Working with English Learners

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Cognitive Academic Language Learning Approach
Advertisements

Purpose : To create a fail-safe system of literacy so that all students have equal access to a standards based curriculum Result: Joyful, independent readers,
Purpose : To create a failsafe system of literacy so that all students have equal access to a standards based curriculum Result: Joyful, independent readers,
Collaborative Strategic Reading: A Model for Content Area Reading October 20, 2010Richmond Public Schools Alethia Elam Stephanie Hooks Dawn James-Cappiello.
Teaching English Reading in a Bilingual Classroom.
E-portfolio in TaskStream (DRF) Signature Assignments Signature Assignments Classroom Community (1 st & 2 nd semesters) Classroom Community (1 st & 2 nd.
The CALLA Model in Curriculum Design
Continuing dominance of “language of instruction” debate.
Section VI: Comprehension Teaching Reading Sourcebook 2 nd edition.
GETTING TO KNOW YOUR ENGLISH LANGUAGE LEARNERS (ELLs)
Directed Reading Lesson The Teacher’s Role in a Directed Reading Lesson Presented by: Elise Pitts Special Services Teacher Alabama State Department of.
Stages of Second Language Acquisition
Teaching Reading and Writing to English Language Learners CEDEI Dr. Kathleen McInerney.
©2003 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Longman Publishers. Study Skills Topic 6 Learning Styles & Teaching Styles PowerPoint by JoAnn Yaworski.
By Anna Strole. Research RAND: Reading Study Group Report on reading comprehension Shows that there are 3 domains to comprehension: Instruction Teacher.
Standards for Education and Rehabilitation of Students who are Blind and Visually Impaired A general overview of accepted standards for Teachers of the.
ELL Students What do they need?.
Dr E. Lugo Morales1 6/28/2012. Develop academic vocabulary Read to acquire new information Understand information presented orally Participate in classroom.
Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part I : Scaffolding oral language development Rebecca Curinga, PD Coordinator Aika Swai, Program Coordinator.
Becoming an Effective Teacher of Reading
Collaborative Strategic Reading: A Model for Content Area Reading
The ELPS—English Language Proficiency Standards
SIOP Overview Shelter Instruction Observation Protocol
Lesson Plan Cycle. Six Elements in Planning the Delivery of an Effective Lesson 1.Generates students’ language through active student participation 2.Comprehensible.
Practical Ideas On Alternative Assessment For ESL Students Jo-Ellen Tannenbaum, Montgomery County Public Schools (MD)
Characteristics of Sheltered Instruction  Warm, affective environment  High levels of student interaction, including small- group and cooperative learning.
The CALLA Handbook – Chapter 2 The Content-Based Curriculum in CALLA Dr. Ellen de Kanter University of St. Thomas Instructional Strategies for the Content.
Teaching English Language Learners in the Content Areas.
Competent Teachers - Competent Students A Model for Designing Daily Literacy Lessons.
Reading Often in Every Class Using Before-During-After Reading Strategies.
Module 8 Teaching English Learners
ESL, Now What? ESL Teaching Simple and Effective Practices Georgia Arruda PP110 Lincoln County Department of Education September 13, 2010
RtI Response to Insanity By Kristi Van Hoveln
1 Supporting Teachers of English Learners Boston After School & Beyond Site Manager Summer Institute Sarah Ottow, ELL Consultant Center for Collaborative.
Hannah Love LSIS 5645 Core Assessment IV. Why is information literacy necessary?  To fulfill the goals of education by preparing students for The workplace.
This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: any public performance or display, including.
Sheltered Instruction: Making Content Comprehensible for ELLs London Middle School April 18, 2008.
Aspire: Professional Development for Bilingual and ELL Paraprofessionals DAVID IRWIN LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT OPPORTUNITIES LLC.
Culturally Responsive Teaching in Diverse Classrooms By Kenny and Maria CHAPTER 3.
Chapter # 9 Content Reading & Writing
 This article involved effective strategies for early childhood teachers to use with children who are English Language Learners.  10 teachers from two.
+ Interactive Guided Reading
TEACHING WITH A FOCUS ON LEARNERS One model of Differentiation: Sousa and Tomlinson (2011) Differentiation and The Brain. Purpose: Understanding Text Complexity.
RECIPROCAL TEACHING: IN AN ESL CLASSROOM Melissa Dye EDBE /11/2014.
4. ( min.) Introduce Vocabulary – T.E. Pgs. _____________ Read the word alone, then whole class reads the word Read aloud, “What Does It Mean?” (Back.
ED 557 August 6, The brain seeks patterns, connections, & relationships between & among prior & new learning. (Gregory & Chatman,2001) The ability.
SIOPSIOP #8: Review and Assessment. Assessment & Review Content Select techniques for reviewing key content concepts Incorporate a variety of assessment.
1 Planning the Unit in OCR District E Literacy Coach Professional Development.
Collaboration & Integrated Content-Based Instruction.
1 Instructing the English Language Learner (ELL) in the Regular Classroom.
Pedagogy As it relates to the field of linguistics.
EL Program in a Nutshell EL Program Flow Chart.
The Reading and Writing Processes (Reading)
SIOP Review Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol.
Differentiation Presented by Redwood Teachers. Differentiation in a Nutshell Differentiated Instruction is multiple ways to structure a lesson so that.
Supporting Literacy for Students with Developmental Disabilities Being a Literacy Partner.
An Overview of Making Standards Work Developed by: Jane Cook EASTCONN Staff Dev/Literacy & Ed Tech Specialist Adapted from materials from The Leadership.
Guided Language Acquisition Design (GLAD)
ESOL Best Strategies and Practices for Adult Learners
Sheltered English Instruction
Stematic instru Content instruction Grade level appropriate Tied to the content standards and Frameworks Context embedded and cognitively demanding.
Comprehension: Before Reading Strategies
Creating an Active Learning environment
The English Language Learners: How to Serve our Diverse Students
Performance Indicator I:
Supporting ELL Students in Math, Social Studies, and Science
Section VI: Comprehension
Multi-Tiered Systems of Support
Presented by: Jenni DelVecchio, Renee Mathis, and Kevin Powell
Working with English Learners
Presentation transcript:

Working with English Learners

-English learners should have daily English language development lessons -Books in both the home language and English should be available on a daily basis. (use a checkout system, as a reward…)

Taken from: Bennett, C. (2011). Comprehensive Multicultural Education: Theory and Practice. Boston, Mass. Pearson Peregoy, S. and Boyle, O. (2013). Reading, Writing and Learning in ESL. (8 th ed.). Boston, Mass. Pearson

Eight Characteristics of Teachers who have attained high level of racial and cultural competence

-Are very comfortable with students -Engage students all the time -Have a personal positive connection with each student

-Have very high expectations for each student and follow through with them -Accept total responsibility for any students lack of success (persistence pays off) -Have a strong positive relationship with all the parents

- Constantly reflect on their practice & include others in the assessment of their practice - Develop and use culturally relevant lessons on a regular basis

Principles of Culturally Relevant Teaching

-Students must experience academic success, including literacy, numeracy, and the technological, social and political skills they need to be active participants in a democracy. Self esteem accompanies genuine academic success. What does this mean?

-Students must develop and/or maintain cultural competence, and the students home culture becomes a vehicle for learning. What does this include?

-Students must develop a “critical conciousness” through which they may challenge social injustice. What might this look like?

Examples of Culturally Relevant Teaching

An emphasis on cooperation and collaboration in the classroom -Encouraging students to rely on and support each other -Including students’ real life experiences in the curriculum

-Allowing students to ask their own questions and search for their own answers -Encourage students to lead discussions & other class activities

Working with English Learners

PREREADING -Build background knowledge -Motivating the learner -Setting purpose

- Some pre-reading strategies -Overview (preview of topic) -films -pictures -preview in L1

During Reading - Reading with a purpose -Monitoring comprehension -Engaging background knowledge

During Reading Strategies - Learning logs -Asking questions -Using headings/sub-headings -Answering questions

-Postreading -Organizing & remembering information -Using information

-Post-reading strategies -Artwork -Summarizing -Publishing/dictation -Reporting -Making a film

Other helpful strategies for ELs

- Before a lesson Review the concept -in the home language (L1) if possible -provide a book, film, youtube or information sheet (search google…)

Before a lesson cont… Teach key vocabulary

During the lesson -Use visuals, gestures, pair/share -Assign a bilingual buddy to EL -Repeat & define key vocabulary

-During the lesson cont… -create a graphic organizer, writing or using pics of major concepts Examples: venn diagrams, clusters comic strips, charts, … - ask questions that are comprehensible for Els (watch sequence of questions, ask questions that require one-word answers…)

During the lesson cont… Review the major concepts at the end of the lesson. – encourage students to add a sentence using the vocabulary to their vocabulary journal

After the lesson -Modify the task for Els based on their English fluency Ex: instead of a paragraph, a sentence, or a pic and dication