Dr. Karen Terrell University of Massachusetts Dartmouth May 28, 2019

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Creating CCSS Literacy Lessons in Science
Advertisements

How to Adapt Assignments and Assessments for English Language Learners
SHAMEICHA WADE-CURRICULUM SPECIALIST TEACHING VOCABULARY.
The Language of Math November 3, Second Check-In  My name is ___ & I am (role).  I am feeling _______ today because ____.  The biggest challenge.
Characteristics  Difficulty identifying words and their meanings  Difficulty extending the meaning of words (association)  Limited vocabulary  Difficulty.
ACT Close and Critical Reading Using ACT Content Passages Macomb Intermediate School District September 15 th, 2010.
Building Background F9: Vocabulary Bell Work: Write 3 strategies you can use in the classroom to help students link past learning with new concepts Opening.
Stages of Second Language Acquisition
Say it, learn it, own it! Increasing student understanding through engaging conversations.
Strategy Toolbox By: Danelle Keninger.
A Conversation Across the Disciplines to Integrate Literacy into Middle & Secondary Classrooms Drs. Pixita del Hill Prado, Ellen Friedland, & Jevon Hunter.
Welcome to Unit 6 Seminar: Learning The Language Learning and Assessment Strategies 1.
Comprehensible Input. Appropriate Speech Rate and enunciation o How the teacher speaks Complexity of speech o What the teacher says Vocabulary Enunciation.
Sarah Peterson Amy von Barnes Making “I Can” Statements Easy Supporting Learners – Week 2.
Sarah Peterson Amy von Barnes Making “I Can” Statements Easy Supporting Learners – Week 3.
Sheltered Instruction Part III of III Presented by Office of English Language Learners
Vocabulary: The Levels of Knowing A Word EDC 448: Dr. Julie Coiro.
SIOP: Component 2 Building Background: F9 Vocabulary Welcome Opening Prayer Sharing of Observations.
MATH COMMUNICATIONS Created for the Georgia – Alabama District By: Diane M. Cease-Harper, Ed.D 2014.
Technology Integration Lesson Planning
Reading Strategies To Improve Comprehension Empowering Gifted Children.
MISD Bilingual/ESL Department
What Can My ELLs Do? Grade Level Cluster 3-5 A Quick Reference Guide for Planning Instructional Tasks for English Language Learners.
RtI Response to Insanity By Kristi Van Hoveln
How to Teach English Language Learners Tips and Strategies
Integrating Language Development in the Content Areas Kris Nicholls, Ph.D. Director, CABE Professional Development Services.
Common Core Shifts Ka`a`awa Elementary School February 3, 2014.
DIFFERENT STROKES WAYS TO DIFFERENTIATE IN THE CLASSROOM.
WELCOME Science For English Language Learners. Training Objectives  Discover teaching strategies that meet the needs of ELL students in science  Explore.
Kingsley Area Schools Seven Literacy Strategies that Work Courtesy of Pam Ciganick, TBAISD
ED 340 SIOP Welcome Opening Prayer. Course Goal – The goal of this class is to prepare teachers to teach content effectively to English learners while.
By: Amanda Joyce.  This article is about how to incorporate literacy into Science and Math classes. This author gave examples of how you are able to.
Yakima School District English Language Learners What, Why, and How
Using the Language Companion as a Classroom Tool
Mrs. Keser’s 6th Grade GATE Math and Science
Academic Conversations
Reading Strategies for Students
Today’s Materials Needed
Interaction SIOP Chapter 6.
Reading Comprehension Strategies Across the Content Areas
Supporting English Language Learners in the Elementary Classroom
Warm Up - Sponge Activity Work as a team to put the parts of the Madeline Hunter Lesson Plan in the correct sequence. 5 minutes Objective: After reviewing.
Curriculum Power Session
Monday, October 17, 2016 Today you will need: Pencil Novel.
Reading Comprehension Strategies for ELLs
Literacy Practice: Promoting Content Area Reading
Writing in Math: Digging Deeper into Short Constructed Responses
Differentiation.
Teaching Proficiency Through Reading Stories
Welcome Opening Prayer
Effective Planning – with the End in Mind - Teaching to the Standards
Differentiation Strategies for Multi-Grade, And Multi-Ability Classrooms By: Linda Miller Baker.
By Jacqueline McCann Middle GA RESA
Improving inference and comprehension skills
The Art and Science of Teaching
Performance Indicator I:
Engage Cobb Conference
ACT Close and Critical Reading Using ACT Content Passages
Connecticut Core Standards for Mathematics
What is the knowledge of words and word meanings called? A.) Comprehension B.) Decoding C.) Vocabulary C.) Vocabulary D.) Inferences L F.
Quality Plus Teaching Strategies
Curriculum Updates Spanish and French
Texas Teacher Evaluation and Support System (T-TESS)
Helping English Learners Be Successful!
Improving inference and comprehension skills
Pedagogical Content Knowledge
Working with English Learners
CLIL (Content and Language Integrated Learning) Model CLIL lesson 12 February 2018 Explain about CLIL. Teaching History in English is more than just.
Nevada Educator Performance Teacher Framework
Learning objective and success criteria.
Presentation transcript:

Dr. Karen Terrell University of Massachusetts Dartmouth May 28, 2019 Many Languages, Many Ideas, Many Approaches: Strategies for Teaching Science in Bilingual Classrooms Dr. Karen Terrell University of Massachusetts Dartmouth May 28, 2019

Agenda About me Our goals Key Vocabulary Comprehensible input summary

A little about me…

A little about me… EDU 518, Week 1

Our goals Learn strategies for teaching science and mathematics to English Language Learners and in bilingual classrooms.  Interact with Dr. Terrell and other participants in discussions about bilingual STEM instruction Discover ways to apply new instructional and assessment approaches in their classrooms. 

