using a foreign language notebook is a good way to track your progress and help keep you motivated. Nothing’s better than seeing how far you’ve come! That way, you never feel like you’ve reached a language learning plateau —you have evidence to prove you’re moving forward!
Setting goals is also helpful because it keeps you continuing along at a good rate. One study out of Harvard indicates that goal setting can increase both motivation and achievement. You can set your goals in your language notebook so that you’re always accountable to yourself.
Finally, you can use your foreign language notebook to target specific errors you need to correct. Errors in language learning can build, but your personalized notebook can be used to target these errors. For instance, if you’re struggling with a particular verb conjugation, you can dedicate several pages to explaining it and listing conjugation charts.
Starting a language notebook from scratch can be daunting. Luckily, there are resources out there that can help.
There are specially-formatted notebooks available for purchase that can take some of the guesswork out of your layout. There are also great videos of how some language learners created and organized their own personal notebooks to help you get started.
Our hope is that these will be an inspiration to you as you start your journey. Take a look at:
- Language Learning Notebook : Don’t have an artistic eye? Try out this notebook. It’s organized with spaces for vocabulary, useful phrases, resource lists, study trackers and more.
- Lindie Botes – Language notebook flip through : In this video, language learner Lindie flips through her beginning Vietnamese journal to show you her set-up and what her notes look like.
- Jazmine Layah – how to take notes : Here, Jazmine gives viewers a quick look at her super-aesthetic Japanese notebook and provides a rundown of how she takes such pretty notes.
Even once your notebook is full, it still isn’t over. There’s always another notebook to fill with fun language learning!
If you dig the idea of learning on your own time from the comfort of your smart device with real-life authentic language content, you'll love using FluentU .
With FluentU, you'll learn real languages—as they're spoken by native speakers. FluentU has a wide variety of videos as you can see here:
FluentU App Browse Screen.
FluentU has interactive captions that let you tap on any word to see an image, definition, audio and useful examples. Now native language content is within reach with interactive transcripts.
Didn't catch something? Go back and listen again. Missed a word? Hover your mouse over the subtitles to instantly view definitions.
Interactive, dual-language subtitles.
You can learn all the vocabulary in any video with FluentU's "learn mode." Swipe left or right to see more examples for the word you’re learning.
FluentU Has Quizzes for Every Video
And FluentU always keeps track of vocabulary that you’re learning. It gives you extra practice with difficult words—and reminds you when it’s time to review what you’ve learned. You get a truly personalized experience.
Start using the FluentU website on your computer or tablet or, better yet, download the FluentU app from the iTunes or Google Play store. Click here to take advantage of our current sale! (Expires at the end of this month.)
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Translate Assignment notebook. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations. Learn Spanish. Translation. ... SpanishDictionary.com is the world's most popular Spanish-English dictionary, translation, and learning website. Ver en español en inglés.com.
Many translated example sentences containing "assignment notebook" - Spanish-English dictionary and search engine for Spanish translations. Look up in Linguee; Suggest as a translation of "assignment notebook" ... or if your child is having a hard time remembering to write things in her assignment notebook, you can check each day when she ...
The best way to organize your Spanish notebook begins with your learning objectives. Our Spanish notebook contains sections for planning, tracking, practice, vocabulary, grammar, and any additional activities you choose to include. Download the printable Spanish Notebook bundle. This is the fastest way to make an interactive notebook.
Prep some visuals to maintain the TL in class. Consider keeping a master table of contents you can project and point to, outlines to follow when there's no foldable or printable. If you keep a master teacher notebook, it's easier to model and stay in the TL. 7. Prepare the most essential pages ahead of time.
Spanish interactive notebooks are great tools to help students to organize their ideas and accommodate different learning styles into a single place. They are also useful to allow students to express their own ideas, enhance their creativity, and process information. This interesting way of learning allows students to take ownership of their ...
Browse assignment notebook resources on Teachers Pay Teachers, a marketplace trusted by millions of teachers for original educational resources.
