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Research and Practice on Teaching ELLs in Middle and High Schools

Research and Practice on Teaching ELLs in Middle and High Schools . Margarita Calder ón Johns Hopkins University . Talking Points. Why is vocabulary important? A science example for -- How to select words to teach.

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Research and Practice on Teaching ELLs in Middle and High Schools

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  1. Research and Practice on Teaching ELLs in Middle and High Schools Margarita Calderón Johns Hopkins University

  2. Talking Points Why is vocabulary important? A science example for -- How to select words to teach. -- How to teach words before reading, during reading and after reading? 3. Program implications and keeping track of student progress.

  3. Why is Content Area Literacy Important? Without reading instruction on content area literacy: • SURFACE COMPREHENSION--Literal comprehension; students read on their own and answer questions; questions are low-level. With reading instruction integrated into content areas: • DEEP COMPREHENSION --Critical comprehension; students learn new vocabulary continuously; associate new readings with prior knowledge; add new knowledge, discuss ideas, interpret facts and information, and apply critical thinking skills to text.

  4. Statistical Trends in Secondary Schools • Nationally, over 6 million American students in grades 6 through 12 are at risk of failure because they read and comprehend below—often considerably below—the basic levels needed for success in high school, postsecondary education, and the workforce. • About 60% of ELLs in middle and high school were born in the United States, that is, they are second- or third-generation immigrants - - and have been in U. S. schools since kindergarten! • Newcomers, refugees -- are now mainly SIFE (Students with Interrupted Formal Education).

  5. Why teach vocabulary before, during and after students read a content text? • Vocabulary knowledge correlates with reading comprehension. • Reading comprehension correlates with content knowledge. • Content knowledge correlates with academic success. • Comprehension depends on knowing between 90% and 95% of the words in a text. • Knowing words means explicit instruction not just exposure.

  6. FOR TRANSITION or ENGLISH-ONLY PROGRAMS: Teachers must balance comprehensible input with rich challenging vocabulary and reading in math, science and social studies in English. ESL Sheltered Instruction Comprehensible input Content Rich Challenging Vocabulary And Reading in Science, Social Studies & Math

  7. SCIENCE • Science can be very exciting or very dull. • Science texts need to be carefully parsed so that standards are met. • A variety of texts can be used to learn science. Students need to become familiar with ways to read those texts and write in that genre. • Science is ideally suited for Cooperative Learning. • Scientific concepts and processes are highly dependent on specific vocabulary.

  8. Agreement on the following ideas or themes or salient features of science that should be taught: • Scientific method and critical testing • Creativity • Historical development of scientific knowledge • Science and questioning • Diversity of scientific thinking • Analysis and interpretation of data • Science and certainty • Hypothesis and prediction • Cooperationand collaboration

  9. Importance of Teaching Vocabulary Vocabulary knowledge correlates with reading comprehension. Reading comprehension correlates with content knowledge. Content knowledge correlates with academic success. Comprehension depends on knowing between 90% and 95% of the words in a text. An ELL needs explicit instruction and at least 12 production opportunities to own a word.

  10. Explicit Instruction: STEP 1 SELECT VOCABULARY TO PRE-TEACH BEFORE PRESENTING CONTENT, TEACHER READ ALOUD, OR STUDENT READING OF ANY TEXT. STEP 2 TEACH VOCABULARY USING 7 STEPS WITH AMPLE STUDENT INTERACTION. STEP 3 STUDENTS READ, DISCUSS, AND WRITE USING NEW VOCABULARY

  11. Vocabulary Tiers for ELLs Tier 1 Tier 2 Tier 3 Simple More Content Words Words Sophisticated run sprinted foreshadow (literature) fell stumbled monarchy (history) mad rage vacuole (sciences) good firmly factor (math) run (42) run

  12. Tier 2 words can also include polysemous words across academic content areas ring table trunk prime round • power • cell • right • radical • leg

