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Pathways to English Language Literacy

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Title: Pathways to English Language Literacy


1
Pathways to English Language Literacy
  • Connie Reyes-Rau
  • Hamilton County Title III Coordinator, SWO SERRC
    Consultant
  • Marie Kobayashi
  • Bilingual School Psychologist
  • Cincinnati Public Schools

2
Learning Objectives
  • Participants will develop an understanding of
    legislation which impacts literacy instruction to
    English Language Learners
  • Participants will be aware of Ohios English
    Language Proficiency Standards and its relation
    to literacy.
  • Participants will examine effective, standards
    based literacy practices in tiered levels of
    support (Ohio Integrated Systems Model)

3
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4
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5
What implications does this data demonstrate
about literacy achievement of ELLs in the state
of Ohio?
  • What does your ELLs literacy achievement look
    like at your school/district?
  • For specific directions on how to obtain your
    school/districts report card, please see
    Assessing course for directions on how to
    Examine you District/School data.

6
Lau Legislation
  • Where the inability to speak and understand
    the English language excludes national origin
    minority group children from effective
    participation in the educational program offered
    by a school district, the district must take
    affirmative steps to open its instructional
    program to these students. (35 Federal Regulation
    11595)

7
Title VI of the Civil Rights Act of 1964
  • In order to determine compliance with the
    requirements of Title VI of the Civil Rights Act
    of 1964, the U.S. Department of Education, Office
    of Civil Rights uses the following standards to
    rate programs for ELL students
  • (1)   is the program based on an educational
    theory recognized as sound by experts in the
    field or is considered by experts as a legitimate
    experimental strategy
  • (2)   are the programs and practices, including
    resources and personnel, reasonably calculated to
    implement this theory effectively and
  • (3)   does the school district evaluate its
    programs and make adjustments where needed to
    ensure language barriers are actually being
    overcome? Castañeda v. Pickard 648 F.2d 989
    (5th Cir., 1981)

8
Title III Law
  • The purpose of Title III is to ensure that
    limited English proficient (LEP) students,
    including immigrant children and youth, develop
    English proficiency and meet the same academic
    content and academic achievement standards that
    other children are expected to meet. Schools use
    these funds to implement language instruction
    educational programs designed to help LEP
    students achieve these standards. State
    educational agencies (SEAs), local educational
    agencies (LEAs), and schools are accountable for
    increasing the English proficiency and core
    academic content knowledge of LEP students (Lau
    Center, State of Ohio 2003).

9
NCLB PROVISIONS
  • Al. ESL students need to be identified.
  • A2. ESL students need to be assessed.
  • A3. LEP students need to receive comprehensible
    instruction.
  • NCREL publication

10
Identification
  • Home Language Survey
  • 30 Days to complete
  • Referral made to ELL team

11
Who is an LEP student?
  • An LEP Student has limited knowledge in English
    in any one of the following areas.
  • Written Spoken
  • Reading Listening

12
And one of the following
  • Immigrant and/or native language is not English,
    or
  • Home language is not English, or
  • An American Indian or Alaskan native, where
    dialect affects English proficiency.

13
Time Line
  • The Home language survey must be completed upon
    arrival
  • ODE recommends the initial assessment in reading,
    writing, speaking and listening occur within the
    first two weeks of enrollment
  • Parents must be notified under NCLB within two
    weeks from the results of the assessment.
  • If the child is enrolled before the beginning of
    the school year, a letter must be sent to the
    parents within 30 days explaining the program

14
Assessment
  • Spring Assessment
  • ELDA K-2(English Language Development
    Assessment), OTELA (Ohio Test of English Language
    Acquisition)
  • Must be in the month of April
  • All students labeled LEP must take the test
  • Initial assessment in reading, writing, listening
    and speaking
  • Must identify cohort (beginning, intermediate,
    advanced and proficient trial mainstream)
  • State does not dictate method of assessment for
    the initial screening

15
Areas required to assess
  • 1.        Listening How well is the student
    able to understand spoken English in social and
    grade-level academic settings?
  • 2.        Speaking How well is the student able
    to orally communicate in English in both social
    and academic settings?
  • 3.       Reading How well is the student able
    to read age-appropriate written materials in
    English for both social and academic purposes?
  • 4.        Writing How well is the student able
    to produce writing in English for both social and
    academic purposes?

