One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol
Advertisements

Sorting Activity Instructions Inside your white envelope is a set of cards. Sort the cards into three piles using the following categories: objectives.
Assessment Photo Album
SIOP Lesson Planning for Science
Reading at Auriol.
101.  Take a look at this code and tell me what generation of programming language is used here. It is important that you can EXPLAIN how you came up.
Learning Targets. OUR Targets I can articulate the difference between a ‘standard’ and a ‘target.’ I can deconstruct standards and evaluate my work for.
1.We will begin by asking you to reflect on a question. 1.We will turn on some music and you will walk around the room, pondering your answer to the question.
1 © 2013 UNIVERSITY OF PITTSBURGH 1 Using the content-focused Coaching® Model to Support Early childhood Literacy and Language Development How to Teach.
Learning Styles Maximizing the Way We Learn. Agenda Today you will… –Find out what type of learner you are –Discover strategies that work best for your.
Key Ideas and Details Ask and answer questions to demonstrate understanding, referring to the text as the basis for the answers. Integration of knowledge.
Checking For Understanding
Breakfast PL April, Teacher read-alouds are planned oral readings of a range of texts. They are a vital part of daily literacy instruction in all.
Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol
Creative Teaching Workshop. My Address
The Cultural Contexts of Teaching and Learning Stuart Greene Associate Professor of English Director of Education, Schooling, and Society Co-founder of.
WORSER BAY SCHOOL: CHILDREN AS WRITERS: A PRESENTATION FOR PARENTS MURRAY GADD: 2015.
CONNECTING HOUGHTON MIFFLIN AND THE NEW COMMON CORE WRITING STANDARDS CONNECTING READING AND WRITING IN THE CLASSROOM.
Welcome Session Norms: All pagers and cell phones on vibrate Stay on topic being discussed Use professional courtesy.
Say it, learn it, own it! Increasing student understanding through engaging conversations.
Comprehension Strategy Routine Cards
Study Skills and Strategies. About Me Name:Mauricio Najarro College:Williams College SAT Score:2400 Has a rich and diverse teaching background, starting.
Chapter 1: Active Reading & Thinking Strategies
Model Performance Indicators.
General Considerations for Implementation
Academic Language Support for Limited English Proficient Students.
Ronniee-Marie Ruggiero Title III Access to Core Coach Stevenson Middle School Presenters : Xavier Contreras, Bertha Melendez, Frank Rodriguez Language.
Beyond the Basal: Reader’s Workshop February 17, 2011 …schools shouldn’t be about handing down a collection of static truths to the next generation but.
COMPONENT #6 PracticeandApplication SIOP. Review Homework 1. Share with the people at your table your plans for_______________. 2. The person staying.
ESSENTIAL QUESTION What does it look like and sound like when students use evidence to support their thinking?
New Teachers’ Induction January 20, 2011 Office of Curriculum and Instruction.
Teaching language means teaching the components of language Content (also called semantics) refers to the ideas or concepts being communicated. Form refers.
The Power of Formative Assessment to Advance Learning.
CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Common Core State Standards Professional Learning Module Series.
Beyond the Basal: Reader’s Workshop February 23, 2012 …schools shouldn’t be about handing down a collection of static truths to the next generation but.
Second Language and Curriculum Goals. Knowing how, when, and why to say what to whom. Successful Communication:
Final Project Presentation ETEC 550
LIU’s 2012 Summer Migrant Program. For the next two minutes, please fill in the chart on your handout with all of the items that come to mine when you.
Tutoring 101 Migrant Education Program. Deliberate in our planning Activities needs to be targeted to specific grade level skills Activities needs to.
MATH COMMUNICATIONS Created for the Georgia – Alabama District By: Diane M. Cease-Harper, Ed.D 2014.
What Can My ELLs Do? Grade Level Cluster 3-5 A Quick Reference Guide for Planning Instructional Tasks for English Language Learners.
What Can My ELLs Do? Grade Level Cluster K-2 A Quick Reference Guide for Planning Instructional Tasks for English Language Learners.
TOM TORLAKSON State Superintendent of Public Instruction CALIFORNIA DEPARTMENT OF EDUCATION Tom Torlakson, State Superintendent of Public Instruction Launching.
Sheltered Instruction: Making Content Comprehensible for ELLs London Middle School April 18, 2008.
SIOPComprehensibleInput. Review Homework You will have 3 minutes to complete this task. Use a colored marker, write/draw what you and your family like.
Integrating Language Development in the Content Areas Kris Nicholls, Ph.D. Director, CABE Professional Development Services.
Conducting an Interview Module 7 Level 1 Understanding Effective Communication.
Getting Them All Engaged: Inclusive Active Participation in Secondary Classes Adapted from Anita Archer workshop: Engaging and Effectively Instructing.
SIOPSIOP #8: Review and Assessment. Assessment & Review Content Select techniques for reviewing key content concepts Incorporate a variety of assessment.
Be prepared to defend your choice They help because…….. They do not help because…….. 12 Powerful Words 12 Powerful Words.
Copyright © 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Chapter 5 Using Comprehension Strategies to Guide Thinking Maureen McLaughlin This multimedia product and its.
Module 4 Unit 1. Lesson 1 Reading and Talking with Peers: A Carousel of Photos and Texts about…
SIOP Review Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol.
Second Language Acquisition and Theory Mrs. Julie Lucas M.A. Ed
Engaging All Students in Collaborative Discussions: Building comprehension of narrative and informational texts through listening and speaking Paul Boyd-Batstone,
Differentiated Instruction Using Language Objectives
Differentiating Disciples: Maximizing the Learning of All Students
Student- Centered Activities For the Secondary Classroom
WESTMERE SCHOOL: CHILDREN AS WRITERS: A PRESENTATION FOR PARENTS MURRAY GADD: 2017.
#8: Review and Assessment
COMPREHENSION Tool Kit K-3 1 1
SIOP Strategies SIOP Made Easy.
Facinghistory.org.
Q: I know my content objectives. How do I prepare language objectives
Mixed ability or different ways of understanding?
Title III Federal Programs Professional Development Series August 2018
FCE (FIRST CERTIFICATE IN ENGLISH) General information.
BULLYING PREVENTION When Is Close too Close ? Nicole George &
BAVERSTOCK OAKS SCHOOL: CHILDREN AS WRITERS: A PRESENTATION FOR PARENTS MURRAY GADD: 2018.
Active Learning Let’s get physical!.
Presentation transcript:

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

1. Move around the room until you hear the music stop. 2. Find a partner and share one word about the phrase or word. 3. You’ll have one minute each to share.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Content Objectives: Participants will identify the needs of Migrant Students. Participants will better understand the significance of cultural bias and poverty on students. Language Objectives: Participants will use effective speaking strategies. Participants will create a language objective. Participants will create graphic organizers for various tasks.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! How Proficient Collaborators Think and Act What Social Strategy Use Looks and Sounds Like

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Who are the diverse learners you work with? What are their lives and homes like?

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Let's take a closer look into the lives of some migrant children.take a closer look into the lives of some migrant children. 1.Educational Continuity 2.Instructional Time 3.School Engagement 4.English Language Development 5.Educational Support in the Home 6.Health 7.Access to Services

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! On an index card, write a definition of the word ‘culture’. In your table group, come up with a group definition of culture.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Pre-linguistic children not spoken to  Children speak only when spoken to  Volunteering answers = showing off  Different wait times  Different story telling styles  Different personal space boundaries

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Parents have limited school and ability to read and write and children have none  Parents can read and write in their first language but children have no school  Parents can read and write and children have been read to and written some  Parents and children can read and write in their first language

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Children raised in poverty are more likely to display:  “Acting-out” behaviors  Impatience and impulsivity  Gaps in politeness and social graces  A more limited range of behavioral responses  Less empathy for others’ misfortunes

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! The federal poverty level in 2012 for a family of four is $23,681. The average total family income for migrant farm workers ranges from $17,500 to $19,999.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

On a piece of paper, title a page: Observing an Orange Make and record your observations about an orange Size Shape Color Patterns Texture Weight Smell Taste …….. 2 minutesminutes

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Now take a look at the model of the orange. Cross off words on your list that you wouldn’t have come up with by just looking at the model. 1 Minutes

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

orange

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! I hear and I forget I see and I remember I do and I understand -Chinese Proverb

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Practice Lecture Reading Teaching Others Audio-Visual Demonstration Group Discussion

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Think of an English learner you have worked with recently and write down all of the reasons this student is not considered English proficient in class. The reasons you listed are your language objectives.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  What language will students need to know and use to accomplish this lesson’s content objectives?  How can I move my students’ English language knowledge forward in this lesson ?

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Your speech  Class discussion  Reading assignments  Writing tasks

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Students will be able to define the terms square, rectangle, rhombus, trapezoid, and parallelogram orally.  Students will be able to use adverbs of time in their lab report to describe their observations.  Students will be able to write comparative sentences about the two types of rocks.  Students will be able to present an oral report about one landform and its influence on economic development.  Let’s write a language objective!

