Do you ever feel like Open House is too short to really explain what happens in your classroom? At my school, I only get seven to eight minutes with parents. That’s barely enough time to breathe, let alone go over late work policies, make-up work, or rules.
But here’s the truth:
Parents won’t remember all of that. They’re visiting seven or eight classes in one night, collecting papers, hearing different rules, and leaving overwhelmed. Most of those handouts end up in the trash.
So instead of filling my time with policies, I use Open House as a chance to:
- Build trust with parents
- Spark curiosity about what we do in class
- Leave them confident that their children can succeed
And it works. I haven’t had to hold a parent conference in years, because Open House sets the tone for a partnership.
What I Skip at Open House
I don’t spend time on:
- Rules
- Late work
- Make-up work
- Remediation policies
All of that is already in the syllabus. I just tell parents where they can find it and move on. That gives me space to focus on what really matters.
What I Focus On
The first thing I share is why my class is different.
I tell parents that my main goal is for students to acquire the language and develop proficiency. That means we spend our time listening to and reading Spanish that students can understand. And yes, that means my class is mostly in Spanish—even for students in Spanish 1!
Of course, parents look surprised when I say that. So I give them proof.
The Mini-Lab Demonstration
Here’s the most powerful part of my Open House: a tiny demo in Spanish.
I use just three words from my posters:
- me gusta (I like)
- pero (but)
- porque (because)
Then I say the following while pointing to those key words on my wall, gesturing the other words and talking very slow:
👉 Me gusta el café.
👉 Me gusta mucho el café. (big gestures!)
👉 Pero no me gusta Starbucks.
👉 ¿Por qué? Porque Starbucks es mucho dinero. (gesture for money, parents laugh!)
And then I stop and ask: “How did you understand me?”
They say: “You pointed, you gestured, you made it clear.”
That’s my moment. I tell them: “Exactly! All it takes is attention.”
Why Attention Matters Most
I explain that in my class, attention is the number one asset.
If students listen with intention, follow gestures, and stay engaged, they will understand. If they get distracted, they’ll miss it, feel frustrated, and fall behind. That’s why I have a strict cell phone policy—not because I dislike phones, but because attention is a must.
Parents nod. They get it. And more importantly, they leave trusting that what I’m doing in class has purpose.
Helping Students Succeed
After the demo, I remind parents:
- This class requires being present and being active.
- Missing class is harder to “make up” than other subjects
- Risk-taking (playing the “game” of Spanish) leads to more fun and more growth.
For upper levels, I share resources like podcasts for learners, my classroom library, and daily readings students can revisit at home.
Why This Approach Works
By the end of Open House, parents walk away thinking:
- “My child really can learn Spanish in this class.”
- “This teacher knows what she’s doing.”
- “I want to support this process.”
That’s what I want. Not more handouts. Not more rules. Trust. Curiosity. Confidence.
And year after year, this approach has given me exactly that.
Connect With These Related Episodes
If you found this helpful, you may also enjoy these podcast episodes:
- 🎙️ Why Teaching About Second Language Acquisition Matters — how I explain SLA and proficiency to students at the start of the year.
- 🎙️ Conference in the Cloud Takeaways with Annabelle Williamson and Elisa McLean — including a reflection on how much target language we can use when routines are in place.
- 🎙️ How to Boost Target Language Use with Routines, Play, and Student Connections — practical strategies you can implement tomorrow.
Your Next Open House
So if you’re getting ready for Open House, here’s my encouragement:
- Skip the long rule list.
- Focus on what makes your class unique.
- Show—not just tell—how students succeed.
- Build trust by being authentic.
At the end of the day, Open House isn’t about the syllabus. It’s about making parents your partners.
✨ If you’re an Academy member, you’ll find my Open House slides inside the Creciendo Curriculum, Para Empezar Module. Not a member yet? You can learn more about the Spanish Teacher Academy here.