16
Second Language Acquisition Theory
  • Brief Overview

17
Some Factors Affecting Second Language Acquisition
  • Motivation
  • First language development
  • Language distance and attitude
  • Access to the language
  • Age
  • Personality and learning style
  • Peers and role models
  • Quality of instruction

18
BICS and CALPJim Cummins (University of Toronto)
  • Consider the difference between BICS and CALP
  • Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills (BICS)
  • The communicative capacity that all children
    acquire in order to be able to function in daily
    interpersonal exchanges.
  • Cognitive/Academic Language Proficiency (CALP)
  • That dimension of proficiency in which the
    learner manipulates or reflects upon the surface
    features of language outside the immediate
    interpersonal context.
  •  

19
BICS CALP
  • Lectures/Texts/Tests
  • Abstract
  • Context reduced
  • Few non verbal cues
  • Cannot clarify
  • New ideas/concepts and language
  • 5-7 years to acquire (newest research may
    indicate up to 11 years)
  • Conversation, jokes
  • Concrete
  • Context embedded
  • Nonverbal cues
  • Can clarify meaning
  • Familiar concepts
  • 2-3 years to acquire

20
Context-embedded
  • Contextual supports that offer clues to the
    meaning of words
  • The more spoken and written words are supported
    or embedded in context, the easier they are to
    understand.
  • Spoken language can be given contextual support
    through facial expressions, gestures, body
    language, demonstrations, and visual cues from
    physical environments.
  • Written language can offer contextual support
    through pictures, graphs, charts, tables, and
    textbook aids.

21
Context-reduced
  • Tasks in which students only have the spoken or
    written words alone.
  • Little to NO contextual support through visuals

22
Cummins Quadrant
Cognitively Undemanding
Context Embedded
Context Reduced
Cognitively Demanding
23
Cummins Quadrant (Examples)
24
Ohios English Language Proficiency Standards
  • Go to the following website (cut and paste to
    your browser)
  • http//www.ode.state.oh.us/students-families-commu
    nities/lau_resource_center/Word/Ohio20ELP20Stand
    ards20-20April20200620.doc
  • Examine Reading and Writing content standards
  • How do they compare to the English Language Arts
    standards?
  • How would you assess your ELL students
    proficiency level based upon these standards.

25
Academic Systems
Behavior Systems
26
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27
Tier ICore Curriculum
28
Some Factors Affecting Second Language Acquisition
  • Motivation
  • First language development
  • Language distance and attitude
  • Access to the language
  • Age
  • Personality and learning style
  • Peers and role models
  • Quality of instruction

29
Elements of Effective Instruction
  • Increased opportunities to respond
  • Modeling
  • Error correction
  • Feedback about progress
  • Contingencies for accurate performance

30
Elements of Effective Interventions
  • Increased opportunities to respond
  • Modeling
  • Error correction
  • Feedback about progress
  • Contingencies for accurate performance

31
Critical Components of Reading Instruction for
ELL students
  • Word recognition (phonics)
  • Vocabulary
  • Comprehension
  • Speech

32
Decoding versus Comprehension
  • Less than 1 of students who are fluent at
    decoding are diagnosed with comprehension
    difficulties (Good, University of Oregon).

33
Sheltered instruction (SI) Observation Protocol
(SIOP)
  • After 5 years of collaboration with practicing
    teachers, CREDE researchers developed a model of
    high quality sheltered instruction, known as the
    SIOP model. This model takes into account the
    special language development needs of English
    language learners which distinguishes it from
    high quality non-sheltered teaching.
  • A study conducted to establish the validity and
    reliability of the SIOP found that the instrument
    is a highly reliable and valid measure of
    sheltered instruction (Guarino, Echevarria,
    Short, Schick, Forbes, Rueda, 2001).