  13. Tier 2 words that nest academic content. Transition Words, Connectors, Causation, Time Sequencing, Predictions. Some examples: Cause & Effect -- because, due to, as a result, since, for this reason, therefore, in order to, so that, thus… Contrast -- or, but, although, however, in contrast, nevertheless, on the other hand, while … Addition or comparison -- and, also, as well as, in addition, likewise, moreover, by the way … Giving examples -- for example, for instance, in particular, such as …

  14. Tier 2 words that nest academic content according to their function. • Passive voice -- is found, is explored, was shown… • Tentativeness or modals -- would improve, possibly, might be, would likely be … • Word-family relationships -- drama, dramatic, dramatist, dramatize, and dramatization… • Embedded clauses or complex sentences -- A growing number of studies suggest, however, that such an increasecould have a big impact on life. …

  15. Some science words shared with math have different technical meanings in the two disciplines. For instance in math we find: • divide, density, solution, radical, variable, prism, degree, image, radian, simulation, experiment

  16. When teachers are explaining / presenting a lesson, look out for words such as: • sum some • facts fats • axis exes

  17. CognatesTier 1 & 2 piano educación familia radio cámara televisión sofisticada

  18. Cognates in ScienceTier 2 and 3 hypotheses hipótesis observations observaciones classification clasificación predictions predicciones tentative conclusions concluciones tentativas evaluate - evaluar • experiment • experimento • experimentation experimentación • investigation investigación • inferences • inferencias • process • proceso

  19. SELECTING WORDS TO PRE-TEACH Activity -- Read the text: Select 2 Tier 1 words Select 2 Tier 2 words or clauses Select 2 Tier 3 words

  20. Observations? Questions? IMPLICATIONS for our text books and instruction: 3 Key Concepts So Far: 1. 2. 3.

  21. Teaching Tiers 2 and 3 Words Geologists/Geologos Sediments/Sedimentos

  22. 1.Geologist • “Geologist” • Sentence- “These are all clues geologists use to figure out how this breathtaking landscape came to be.” • Repeat- “Geologist, geologist, geologist!” • Dictionary Definition- “A scientist who studies the solid parts of Earth such as its rocks.” • Student Friendly Definition- A person who can understand and know about our planet the Earth. • Touch your nose if the word applies- • “Volcanoes!” • “Classroom!” • “Plants, mountains!” • Prefix? “Geologist!”

  23. 2.Sediments • “Sediments!” • Sentence- “The layers look a bit like a pile of sandwiches. Each layer was made from sediments- bits of sand, mud, clay, and plant and animal remains. • Repeat- “Sediments, sediments, sediments!” • Dictionary Definition- “Solid material that settles to the ocean floor or other surface.” • Kid-friendly Definition- Dirt, mud that falls inside of water. • Please say the word- sediments – if the word applies- • “Oceans, clay, dirt! “ • “Sandwiches, lunchroom, milk!” • “Lakes, rocks, hard pressure!” • 7. What type of word is “Sediments?”

  24. Consolidation Activity Create a poster size postcard using the new Tier 2 and 3 vocabulary words. Make sure to use the Rubric to guide you and work in groups!

  25. Postcard Rubric

  26. What is Academic Literacy? Includes reading, writing, and oral discourse for school Varies from subject to subject Requires knowledge of multiple genres, purposes for text use and text media Is influenced by students’ literacies in contexts outside school Is influenced by students’ personal, social, and cultural experiences (Short & Fitzsimmons, 2007) 26

  27. Before Reading Hook the Reader Build Background Connect with Prior Knowledge Pre-teach Vocabulary Implicitly Preview Text Set Purpose for Reading 27

  28. Clues to the Past

  29. Read Aloud Why Teacher Read-Alouds in Secondary? Fluency MODEL MODEL Self-correction Fix it strategies Extend comprehension Teach more words 29

  30. During Reading Read-Aloud: Model and build reading strategies Partner Reading: Students practice and apply strategies Coach students Help students organize and retain information 30

  31. Cause and Effect 31

  32. After Reading Model summarizing and synthesizing information Help organize information and develop reading memory Students apply text Reflect and consolidate knowledge 32

  33. Complete the graphic to show the relationship between vocabulary and academic literacy. Vocabulary & Literacy 33

  34. Reading for Domain Knowledge Without reading comprehension, students cannot learn math, science, social studies and literature (NRC Commission on Teacher Preparation). English language learners (ELLs) are learning English at the same time they are studying core content through English. They must perform double the work of native speakers to keep up, and at the same time be accountable for AYP (Carnegie Panel on ELL Literacy).

