News and Updates
NEW:
Changes and updates for 2025
Arrival at Kingwood High School
Lunch options
Teacher-to-teacher tips
Tips for Pair Discussion
Houstonfest Scholarships
Scholarships at State
NEW:
Houstonfest history
Contest
promo video #1 (students from one school tell why they
love contest)
Contest promo
video #2 (one student tells why she loves contest)
Contest promo
video #3
(hilarious 2024 State-winning submission from our own Klein Oak High School!)
State promo video contest
Photo gallery
Daily log of changes to
State-qualifier list
Important Dates
on a rolling basis but no later than Wed., Apr. 30, 2025 for payment
during the 2024-2025 school year: submit
Gail Cope Teacher Grant applications.
Mon. Jan. 13, 2025, 4:00 p.m.: Application for
transportation grants from the Houston Saengerbund opens (IF THEY ARE OFFERED AT
ALL; if so, teachers will be sent a
link to a Google Form).
Tue., Jan. 21, 2025, 11:59
p.m.: Houstonfest registration
spreadsheet due for regular price of $12/student (payment does not have
to be mailed until 1/27).
Mon., Jan. 27, 2025, 11:59
p.m.: Houstonfest registration spreadsheet
due
for late price of $15/student. Deadline to postmark Houstonfest payment.
Sat., Feb. 1, 2025, 9:00 a.m.: Submission of entries in the 7 virtual Houstonfest events due (get link to
Google Form from your teacher).
Tue., Feb. 4, 2025, 11:59 p.m.: Remote
judging of the 7 virtual Houstonfest events ends.
Wed., Feb. 5, 2025, 10:00 p.m.: Houstonfest changes (adds,
drops, substitutions) due. After this point, no more changes will be allowed.
Sat., Feb. 8, 2025:
Houstonfest,
Kingwood High School, Houston.
Fri., Feb. 14, 2025, 11:59 p.m.: State
online registration due for "early bird" price of $12/student (payment does not
have to be mailed until 2/19).
Wed., Feb. 19, 2025, 11:59 p.m.: State
online registration due
for
regular price of
$15/student. Deadline to postmark your State payment.
Sat., Feb. 22, 2025, 9:00 a.m.: Submission of entries in the 7 virtual State events due (get
the link to a
Google Form from your teacher). Also,
Mary El-Beheri Memorial Scholarship and Sandra Dieckman GTHS Memorial
Scholarship
applications due (to submit the application, get the link to a Google
Form from your teacher).
Mon., Feb. 24, 2025, 8:00 p.m.:
Entries in
State promotional video
contest
due to State director.
Tue., Feb. 25, 2025, 11:59 p.m.: Remote
judging of the 7 virtual State events ends.
Sat., Mar. 1, 2025:
Texas State German Contest, Texas State
University, San Marcos.
Sat., Mar. 8, 2025, 11:59 p.m.: Houstonfest Scholarship applications due.
Sun., Mar. 16, 2025: Gail Cope
State Scholarship applications due.
|
Tips for Pair
Discussion
First, the official rules:
Entry
Limit: 2
entries (pairs) per school (Level 3 only).
Discussion time:
3 minutes (not
including a 30-second reflection time).
A pair of contestants draws a topic instructing them to plan something (trip,
purchase, celebration, etc.). Both are expected to make suggestions and voice
opinions, to agree or disagree, and to make alternative suggestions. At the end
of the discussion, they must come to an agreement.
The topics will pertain to the
daily life of teenagers. No contestant pairs will have the same topic. From
the time the topic is drawn, the contestants may take up to 30 seconds to read
the topic and gather their thoughts, but they may not speak to each other
during this time. At the end of the 30 seconds, the contestants have 3
minutes to role-play the situation. The two team members will be scored
independently of one another, but both scores will be added together to obtain
the team score, i.e., contestants
will be ranked
and potentially advance to State
as a team.
Download critique sheet.
Now, some tips to the
contestants:
-
Make good use of the
30-second reflection time to brainstorm ideas, but remember that you can't
consult with your partner during this time. The time is meant purely
for you to read the prompt and gather your own thoughts.
-
Start the conversation by
taking a few seconds to establish the scenario from the prompt card rather
than launching immediately into debating the solution. Although the
judges will know what is on your prompt card, it will create a more natural
conversational flow if you restate the situation (in your own words) and
THEN start exchanging ideas. For instance, if the prompt tells you to
discuss ideas for a wedding gift...
Good beginning:
A: Hey, Thomas and
Wiebke are getting married next weekend. Are you invited?
B: Yes, I am, and I
haven't bought them a gift yet. Do you have any ideas?
A: I haven't bought
them anything, either. Maybe some nice towels?
Bad beginning:
A: Towels would be
nice.
B: Or a lamp for their
living room.
In the first example, the
contestants have begun the conversation in the way that such a conversation
would start in the real world. In the second example, there is no
context; it's as if we've been plopped into the middle of the conversation
and we don't know what it's about.
-
Be assured that the prompts
are realistic situations that teenagers would encounter in daily life. You will not be asked to pretend that you are someone you aren't, such as a
doctor or a police officer. Both contestants will be "playing"
teenagers.
-
Don't panic if the
conversation starts off slowly. Just keep plugging away, and in most
cases, the words will start coming faster as you get deeper into the 3
minutes.
-
The judges will give you a
signal when there are 30 seconds left. At this point, wrap up the
conversation, perhaps restating some of the things you have agreed on.
Finally, some video samples:
In
Sample 1, Sindhu and Danita of
Clements High School
are playing out this scenario (which is NOT one of the prompts that will
be in the deck at contest): "Your friend Lothar in Germany is working on a
project about Texas in his English class. He asks you why -- if at all --
someone should visit Houston. Discuss what advice to give him."
In
Sample 2, Sindhu and Danita are playing this scenario (which is
also NOT one of the 30
prompts in the deck of prompt cards): "It has been a tradition in your
German class to celebrate Nikolaustag on December 6. The principal
of your school suggests that you end this tradition because it has a Christian
origin. Discuss counterarguments."
In
Sample 3, Dakota and Alex of
the Westchester Academy of International Studies are discussing the same prompt
from Sample 1 (Lothar wanting to know what's interesting about Houston).
Thanks to their teacher Jürgen Müller for making the recording and for writing
the two sample prompts. |
When is the next Houstonfest?
Saturday,
February 8, 2025 Where
is Houstonfest?
Kingwood High School
2701 Kingwood Dr.
Kingwood, TX 77339
(new location in 2025!)
Link to Texas State German Contest
Texas
State German Contest on Facebook
Texas
State German Contest 40th Anniversary Facebook Group |