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Information From the U.S. Department of Education http://dww.ed.gov/priority_area/priority_landing.cfm?PA_ID=6 AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge A Hospitable Welcome? How do you feel about students and families who don’t speak English? We all have preconceived ideas ranging from intrigue/support to resistance/aversion. Initial fears are NOT discrimination . . . it’s how you respond to them that determines what you do, say, and project. AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge Precedent for Services In the Law The Civil Rights Act of 1964—prohibits discrimination (race, color, national origin, etc.) in programs receiving federal funds. EEOA of 1974 (Equal Educ. Opportunities Act)— States must provide equal opportunity and take action to overcome language barriers in school. NCLB Act 2001 (No Child Left Behind)—States must offer programs of intensive ESL instruction and test annually for language proficiency progress. AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge Acronyms LEP = Limited English Proficient ELL = English Language Learner ELLP= English Language Learner Plan ESL = English as a Second Language ESOL = English to Speakers of Other Languages TESL/TESOL = Teaching English to Speakers of Other Languages L1 = First Language (1L) L2 = Second Language (2L) Definition of LEP any student whose native language is not English or who comes from an environment where a language other than English is used AND is not proficient in the areas of listening, speaking, reading, and writing English, and this impedes their success in school. Interesting Fact: Many LEP students are US citizens; however, another language other than English is used at home and in their communities. When they enter school, English is a foreign language to them. Where are our LEP Students? (as of January 31, 2008) 12% Forest Zone 10% Liberty Zone Staunton River Zone 78% Forest Zone Boonsboro Elementary 10 Forest Elementary 25 New London Academy 9 Otter River Elementary 0 Thomas Jefferson Elementary 7 Forest Middle 11 Jefferson Forest High 7 Total 69 Liberty Zone Bedford Elementary 0 Bedford Primary 1 Big Island Elementary 1 Thaxton Elementary 1 Montvale Elementary 0 Bedford Middle 3 Liberty High 3 Total 9 Staunton River Zone Body Camp Elementary 1 Goodview Elementary Huddleston Elementary 3 0 Moneta Elementary Stewartsville Elementary Staunton River Middle 0 2 Staunton River High Total 4 1 11 Our ESL Staff In the Forest Zone 69 Students Joyce Metallo @ Boonsboro Elementary Forest Elementary Michelle Wesbrook @ Thomas Jefferson Elementary New London Academy Otter River Elementary* Forest Middle School Jefferson Forest High School * No Students at this time Our ESL Staff In the Liberty and Staunton River Zones 20 Students Amy Wycoff @ All Elementary Schools All Middle Schools All High Schools * No Students at this time (BES, HES, MonetaES, MontvaleES) Role of the ESL Teacher The Main Objective is to teach an ESL curriculum which follows the SOLs for English Language Proficiency adopted by the VDOE. Support classroom teachers by teaching content vocabulary for the general education curriculum Inclusion support in the general education classroom Other Duties Diagnose and monitor language proficiency of ELLs Create ELLP and implement w/in committee Liaison with parents, classroom teachers, guidance counselors and test coordinators, school nurses, social services, school administrators, and county supervisors Keep ESL student records for VDOE audit Assist teachers with supplemental materials Translation—phone calls, parent conferences, SCT & IEP meetings, correspondence, etc. Administer year-end English Proficiency Test and proctor districtwide and SOL assessments for LEP students Supervise practicum students, interns, student teachers, etc., from area colleges Revise teaching schedule as student population changes Itinerant travel to all schools served Who are ELLs? No two ELLs are alike: A variety of factors bring ELLs to our schools. ELLs have different academic experiences in their native language. Family situations of ELLs vary greatly. Who are the Families? Business Professionals (CFOs, Global Quality Experts, Nuclear Physicists, Engineers) Professors, Pastors, Missionaries University Students Restaurant Owners and Workers Construction Workers Beauty Technicians (Nail, Hair, etc.) Meat Production, Orchard, and Farm Workers Languages in Bedford County LEP and Bilingual Students Arabic Chinese Dutch French German Italian Japanese Korean Kriol Laotian Romanian Russian Spanish Tagalog Urdu Vietnamese AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge The Science of Linguistics Linguistics is the study of language and culture What is language? Decoded sounds and symbols with meaning Imbedded with socio-cultural values Socio-linguistics People who learn and effectively use a second language adopt a new culture, value system, and worldview. This takes courage! The brain functions