The ABCs of ELLs - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 33
About This Presentation
Title:

The ABCs of ELLs

Description:

... trombone effect from old Peanuts TV specials, indicating when an ... time for acquisition, practice, reflection, making meaning, and building recall' ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:39
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 34
Provided by: jdec2
Category:
Tags: abcs | ells

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: The ABCs of ELLs


1
The ABCs of ELLs
  • School District of Janesville
  • March 12, 2007
  • Professional Development Session

2
Presented by
  • Julie DeCook, ELL Program Support Teacher, SDJ
  • Linda Cottier, ELL Teacher, Craig HS
  • Matt Wolf, ELL Teacher, Marshall MS

3
Introductions
  • Name
  • School
  • Grade or Subject /Area or Specialty
  • Other?

4
Overview
  • Affective Filter
  • Brain Compatible Practices
  • Comprehensible Input

5
Activity
  • Who did you bring with you today?
  • Who inspired you to come today?

6
Drilons Story
7
Simulations(Alternate Activity)
  • A new student arrives at your classroom door who
    doesnt speak any English. What is your gut
    reaction?

8
Simulations(Alternate Activity)
  • Think of the most challenging course you took in
    school. What was challenging about it? What
    emotions did you experience? (Jo Gusman, 2005)

9
Simulations(Alternate Activity)
  • You are a 16 year old immigrant to Germany. You
    are enrolled in school. You have taken German
    since 7th grade, but now all of your math,
    science, language arts, and German history
    instruction is in German. How do you feel? What
    do you think? What do you do?

10
Affective Filter
  • What does perceived threat do to us?
  • What is the impact of fear and anxiety on the
    brain?
  • What is the impact on learning when the
    environment and/or community doesnt feel safe?

11
Affective Filter
  • Psychological Filter
  • Defensive Shield
  • Emotional Gatekeeper
  • (Candice Pert, Molecules of Emotion)
  • Garage Door

12
Affective Filter
  • What do we do
  • to avoid things
  • that threaten us???

13
  • Frequent trips to
  • The restroom
  • The drinking fountain
  • The nurses office
  • Sleeping in class
  • Absenteeism/truancy/tardiness
  • Refusal to work
  • Clowning
  • Distracting

14
The TRUE Brick Wall
  • When the affective filter is up, its as though
    you never taught the lesson!

15
Process Activity
  • Turn to a partner and share a time your affective
    filter was up.
  • Quickly sketch a graphic representing affective
    filter to you.
  • Share with your partner.

16
The Bridgefrom Affective Filter to
Comprehensible Input
17
Charlie Browns Teacher
  • Any speech that has been slurred from
    drunkenness, distorted by lousy loudspeakers, or
    just rendered incomprehensible by other means.
    Refers to the "whaa-whaa-whaa" trombone effect
    from old Peanuts TV specials, indicating when an
    adult was speaking.
  • Ed Sounds like they hired a Charlie Brown
    Teacher to do the announcements.
  • (urbandictionary.com)

18
Brain research tells us . . .
  • Every thought we have creates a physiological
    responsein the case of not understandingstress.
  • All learning involves our body, our emotions,
    our attitudes . . . brain-based approaches
    address those variables more comprehensively
    (Completing the Puzzle A Brain-based Approach to
    Learning, Eric Jensen)

19
Brain research tells us . . .
  • The mid-brain regulates attention, emotions,
    sleep, appetite, etc. and long-term memory.
  • The neocortex regulates sensory perception, motor
    commands, spatial reasoning, conscious thought,
    and language.
  • There are more neural fibers going from the
    mid-brain to the neocortex than the other way
    around.

20
Brain research tells us . . .
  • This is important evidence that emotions are
    more important and powerful to the brain than
    higher-order thinking skills. (Completing the
    Puzzle A Brain-based Approach to Learning, Eric
    Jensen)

21
Brain research tells us . . .
  • Attention to external events (instruction) and
    attention to internal processes (thought which
    internalizes learning) do not happen at the same
    time.
  • Attending and learning are not the same thing.
  • Learners need time for acquisition, practice,
    reflection, making meaning, and building recall.
    (Completing the Puzzle A Brain-based Approach to
    Learning, Eric Jensen)

22
Brain research tells us . . .
  • Leaners construct meaning by
  • Making connections
  • Attaching emotion
  • Finding patterns

23
Brain research tells us . . .
  • The brain is so motivated to find meaning that it
    constructs ways to put pieces of information
    together in a way that makes sense
  • Teacher, America eggs no chicken.

24
To guide the formation of accurate patterns,
connections, and meaning, ELLs need . . .
  • Comprehensible Input!

25
Framework of Language DemandJim Cummins, Anna
Chamot and Michael OMalley
Cognitively Undemanding
Context-Reduced
Context-Embedded
Cognitively Demanding
26
What is Comprehensible Input?
  • Students should be able to understand the essence
    of what is being said or presented to them
  • Should we only use words the students understand?
  • Comprehensible input 1

27
Comprehensible Input
  • Goes beyond the choice of vocabulary
  • Provide background knowledge and content
  • Context or visual clues
  • Asking for clarification
  • Graphic organizers

28
Comprehensible Input
  • Provide instruction that draws upon the
    experiences of your students
  • No need to be an expert of the culture
  • Listen carefully to your students
  • Connect learning to their past experiences

29
Comprehensible Output
  • Learners need opportunities to practice language
  • Cooperative learning groups
  • Students or teacher can adapt message to
    listeners needs
  • Easy to check understanding of the listener
  • Opportunity for oral practice and repetition of
    content understanding as peers help negotiate
    meaning
  • Feedback is non-judgmental and immediate

30
Recipe for Input
  • Behavior Checklist for Teachers
  • Language Signal
  • Chunk n Chew

31
Recap
  • Affective Filtereffective of negative emotion on
    learning
  • Brain Compatible Practicesholistic approach
    accounting for cognitive, emotional, and
    physiological aspects of learning all together
  • Comprehensible Inputinstruction that
    demonstrates meaning

32
Recap Continued
  • Differentiate
  • Content
  • Products
  • Process
  • AND
  • Affect
  • Learning Environment

33
Closing Launch
  • Please complete the last column of the Who Did
    You Bring With You Today? activity.
  • Share 1 or 2 answers you discovered today with a
    partner.
  • Thank you for choosing to spend your time
    learning about ELLs!!!
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com