Teaching Diverse Learners |
Language Support for Students
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WHAT |
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The participatory, inquiry-based classroom engages students in meaningful learning activities and productive interactions with their peers. |
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WHY |
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All students, especially English language learners (ELLs), benefit from active participation in their learning. Through conversations and discussions in class with both teachers and other students, ELLs develop their English language skills as they broaden their knowledge and understanding of subject matter. |
HOW |
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Model how to pose questions or make comments in a discussion group, then organize student-directed discussions or sharing time (Brisk & Harrington, 2000). Use cooperative learning strategies.
Encourage peer collaboration. Provide opportunities for teaching and learning through joint productive activity. See CREDE's Standards and Indicators for Joint Productive Activity at |
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WHAT |
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Maintaining high expectations for students in schools means challenging and supporting each student to attain his/her personal best. |
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WHY |
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Expect the same high standards from bilingual students as from monolingual students. Limited proficiency in English does not mean limited cognitive ability. |
HOW |
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Teach challenging subject matter using simpler language through the use of sheltered English techniques (Peregoy & Boyle, 1993). Use instructional strategies that foster higher-order thinking. Group students heterogeneously for learning activities. When having small group discussions, allow the use of the first language among students who speak the same language. |
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WHAT |
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Teaching ESL through content-area instruction supports English language learners by embedding explicit strategies for language development within content lessons. |
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WHY |
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Content-area material can provide the context for acquiring both social and academic English. Your students will learn new vocabulary and linguistic structures as they master important content matter. |
HOW |
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Determine the background knowledge that students need to understand the concept. Incorporate ESL objectives, when you are planning lessons [more], and ESL standards (see Simplify language, not content. Provide models and demonstrations. Use graphic organizers. Display visual representations. |
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WHAT |
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Thematic units focus study on one topic, while using a variety of activities and strategies in a series of lessons to explore the common theme. |
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WHY |
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Thematic, interdisciplinary units provide the structure needed to integrate language and content. |
HOW |
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Choose topics to investigate from the science and social
studies curricula, or from general interests of the students. See Paso Partners at Collaborate with teachers from other disciplines. Enhance instruction through various means: filmstrips, videos, Internet, guest speakers. |
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WHAT |
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Incorporate culturally familiar learning strategies as instructional vehicles for lessons and assignments in order to link home and school. |
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WHY |
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The learning environment to which your student is accustomed may be vastly different from the environment and routines of your classroom. |
HOW |
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Find out as much as you can about the student's personal and cultural background. Learn more about the educational system of the student's country. Develop activities and lessons that reflect teaching and learning strategies used in the student's culture. To learn more about students and their experiences, some activities might include:
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WHAT |
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Use a variety of strategies when teaching literacy to access learners' needs, to determine how to proceed with their instruction, and to advance the development of their literacies. |
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WHY |
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While some students had excellent and consistent literacy instruction in their native country, others -- for various reasons, including poverty and war -- enter bilingual/ESL classrooms in the United States with limited or no literacy skills in the first language. |
HOW |
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Use guided reading and writing strategies. Conduct shared reading and writing lessons. Plan for independent reading and writing every day. Plan word structure and vocabulary work every day. |
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WHAT |
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Provide appropriate and valid assessment that aligns with instruction and fits the purpose for which the learner is being assessed. |
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WHY |
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Assessment can be a valuable tool for guiding the education of your English language learners. When coordinated with instruction, assessment provides helpful information that you can use for planning academic content and language learning for each of your students. When assessing academic progress, focus on the content of the answers or product, not on the language structure used by the student. |
HOW |
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Maintain a portfolio of writing for each student to record progress and assess individual needs of students. Implement performance-based assessments. Utilize informal assessments such as checklists, observation charts, anecdotal records, learning logs, or interviews to track progress of students. Assess both the process and the product of students learning activities. Provide timely feedback to the students on their assessments Keep parents apprised of students progress. |
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WHAT |
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Recognize that students use both languages to learn and that they benefit from classrooms rich with materials and resources in both languages. |
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WHY |
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Whether in a bilingual or ESL class, it is easier for bilingual students to learn when they are able to use both their first and second languages. |
HOW |
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In a bilingual class, give equal importance to the first language (L1) and the second language (L2). In an ESL classroom, allow the use of L1 to support instruction in L2. Display books in both languages in the classroom library. Use authentic literature in L1 & L2. Encourage students to share what they learned in their first language. |
References:
[return] Brisk, M. (1998). Bilingual education: From compensatory to quality schooling. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Publishers.
[return] Brisk, M., & Harrington, M. (2000). Literacy and bilingualism: A handbook for all teachers. Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, Inc.
[return] Peregoy, S. F., & Boyle, O. F. (1993). Reading, writing, & learning in ESL: A resource book for K-8 teachers. New York: Longman Publishing Group.