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The EAL Friendly Classroom in the EAL Friendly School National Education Show Cardiff

The EAL Friendly Classroom in the EAL Friendly School National Education Show Cardiff 16 th November 2018 stuart.scott@collaborativelearning.org www.collaborativelearning.org/links.html. Stuart Scott. Director of Collaborative Learning Project

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The EAL Friendly Classroom in the EAL Friendly School National Education Show Cardiff

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  1. The EAL Friendly Classroom in the EAL Friendly School National Education Show Cardiff 16th November 2018 stuart.scott@collaborativelearning.org www.collaborativelearning.org/links.html

  2. Stuart Scott Director of Collaborative Learning Project We develop, share and disseminate free talk for learning activities in all subject areas and for all ages.

  3. We are part of a supportive EAL network. Join the conversation! EAL Bilingual Google Group. National Association for Language Development in the Curriculum. Bell Foundation. Education Endowment Foundation. All on our links page

  4. EAL has a supportive network a click away! • Help is at hand for specific queries: • e.g. EAL Bilingual Forum • Plus case studies from Department for Education – NAEP - now on new British Council/Bell Foundation EAL Nexus site and NASSEA and NALDIC websites together with useful podcasts and lots of helpful LA websites e.g. Hampshire with MESH guides link. • Look at our links page: www.collaborativelearning.org/links.html • Take a look at our blog about new arrivals • www.joinedinthinking.org.uk • Or contact us for specific queries: • stuart.scott@collaborativelearning.org

  5. Everything you do to support your EAL pupils will benefit every other pupil in your school. In many EAL friendly schools they become the highest achievers.

  6. Education Endowment Foundation (EEF) https://educationendowmentfoundation.org.uk Their toolkit examines teaching strategies. Summarises research evidence. Measures impact on achievement. Estimates cost. Funds new research, guidance and projects. “The Which Guide to best practice!”

  7. Impact? Collaborative Learning Feedback Peer tutoring Reading comprehension strategies Research Evidence? Metacognition and Self Regulation Cost?

  8. What I aim to do today. • Raise awareness of the importance of acquiring knowledge about individual EAL pupils. • Develop effective initial assessment and induction of new arrivals balancing strategic interventions and a welcoming and empowering mainstream environment. • Introduce frameworks for tracking EAL pupil progress.

  9. The Education Endowment Foundation has part funded a recent research review on EAL and is in the process of linking it to their Teaching and Learning Toolkit. They currently link this toolkit to school themes for improvement

  10. Victoria Murphy: EAL Research Review 2016Strong evidence that some EAL pupils can make the most progress overall and that there is an enormous untapped potential. Some suggestions for intervention: • Increasing quantity and quality of verbal interaction • Improving subject specific vocabulary • Embedding multi-word phrases and idioms

  11. Linking research and practice Growth of study centres e.g. Learning without Limits, Oracy at Cambridge, Lesson Study, Collaborative Enquiry Does your school have a framework which supports evidence based practice and/or ways in which new strategies for improving progress are observed and tested in a supportive environment? Would your school be interested in using “lesson study” or “collaborative enquiry” to achieve this?

  12. Suggestions for role of Estyn? • Safeguarding (one day surprise visit) • Standards (can be done online) • School Improvement (best done supportively and collaboratively over a year.) from Peter Hyman at School 21

  13. Welcoming New Arrivals: Key Idea 1 HELLO • The golden hello – makes sure the child feels welcome • The most powerful tool in your toolkit • There will be no progress until your child feels safe

  14. Key Idea 2 “Ain’t nothing like the real thing baby”…or failing that ”a picture paints a thousand words”

  15. Key Idea 3 Communication Champions Communication champions keep on trying, they use gesture, mime and every other “language” they know to communicate. They keep on going. • Become one. • Help everyone else become one. • Find children who are good at this and nurture them.

  16. Key idea 4 Social ball bearings help things roll • “Please”, “Thank you” and “Can I have?” are essential first things to teach. • Children who try to use these phrases will get more positive responses from those around them, adult and child. Positive responses begin an upward spiral of communication.

  17. Key Idea 5 We are not all the same • Children learn in different ways. • Some New Arrivals are desperate to communicate and do everything to get ideas across. This group can easily develop error strewn writing which is hard to improve. Structured teaching of language items is crucial. • Some New Arrivals will only speak when they are sure they are right. This group are usually performing at a higher level than anyone gives them credit for.

  18. Key Idea 6 Independence is all • You can only do it if you understand it and can do it yourself. Avoid causing “blind” copying and echoing. Avoid the need to copy by using substitution tables or cut up sentences. • Introduce regular independent talking and writing. (Make it fun)

  19. Key Idea 7 Graphic/Visual Organisers/Key Visuals Learning needs Language needs • A graphic/visual organiser or key visual is a diagrammatic way of organising and presenting an idea. It is not a photograph nor illustration. • Examples social needs

  20. e.g. Sample Visual Organisers

  21. A graphic organiser/key visual representation about: Balancing the needs of EAL beginners Cognitive Learning needs Language needs Social needs Feeling safe

  22. Key idea 8 Keep looking for green shoots • Be optimistic and look for tiny glimmers that show English is developing. The first signs will often be, ironically, incorrect. Children will try to generate ideas based on what they know of English and other languages. • Celebrate.

  23. Key idea 9 Always reach for the stars • Keep your eye on the long game. EAL beginners can, should and will develop, thrive and excel. • Expect the best. Expect success. Expect your colleagues to do likewise!