in unique ways regarding language, using both mathematical and artistic processes and enabling inductive and productive linguistic skills. Bi- and multi-lingual people have many more active brain cells than mono-linguals. BICS vs. CALP Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills * Conversational Proficiency * Usually developed in 1-2 years Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency * Grade-level appropriate academic language * May take 5-10 years to develop (Jim Cummins) Factors Influencing L2 Acquisition Age of the student Limited or interrupted schooling and literacy in first language Family and home circumstances Cultural adaptation by Judie Haynes One of the roles of ESL teachers is to help mainstream staff members unlock cultural puzzles by teaching strategies that help them understand the role culture plays in the behavior and learning of ESL students. Enjoy the reprint of my Spring 2003 column for Essential Teacher. At the end of the school year, a new Korean student came to my classroom with a message from his firstgrade teacher. It said that the student had repeatedly insisted that he was 8. My colleague wanted to know why an 8-year-old had been placed in her class when the other students were all 7. I explained to the student that Americans count birthdays differently than Koreans do. In the United States, he was 7 years old. (In Korea, everyone becomes a year older on the Lunar New Year.) Several explanations later, the last one by his father, the child tearfully exclaimed in Korean, “What! I lost a year! I'm only 7 years old in the United States!” Cultural Adjustment Most 2Ls go through periods of cultural adjustment. Honeymoon phase—everything is new and exciting Disorientation phase—feel they don’t fit in and can’t express or be themselves Adjustment phase—begin balancing their old life with the new one and gain more confidence Adoption phase—realize there are differences in their old and new culture, and they accept and feel comfortable in both Cultural Observations Academic Culture—abilities in literacy vs. oral communication Family literacy and academic expectations Group orientation vs. independent learning Competition Cooperative learning vs. cheating Cultural Observations, cont. Sight words vs. phonics Formal vs. informal academic cultures Identity based in religious/cultural norms Food, clothing, same-gender education PE, art, music, etc. Cultural Observations, cont. Personal space Time and Attendance Behavior and Discipline Exhaustion factor Social and medical needs AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge Types of Instruction Itinerant Teachers English-only vs. Bilingual Pull-outs and Inclusion Accommodations Stages of Second Language Acquisition Preproduction •Minimal Early Production •Limited Speech Emergence •Good Intermediate Fluency Advanced Fluency •Excellent (Stephen Krashen) comprehension •Nods “Yes” and “No” comprehension •Uses 1-2 word responses comprehension •Uses simples sentences •Frequent Errors comprehension •Few Errors •Near-native speaker proficiency Testing—SOLs ELLs are required to take SOLs. For 2007-2008, they have the following exemptions: Reading—exempt within the first 12 months of school in the US Writing and History/SS—have a one-time exemption Math—no exemption, but may use Plain English version if English level is 1 or 2 Science—no exemption, but scores do not count against district for up to 11 semesters End-of-course—No exemptions AMAOs Annual Measurable Achievement Objectives are raised each year by the USDE and the VDOE Reading/Language Arts Math Science English Progress English Proficiency 2006-07 2007-08 73% 71% NA 35% 25% 77% 75% ?? 40% 30% Classroom and Testing Accommodations LEP students receive accommodations for their classroom work and tests as well as on districtwide and standardized tests. Sufficient time for assignments and tests Small groups Assistance with and repeating directions Tests read aloud or given orally Open-book or take-home tests Bilingual dictionaries Some LEP students have an IEP Test Practice !!! Solve this Math Problem 메리는 그녀의 집에 많은 사과 나무가 있다. 1 일 그녀는 5개의 사과를 모은다. 다음날에, 그녀는 3개의 사과를 모은다. 마지막 일에 그녀는 7개의 사과를 모은다. 얼마나 많은 사과를 메리는 3 일 후에 가? Now Solve This One María tiene muchos manzanillos en su casa. Un día ella recoge 5 manzanas. Al día siguiente, ella recoge 3 manzanas. En el último día ella recoge 7 manzanas. ¿Cuántas manzanas recogió María después de los 3 días? How About This One? Mary has many apple trees at her house. One day she collects 5 apples. The next day, she collects 3 apples. On the last day she collects 7 apples. How many apples does Mary collect after 3 days? Teach Language Teach the academic language of your classroom. Create Language Objectives to accompany Content-area Objectives. Provide opportunities for students to use language in the classroom. Make It Fun !! http://www.esl4kids.net/printable/CVC_Ma tch.pdf http://www.esl4kids.net/printable/Subject _Verb_Gramminoes.pdf Example #1: Social Studies