Key Vocabulary After identifying the content to teach, we need to determine the vocabulary that may be involved Tier 1: words of everyday speech, usually 1-2 syllables Tier 2: general academic words, typically multiple syllables or a word cluster, often overlooked but critical, often have multiple meanings Tier 3: domain-specific words  all students enrolled in this class will have to learn these terms Beck et al

Key Vocabulary After identifying the content to teach, we need to determine the vocabulary that may be involved Tier 1: words of everyday speech, usually 1-2 syllables Tier 2: general academic words, typically multiple syllables or a word cluster, often overlooked but critical, often have multiple meanings Tier 3: domain-specific words  all students enrolled in this class will have to learn these terms Beck et al

What Tier 2 and Tier 3 terms do you see? Key Vocabulary Read this excerpt: “Not all of the light from the Sun makes it to the surface of the Earth. Even the light that does make it here is reflected and spread out. The little light that does make it here is enough for the plants of the world to survive and go through the process of photosynthesis. Light is actually energy, electromagnetic energy to be exact. When that energy gets to a green plant, all sorts of reactions can take place to store energy in the form of sugar molecules.”  http://www.biology4kids.com/files/plants_photosynthesis.html Note the idioms here, too!!!  “makes it”, “:all sorts” What Tier 2 and Tier 3 terms do you see?

Key Vocabulary What are some ways to provide vocabulary instruction? Brainstorm and discussion  Concept map

Key Vocabulary What are some ways to provide vocabulary instruction? Comparison  Venn Diagram

Key Vocabulary What are some ways to provide vocabulary instruction? Investigation  Frayer Model

Key Vocabulary What are some ways to provide vocabulary instruction? Investigation  Frayer Model

Key Vocabulary: Your TURN Consider an upcoming lesson or one you would like to enhance next school year: What key vocabulary would you like to highlight? Determine a use for the Concept Map, Venn Diagram, or the Frayer Model in your vocabulary instruction Share out!!! 10 minute pause

Key Vocabulary There’s more strategies out there, of course!!! Concept Circles: Choose common attributes or relationships among a number of terms. Draw a circle divided into sections (3-6) and put a term into each section, all of which have related in some way or all but one are related. Can also leave a section blank for students to add in their own example or a non- example. Direct students to identify the common attributes, name the relationship that exists among the terms in the circle, or to explain why the one term does not belong in the circle.

Key Vocabulary There’s more strategies out there, of course!!! Concept Circles: Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants Chloroplast Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants ______ Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants Digestion

Key Vocabulary Now you try it! There’s more strategies out there, of course!!! Concept Circles: Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants Chloroplast Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants ______ Sun Energy Concept: __________ Plants Digestion

Key Vocabulary Word Sort: Helps students recognize the semantic relationships among key concepts Helps students develop a deeper understanding of key concepts, and also are an excellent method of teaching the complex reasoning skills of classification and deduction Students are asked to sort vocabulary terms into different categories and explain their choices. The strategy can be used in two different ways: “Closed sort” = the teacher provides the categories into which students are to assign words “Open sort” = students group words into categories and identify their own labels for each category Have teachers do one

Key Vocabulary Now you try it! Word Sort: acceleration displacement force free fall inertia kinetic energy kinetic friction mechanical energy momentum motion potential energy power projectile motion speed static friction terminal velocity velocity work Have teachers do one physics Need post-its if possible

Key vocabulary Word Splash: Content vocabulary is arranged randomly on a board, chart, or paper. Students are asked to use the words in a sentence, paragraph drawing or diagram. Can be open or closed Have teachers use words from Word Sort as their splash to write as many sentences as possible in 5 minutes.

Comprehensible input Term coined by Stephen Krashen (1981) Making adjustments to speech so that the message to the student is understandable GOAL: Provide ACCESS to language for all students Multiple methods: Visuals Gestures Modifying speech (e.g., slow down, wait time, clear explanations, etc.) Modeling

Comprehensible input Comprehension Strategies 3 Read: Have students read a problem 3 times in order to make sense of it. Context Question Information Distribute handouts and start tech/engineering problem

Comprehensible input Comprehension Strategies 3 Read: Have students read a problem 3 times in order to make sense of it. From 2015 HS Tech/Eng MCAS Answer: A

Comprehensible input Comprehension Strategies 3 Read: Have students read a problem 3 times in order to make sense of it. From 2015 HS Tech/Eng MCAS Answer: A

Comprehensible input Comprehension Strategies With which statements do you agree? Elementary Science example (p.105)

Comprehensible input Comprehension Strategies Anticipation Guides Identify major concepts you want students to learn Create 4-6 statements that support or challenge students’ beliefs and experiences about the topic. Share the guide with the students. Discuss the statements with the class. Have students read the text or receive direct instruction. Reshare the guide with the students. Have a discussion with students about what they learned. Split table group to develop anticipation guides Then administer to the opposite group

Comprehensible input Now you try it! Comprehension Strategies Anticipation Guides Identify major concepts you want students to learn Create 4-6 statements that support or challenge students’ beliefs and experiences about the topic. Share the guide with the students. Discuss the statements with the class. Have students read the text or receive direct instruction. Reshare the guide with the students. Have a discussion with students about what they learned. Split table group to develop anticipation guides Then administer to the opposite group

Summary Complete this sentence: “I plan to use the ________________ strategy in my future instruction, because ______________.”

Thank you for your time!!! Dr. Karen terrell kterrell@umassd.edu