Spanish 1 Handouts - Worksheets, Assignments, & Projects. Choose a Unit: Unit 0. Comic Strip: [PDF | .docx] Preliminary Chapter Comic Strip InstructionsUnit 2. Schedule Assignment: [] Unit 2 - Schedule AssingmentTelling Time Worksheet: [PDF | .docx] Practice with Telling TimeIr, Ser, Estar, Tener Drawing Worksheet: [PDF | .docx] Practice with the irregular verbs
Translate Asignment notebook. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations. Learn Spanish. Translation. Conjugation. ... Spanish learning for everyone. For free. Translation. The world's largest Spanish dictionary. Conjugation. Conjugations for every Spanish verb.
Apply Creativity. One of the many benefits of interactive notebooks for Spanish in class is that it allows students to work on their creativity. Language might not seem like a creative topic, but the teaching and learning methods always rely on creativity and communication. Some students pay more attention to details than others, which can ...
The sections included are... -especiales (música, arte, educación física) -escritura -lectura -ciencias/ciencias sociales -matemáticas -otras notas -fecha -y un lugar para que firmen los padres
Por favor - como se dice : assignment notebook? "assignment notebook" es un cuarderno que es usado para estudiantes anotar sus tareas. WordReference.com Language Forums. Forums. Rules/Help/FAQ Help/FAQ. ... Spanish-English Vocabulary / Vocabulario Español-Inglés . assignment notebook. Thread starter ...
Many translated example sentences containing "an assignment notebook" - Spanish-English dictionary and search engine for Spanish translations. Look up in Linguee; Suggest as a translation of "an assignment notebook" ... or if your child is having a hard time remembering to write things in her assignment notebook, you can check each day when ...
7. Make your notebook visually appealing. Beyond color coding, truly committing to making your foreign language notebook visually appealing will help you out even more. You can use things like headings, diagrams, stickers, borders, boxes and more to help you organize your information and present it clearly.
notebook - Translation to Spanish, pronunciation, and forum discussions. ... notebook n (book: to write notes in) cuaderno nm : Rachel bought a few notebooks for her classes. ... assignment notebook binder, notebook, 3-ring binder briefcase or notebook case college-ruled notebook
Many translated example sentences containing "please check your child's assignment notebook" - Spanish-English dictionary and search engine for Spanish translations. Look up in Linguee; Suggest as a translation of "please check your child's assignment notebook" ... *Have your child use an assignment notebook so he/she knows what homework is ...
Translate Assignment notebooks. See Spanish-English translations with audio pronunciations, examples, and word-by-word explanations. Learn Spanish. Translation. ... SpanishDictionary.com is the world's most popular Spanish-English dictionary, translation, and learning website. Ver en español en inglés.com.
Students are responsible for keeping an Assignment Notebook /Daily Practice Log, as well as being prepared for each lesson (i.e. pencil, sheet music, instrument, etc.). Los estudiantes son responsables de guardar un registro de la práctica de la Asignación Cuaderno /Registro Diario De la Práctica, tan bien como siendo preparado para cada ...
NOTEBOOK translate: cuaderno, ordenador portátil, cuaderno [masculine, singular], portátil [masculine, singular…. Learn more in the Cambridge English-Spanish ...
Many translated example sentences containing "notebook" - Spanish-English dictionary and search engine for Spanish translations. Look up in Linguee; Suggest as a translation of "notebook" ... These notebooks are equipped with a customized biometric fingerprint security application that limits accessibility to the data on the notebook to the ...
Spanish Translation of "ASSIGNMENT" | The official Collins English-Spanish Dictionary online. Over 100,000 Spanish translations of English words and phrases. TRANSLATOR
1. (allocation) a. la asignación. (F) The manager is in charge of making the project assignments.El director está a cargo de la asignación de los proyectos. 2. (task) a. la tarea. (F) We have gathered the data we needed for the school assignment. Hemos reunido los datos que necesitábamos para la tarea del colegio.
tarea f (plural: tareas f) I still have not finished the assignment. Todavía no he acabado la tarea. I asked the teacher to explain the assignment further. Le pedí al profesor que explicase más la tarea. less common: cesión f. ·. función f.
your notebook. tu cuaderno. Dad brought a notebook for us. Dad brought us a notebook. Papá trajo una libreta a nosotros. Papá nos trajo una libreta. You were writing in the notebook. Tú escribías en el cuaderno. He will present you the notebook to sign.