Content Objective = to understand the period of the 1920’s and the women’s rights movement Language Objective = to use the terms could and couldn’t, did and didn’t to make comparisons. Example #2: Science Content Objective = to understand the sequential pattern of an experiment and how one step affects another Language Objective = to use if-then statements to explain the steps of the experiment Example #3: Math Content Objective = to comprehend the difference between two or more polygons Language Objective = to use the terms greater than, less than, similar, and equal to in classifying polygons Example #4: Language Arts Content Objective = to learn how to express persuasive opinions Language Objective = to use the sentence starters “I think” and “In my opinion” to express opinions Grading Helps Evaluating LEP students is especially difficult when they receive many accommodations for their work. Teachers may use progress codes on report cards rather than letter grades to reflect students’ progress. As fewer accommodations are needed, letter grades may be introduced to reflect students’ true abilities. Students cannot be penalized for lack of English; however, they can fail for lack of effort, not completing assignments, etc. Neither should students receive all ‘A’s unless this is a true reflection of their independent academic ability. Adjust accommodations accordingly. Assessment Codes Examples: S = Satisfactory P = Progressing N = Needs Improvement U = Unsatisfactory * = Modified Instruction—ESL I = Incomplete (secondary schools) AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge Comprehensible Input Speak slowly and clearly, not loudly. Pause between sentences or thoughts. Repeat, rephrase, and paraphrase. Use key words frequently. Avoid idioms or slang. Accompany speech with gestures and facial expressions. Reduce Anxiety Create a comfortable learning environment. Be respectful of the student’s language and culture. Teach basic routines. Teach US cultural norms & behavior. Teach classroom expectations. Discipline as appropriate. Contextual Clues Label classroom objects. Use visuals whenever possible. Reinforce oral discussion with key words in writing. Write legibly in print. Allow for “wait time.” Provide textbooks even if they cannot yet understand them. Active Participation Connect learning to prior knowledge. Design activities that encourage hands-on participation of all students. Design multi-sensory lessons. Take advantage of the benefits of cooperative learning. Vary student groupings. Encourage mothers to volunteer. Helpful Sources Classroom Kits Picture dictionaries Bilingual dictionaries Content picture dictionaries Word Study for ELLs Rosetta Stone Houghton-Mifflin Reading Text ELL CD Rom (on FES Network) Volcanoes The selection tells how volcanoes are formed and what makes them erupt. The earth is made up of layers of rock. The top layers are called the earth’s crust. Deep below the crust, there is melted rock called magma. Volcanoes form when there are cracks in the earth’s crust. Magma pushes up through the cracks, causing an eruption. The hot magma that pours out is called lava. When the lava cools, it hardens into rock. The earth’s crust is broken into huge pieces called plates. Most volcanoes erupt in places where two plates come together. There are underwater volcanoes, too. When they erupt, they can grow high enough to form islands. There are four kinds of volcanoes. Shield volcanoes have gentle slopes. Cinder cone volcanoes look like upside-down ice cream cones. Most volcanoes are composite or strato-volcanoes. Volcanoes are formed by layers of cinder, ash, and lava. The last kind of volcano is a dome volcano. Its sides are made of very thick lava. Volcanoes that do not erupt anymore are extinct, or dead. The eruption of Mount St. Helens in 1980 shows how destructive an eruption can be. ELL 1–8 Selection Summary Grade 5 Theme 1: Nature’s Fury Master ELL 1–8 Volcanoes Copyright © Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved. Other Helps Planning Sessions Remediation Classes After-school help Outside tutoring Summer School On-Line Resources Professional Development ESL courses: Liberty University Randolph College George Mason University On-line Courses VDOE support for classes AGENDA 1) Welcoming ELLs 2) Precedent for Services 3) Who & Where are they? 4) Cultural Perspectives 5) Instruction 6) Teacher Helps 7) A Unique Challenge A Unique Challenge English Language Learners are required to learn English AND master content-area concepts simultaneously. INTEGRATE Content-Area Instruction & Language Instruction Encouraging Thoughts... Classroom teachers hold a unique position with the ability to develop academic language proficiency consistently and regularly as part of the lessons they plan and deliver. It IS Worth The Effort A wise person once said that working with ELLs can be quite “inconvenient.” However, they WILL learn English . . . and You will enrich their lives, changing the world through them!