34
Sheltered instruction (SI) Observation Protocol
(SIOP)
  • 1997-98-researchers compared ELL students in
    classes whose teachers had been trained in
    implementing the SIOP to a high degree to a
    control group (taught by teachers not trained in
    SIOP) using a prompt that required narrative
    writing. ELL students in the SIOP classes
    demonstrated significantly higher writing scores
    than the control group.
  • 1998-99the study was replicated using a prompt
    that required expository writing. Again, ELL
    students in the SIOP classes demonstrated
    significantly higher writing scores than the
    control group and made greater gains from the
    pre-test to the post-test.

35
Sheltered instruction (SI) Observation Protocol
(SIOP)
  • The Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol
    provides concrete examples of the features of
    sheltered instruction that can enhance and expand
    teachers instructional practice.

36
Sheltered instruction (SI) Observation Protocol
(SIOP)
  • The protocol is composed of thirty items grouped
    into eight main components
  • Preparationexamines the lesson planning process,
    including the language and content objectives,
    the use of supplementary materials and the
    meaningfulness of the activities.
  • Building Backgroundfocuses on making connections
    with students background experiences and prior
    learning and developing their academic
    vocabulary.
  • Comprehensible inputconsiders adjusting teacher
    speech, modeling academic tasks, and using
    multimodal techniques to enhance comprehension.
  • Strategiesemphasizes teaching learning
    strategies to students, scaffolding instruction,
    and promoting higher order thinking skills.

37
Sheltered instruction (SI) Observation Protocol
(SIOP)
  • Interactionencouraging elaborated speech and to
    group students appropriately for language and
    content development.
  • Practice/Application provides activities to
    extend language and content learning.
  • Lesson Deliveryensures teachers present a lesson
    that meets the planned objectives.
  • Review/Assessmentconsiders whether the teacher
    reviewed the key language and content concepts,
    assessed student learning, and provided feedback
    to students on their output.

38
SIOP Features in a Lesson Plan
  • Preparation
  • Adaptation of content
  • Links to background
  • Links to past learning
  • Strategies incorporated
  • Integration of processes
  • Reading
  • Writing
  • Speaking
  • Listening
  • Scaffolding
  • Modeling
  • Guided practice
  • Independent practice
  • Comprehensible input
  • Application
  • Hands-on
  • Meaningful
  • Linked to objectives
  • Promotes engagement
  • Grouping Options
  • Whole class
  • Small groups
  • Partners
  • Independent
  • Assessment
  • Individual
  • Group
  • Written
  • Oral

39
Vocabulary Development
  • Summary of the Research
  • Self-selected reading as a leisure activity
    increases vocabulary development (Anderson,
    1996).
  • Likelihood of learning an unfamiliar word while
    reading is 1 in 20. The likelihood increases to 1
    in 10 when children read easy narratives and
    decreases to near zero when difficult expositions
    are read (Shin, 2006).
  • Independent reading appears to be a far more
    important source of vocabulary growth than direct
    vocabulary instruction (Shin, 2006).
  • Almost two-thirds of the typical childs annual
    vocabulary growth comes as the natural
    consequence of reading books, magazines, and
    newspapers (Anderson, Wilson, and Fielding
    (1988).

40
Research on Imagery as Elaboration (Marzano
Pickering, 2005)
Students who used imagery to learn vocabulary,
on average, performed
of studies
37 percentile points higher than
students who kept repeating definitions
6
students who were using the terms in sentences.
21 percentile points higher than
4
41
Vocabulary Strategies
  • Choose one of the websites and share with the
    listserve or the instructor a useful strategy you
    learned
  • www.ncrel.org/litweb/vocabulary.php
  • http//www.justreadnow.com/strategies/vocabulary.h
    tm
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