High-Leverage Teaching Practices in Foreign Language Education Lillian Forsman & Dr. Anne Cummings Hlas Department of Foreign Languages, University of.

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High-Leverage Teaching Practices in Foreign Language Education Lillian Forsman & Dr. Anne Cummings Hlas Department of Foreign Languages, University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire, 357 Hibbard Hall, Introduction What Participants Say about HLTP Implications of Research Acknowledgements: Background of Participants Future Research and Limitations How HLTP were used in the Classroom High-leverage teaching practices (HLTP) are a core set of teaching practices that, when executed proficiently by accomplished novice teachers, are said to promote higher gains in student learning over other teaching practices. In this project, we look at how teacher candidates execute high-leverage teaching practices in an early second language learning practicum. The purpose of this research is to identify various HLTP, find evidence of gains in student learning, and develop materials and assessments to teach and evaluate these practices and their use in Foreign Language Exploratory (FLEX) classrooms. What we did The participants involved in this study were UWEC students enrolled in Education Studies 437: Teaching Foreign Language in Grades 1-8. This methods course involved a seven-week practicum in teaching elementary community children. The students were all majors or minors in Spanish, French, or German education and were planning to teach or student teach using the language. Of the sixteen participants, one was male and fifteen were female. The participants were aged years old. One was a native speaker of Spanish. While we were observing the students in their FLEX classrooms, we kept a tally of how often each HLTP was used and had students report on their own use of HLTP in the classroom. Based on the data we collected from the classes we observed, we found that the practice used most frequently was making input comprehensible, followed by collecting ongoing assessments and then asking questions. The use of making input comprehensible was evident through the abundant use of props and visuals (e.g., fruit, photographs, etc.), gestures, and use of repetition, such as the rule of three (e.g., describing a word or concept three different ways). We also observed some evidence of ongoing assessments, such as the use of graphic organizers and collecting visual responses using indicators or a thumbs-up approach. The students often tried question sequencing as well, but not frequently, moving from basic yes/no questions to either/or to open-ended questions in order to encourage confidence and increase the number of student responses. “I have learned that there are many times in lessons that could benefit from HLTP that I haven’t been aware of before. I have also learned that as you teach, they become more and easier to incorporate into the lessons without having to plan them out.” -Participant #10 “Through the concepts of high-leverage teaching practices I was able to learn that it is completely different to know about HLTPs and to actually use them in the classroom. After our first personal assessment I was able to recognize certain parts of the HLTPs that came naturally to me and other parts that were really hard for me to implement. Overall, I learned that by pushing myself to actively use HLTPs the students I worked with more fully acquired the language and were involved in the class.” –Participant #7 “I feel that as a pre-service teacher I am beginning to understand how to make input comprehensible. I think the more I get to practice, the better that I will become.”—Participant #9 These quotations suggest that teacher education programs need to provide the necessary time to develop and practice competence in a few fundamental practices that are developmentally appropriate for beginning teachers. ES 437 students were taught about three specific HLTP: making input comprehensible, asking questions, and collecting ongoing assessments. The students rated themselves on use of HLTP during preparation and reported their uses of HLTP at three points during the FLEX practicum. These students were then encouraged to incorporate HLTP into their lesson plans for their FLEX classrooms. We carefully observed each participant giving two lessons and took note of their HLTP use. Each participant was interviewed for 10 minutes following one of their lessons and asked to rate their use of each HLTP in that lesson. These interviews and the lessons we observed were audio-recorded and transcribed, coded for HLTP data, and used for our analysis. Micro-practices Each of the HLTP that we are studying can be characterized by micro-practices, a subset of practices that are implemented as part of enacting the HLTP. We found that the most popular micro-practices used by the students fall under the making input comprehensible category. Students reported use of visuals, use of gestures, slow rate of speech, and repetition of words as the most frequently used micro- practices. The least frequently used micro-practices related to Asking Questions and Collecting information from all students. See Table 3 for a list of those micro- practices. Findings from this study can be used to develop syllabi for other methods courses that wish to include HLTP, teaching materials to teach these practices, and further evaluation tools to determine how HLTP are executed during practicum or other language classes. In addition, we found that students need extra work on asking questions, the least used HLTP. We suggest students need more time to practice questioning strategies and activities that will help them to better understand specific techniques. Finally, while the participants, in general, used a lot of making input comprehensible, their use was concentrated to a small set of micro-practices (see Table 2). Further exposure to and practice with the other micro-practices could lead to a fuller and richer experience with making input comprehensible. In this study, we focused on identifying a few high-leverage teaching practices that may provide higher gains in student learning over other practices during a FLEX experience. We did quantitative analysis to keep track of how the practices were used and qualitative analysis to provide evidence of their effectiveness. In the future, further research can be done to identify other possible HLTP in this content area and study the effect on student gains on a deeper level. Research could also be done on how to best introduce these concepts to current foreign language educators without previous exposure to HLTP. One limitation to this study is the limited time we had for teaching HLTP and giving participants the opportunity to practice them. Selected Resources Ball, D. L. & Forzani, F. M. (December 2010/January 2011). Teaching skillful teaching. Educational Leadership. Association of Supervision & Curriculum Development, Hlas, A. C. & Hlas, C. S. (2012). An examination of high-leverage teaching practices: Making connections between mathematics and foreign languages, Foreign Language Annals, 45 (S1), s76-s97. University of Michigan (2012). Teaching Works. Retrieved from Support for this project provided from student differential tuition funds through the University of Wisconsin-Eau Claire Summer Research Experiences for Undergraduates Program and the Blugold Fellowship Program. Table 3: Most and least used micro-practices reported across participants (n=16) Table 1: Average number of times HLTP were reported to be used throughout three FLEX classes across 16 participants (n=16) Table 2: Micro-practices associated with Making Input Comprehensible