  35. New York City Schools, Montgomery County, Alaska, and others are finding that: • Literacy interventions for native English speakers will not work for ELLs. Adolescent ELLs generally need much more time focused on developing vocabulary and background schema than native English speakers do. • Elementary-level programs do not work for adolescents. • Phonics-only programs do not work. • They commissioned focused comprehensive programs.

  36. Interventions and Well-Prepared Teachers • ESL, reading, special education, bilingual teachers who can teach phonics, decoding, vocabulary, and reading comprehension along with academic language and concepts. • Mainstream teachers who can build on language, reading and writing skills in math, science, social studies, and language arts.

  37. INTEGRATION OF APPROACHES A C A D E M I C S U B J E C T S Depth & Breadth of WORD KNOWLEDGE GRAMMAR, SYNTAX, DISCOURSE VOICE WRITING IN THE DIFFERENT SUBJECT AREAS RICH LANGUAGE Practice PHONEMIC, PHONOLOGICAL & SEMANTIC AWARENESS READING COMPREHESION STUDY SKILLS

  38. Evidence-based programs that help schools demonstrate that they are achieving AYP with English-language learners: • ExC-ELL -- Expediting Comprehension for English Language Learners (6th - 12th) -- professional development program for mainstream teachers on how to integrate language and literacy development along with subject matter. • RIGOR -- Reading Instructional Goals for Older Readers (4th - 12th) -- Spanish and English curriculum -- lessons, leveled readers, ancillary materials, and professional development for ESL, dual-language, mainstream teachers.

  39. A MODEL WHERE ESL SPED AND ELA, MATH, SCIENCE, SOCIAL STUDIES TEACHERS WORK TOGETHER Social Studies teachers ExC-ELL ExC-ELL RIGOR Science teachers Emerging Literacy and Language teachers Math teachers ExC-ELL ExC-ELL Language Arts teachers

  40. Settings for Implementation

  41. ASSESSING QUALITY INSTRUCTION - VOCABULARY INDICATORS: • TRAINING EXAMPLE • Workshops on vocabulary • Reading and discussing research in TLCs • Modeling / demos and observations on teaching vocabulary to ELLs • TEACHER TRANSFER EXAMPLE • Increases own use of vocabulary • Uses 5-10 strategies to teach daily vocabulary • Mentors other teachers on the strategies • STUDENT IMPACT EXAMPLES • Masters 5-10 Tier 1, 2, & 3 words daily • Uses new words in daily speech, & in retells • Increased reading fluency & comprehension • Uses new words in writing

  42. Coming in Spring: Logitech Digital Pen Pen Docking Station: To store recorded data on the computer Camera: To record data as the user writes on the digital paper Ink Pen: To write observations on the digital paper

  43. Observation Detail Report

  44. Teacher and Student Profile Summary Report

  45. ExC-ELL Observation Protocol (EOP) is used: • By teachers for designing / developing their lessons. • By teachers for self-reflection. • By teachers for observing and documenting student performance. • By principals and supervisors for observing and coaching teachers. • By coaches to give concrete feedback to teachers. • By researchers to collect data on teacher and student growth and quality of implementation.

  46. IN SUMMARY: Newcomers and Long-Term ELLs Need • ESL, reading, special education, bilingual teachers who can teach phonics, decoding, vocabulary, and reading comprehension along with academic topics. • ExC-ELL teachers to build on reading and writing skills in math, science, social studies, and language arts by integrating oracy and literacy into the content areas. • With tools such as the ExC-ELL OP we can help expedite teacher and student success!

  47. CONTACT INFORMATION: Margarita Calderón Mecalde@aol.com (915) 276-1804

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