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! On a post-it write down… Green – Something you have learned. Yellow – A question you have??? Red – What has prevented or stopped you from learning?

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Students, especially middle and high school age students, are trying to establish their own identity. Common way to do this is to rebel against authority. We want to choose language that steers our students away from disruptive thoughts. (We don’t want to give them opportunities to rebel against.)

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! I want you to go outside. Let’s go outside.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  You should…  I think you’d better…  You need to…

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  I want you to find your group and sit with them.  You should leave the room now.  You have one more minute.  I’m going to give you a choice.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Students must make several mental adjustments to answer this question. 1. They have been listening to information. 2. They have been processing the information. 3. Stop. Sort through material to see if they do have a question. 4. Must find the words to express their idea. 5. Must find the courage to speak publicly. This process takes time!

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Give students time to prepare their thoughts in a safe way.  Turn to one or two people near you and briefly discuss this. (WAIT – seconds).  What thoughts or questions do you have about this topic? What comments would you like to make? What areas, if any, might I clarify? (WAIT – seconds).  Please thank your partners for sharing. Face back toward me. Now, what questions or comments do you have?

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! What is the most important political issue facing the world today? Two assumptions are being made by this question. 1. There exists only a single correct response. 2. The teacher’s answer is the correct answer.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  What’s the best way to make a cake?  What are the rules to the game of Musical Chairs?

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Images are a prime influence on behavior. We want students to have an image in their minds that guides their behavior in the desired direction more effectively. Don’t spill your milk. Please be careful to keep the milk in the glass.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Watch these words: can’twon’tdon’t wouldn’tshouldn’tcouldn’t avoidstopnever Now you try!

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Give Specific feedback – general feedback has been shown to have no positive affect on student behavior. Positive Specific Praise NOT: Well done. I liked it! DO: Excellent presentation. I enjoyed your use of metaphor and the interaction you generated with the audience. Provide specific criticism NOT: That wasn’t the best you’ve done. DO: I felt that the visual aids were hard to see, and the presentation could have covered more details of the project.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! We need to clarify what we expect of students. Look at the difference between these two statements:  How many of you have been to Mexico?  Raise your hands if you have been to Mexico.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!  Did you find all that? Good, let’s continue.  If you have found the second paragraph on page 27, please nod your head.  If you have not yet completed the assignment, please raise your hand.  If you have completed the assignment, please raise your hand.  You Try!

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Graphic Organizers can be used to support teaching and learning in many areas. Cause and effect Note taking Comparing and contrasting Main ideas and themes Vocabulary Sequencing Problem and solution Describing and explaining

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Why Use a Graphic Organizer? 1.Students are considerably more likely to understand and remember the content. They can separate what is important to know from what is non-essential. 2.Because semantic information processing demands are reduced, the content can be addressed at a more sophisticated or complex level. 3.Students are more likely to become strategic learners.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Challenges Facing Migrant Education

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Box and T Chart Box: Illustrates the similarities between two species T-Chart: Defines the differences using a one to one correspondence between two species

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Using a Box and T chart, compare and contrast the following: Migrant students and non migrant students

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Content Objectives: Participants will identify the needs of Migrant Students. Participants will better understand the significance of cultural bias and poverty on students. Language Objectives: Participants will use effective speaking strategies. Participants will create a language objective. Participants will create graphic organizers for various tasks.

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123!

Allen, Richard Howell. Impact Teaching: Ideas and Strategies for Teachers to Maximize Student Learning. Boston: Allyn & Bacon, Print. “Could You Survive: Take the Quiz.” Ahaprocess, The Grand Rapids Press, 29 April Web. 16 Sept Echevarria, Jana, Mary Ellen Vogt and Deborah Short. Making Content Comprehensible for English Language Learners: The SIOP Model. Boston: Pearson Education, Print EdChange: Informing Ourselves Reforming Our Schools Transforming our World. Equity & Diversity. Web. 17 Sept Jensen, Eric. Teaching with Poverty in Mind. Alexandria: ASCD, Print. Mendler, Allen N. Connecting with Students. Alexandria: ASCD, Print. Ellis, Edwin. “Q&A: What’s the Big Deal with Graphic Organizers?” Web. 18 Nov

One Team…Helping all students realize their dreams and aspirations…We are ESD 123! Mary Kirby, Migrant Content Specialist