  24. A graphic organiser/key visual representation about: Balancing the needs of EAL beginners Cognitive Learning needs Language needs Social needs Feeling safe

  25. A graphic organiser/key visual representation about the relationship between first and second languages:

  26. Understand what classroom practice is EAL friendly and what are its theoretical underpinnings. Examine classroom practice that integrates language and curriculum development.

  27. What do you know about your EAL Pupil? • New arrivalsPupils from established communities • Previous experience of schooling • Trauma – past and present • Mobility • Cultural expectations of education

  28. New Arrivals and Phonics Many new arrivals will be literate in first language. Others may not have started literacy. This may be a language where sound symbol correspondence is more reliable. Like Welsh; unlike English!

  29. New Arrivals and Phonics Don’t use Infant phonics programmes Avoid baby books – find a grown up context Think of the impact of the specific first language: e.g. v/w in Gujerati or three to five “r”s in Spanish or Arabic or….

  30. EAL Friendly? Basic principles • Build on prior knowledge • Move from concrete to abstract • Ensure everyone works with everyone else • Extend social language into curriculum language • Provide motivating ways to go over the same thing more than once

  31. What constitutes an EAL Friendly classroom? • Social Relations - empowerment • Language – exploratory talk • Learning – curriculum access

  32. Brain Research • Up to age of 11 brain is 150% more active in acquiring language. • The act of talking and thinking increases the number of connections and cells that build the brain. • Talk fuels brain development. Research summed up in Robin Alexander’s “Towards Dialogic Teaching; Rethinking Classroom Talk”

  33. Presentational talk • Exploratory talk • Symmetrical talk • Asymmetrical talk

  34. Whole class discussion: example 1 • Teacher: OK. Looking at the text now I want you please to • tell me what tense the first paragraph is in. • Girl: The past tense. • Teacher: Yes it’s in the past tense. How do you know it’s in the past tense? • Girl: Because it says August 1990. • Teacher: You know by the date it’s in the past tense, but you know by something else you know, you know by the doing words in the • text that change. What’s a doing word? What do we call a doing word David? • David: A verb. • Teacher: A verb good. Will you give me one verb please out of this first paragraph. Find one verb in this paragraph. Stephen? • Stephen: Rescued. • Teacher: Rescued, excellent, excellent and that’s in the past tense. • (Hardman, 2007)

  35. Whole class discussion: example 2 Teacher: Who has a question? Susan: How many spiders can fit in a cage? Reggie: It didn't tell. Susan: Yes it did. Justin: Reggie doesn't think it told us. Susan: Charlie? Charlie: About ten or so. Susan: Mara? Mara: Ten to twenty. Teacher: Ten to twenty. Daryl…what question would you ask? Daryl: If you came by and looked, if you looked in the Daddy Long Legs cage, what would the Daddy-long-legs do? Justin?

  36. Classroom PracticeConstruction of new meanings • Opportunities to revisit learning in attractive ways • Templates for pupils to develop their own activities • Scaffolds talk at all levels simultaneously • Provides tasks that model thinking processes • Transformation of information

  37. Making an activity • Curriculum goal To understand how much a Roman soldier had to carry. To learn technical terms for equipment used by Roman soldiers. To develop empathy with characters in the past.

  38. Making an EAL friendly activity • Provide pictures and labels • Provide a sorting grid to organise ideas • Add in a game element to re-inforce and practice. • Once pupils have a grid a game can be played where a spinner is turned each section corresponds to a grid section and items are added one by one first o be ready is the winner.

  39. Let Me Introduce How does it work? • Pupils find one person with the same colour card • Each one reads out their card which begins “I am..” • The pair finds another pair – now they introduce their partner so it is no longer “I am” and has become “This is …… they….” in students own words.

  40. Let Me Introduce Why does it work? • Opportunities to deliver curriculum content • Practice in reading > reading aloud. • Process of listen>understand/think> construct speech in own words. • Communication and interaction is integral. • Students work with many others. • Possible application across many topics/subjects.

  41. Sorting cards onto a visual organiser.Why it works • Opportunities to explore vocabulary • Practice in explaining concepts • Opportunities to expand mental models • Visual organisers structure thinking • You can reinforce the organisers with games.

  42. Barrier games • Barrier games are games where one person (or pair) has half the information and the other person (or pair) has the other half. • Complete information sets can be obtained by asking questions or by passing on information. Familiar informal examples would be battleships. The deduction game “20 questions” is also related.

  43. Barrier Games Why do they work? • Opportunities to deliver curriculum content • Practice in reading or interpreting data. • Practice in questioning • Communication and interaction is integral. • All students must participate • Possible application across many topics/subjects.

  44. Clue cards to make experts • In this variation pupils work as a group. Each person has some information which is essential. • The group then work together to complete a joint task. Examples “Indus Valley“”The Wilsons”“What Can You Grow?”

  45. Information gaps / Expert groups Pupils work in a group to understand some information. They are then regrouped to work with pupils who have learnt something else. Each new group should have a complete set of information by the end. Jigsawing a term used to describe the grouping and regrouping.

  46. Information gaps / Expert groups /Jigsawing • Why do they work? • Opportunities to read/ listen/ talk • All pupils must participate • Learning is carried and recalled to support embedding • Opportunities to differentiate • Easy to organise • All pupils have their own set of complete information to support subject knowledge tasks.

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