Yabla uses authentic content and a unique video player to improve students' listening comprehension, vocabulary, and spelling.
Every student has their own login, and teachers can assign activities, set goals, and monitor student performance.
Yabla uses authentic content and a unique video player to improve students' listening comprehension, vocabulary, and spelling.
Every student has their own login, and teachers can assign activities, set goals, and monitor student performance.
Yabla partners with the world's best commercial, public, and independent broadcasters. Music videos coming from the likes of Sony Latino, Sony France, Universal Latino and Universal Europe drive student interest in the living language through contemporary, meaningful culture.
Documentaries and news from passionate independent producers and networks such as Tv Peru, Gallovision and France2 draw students into the greater world of science, technology, ecology, economy, and history. Exclusive interviews and travel videos will bring them into contact with musicians, chefs, scientists, students, doctors, and other real people representing a great variety of accents, regions, and social classes.
Try a Yabla VideoWith a school account, your students can quickly and easily sign themselves up, choosing their own username and password, at their (or your) convenience. You can also directly add and/or delete users at any time, using your allocated slots as needed. For example, you are welcome to give access to one set of students one semester and switch to another set of students the following semester. Students will be able to log in and access Yabla video language immersion at any time from any location.
You can assign videos based activities to your students as homework or lab assignments. Students complete assignments by playing the games and earning points. As students complete the assignments, you can monitor their progress in a gradebook and a detailed activity report. This helps to ensure that students are actively engaged in the videos.
Watch a video and use the "games" button to try the available activities.
Beginner or advanced, middle school or Ivy League, learners at all levels benefit from actively listening to native speakers. Current subscribers include top academic institutions such as the University of Michigan and Brown University, as well as public and preparatory schools at the secondary and middle-school levels.
L'Italiano (The Italian) was recorded by Toto Cutugno in 1983 and presented at the 33rd Sanremo Festival, where it didn't win. That didn't stop it from becoming a top hit and one of Italy's...
Giuliano talks about why this year he chose to go to a lake for his vacation.
Adriano and his mother show us how to make this Sicilian summer specialty. It's easy to make, but there is one important secret.
Marika talks about going to the movies in Italy. Don't worry. Italians like popcorn, too.
Gestures are part of body language, and we all know that Italians are particularly famous for communicating with their hands. Arianna shows us how to "speak" Italian without words.
A young man is departing by train and says goodbye to his two parents in different ways. In another scene, a little girl is going to school very reluctantly and her brother has to practically drag...