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Unit 3 American Individualism

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Title: Unit 3 American Individualism


1
Unit 3 American Individualism
  • Welcome

2
Business Matters
  • Names
  • Concerns/feedback
  • Facilities
  • Todays schedule

3
English Learners in the ELA ClassroomUnderstandi
ng ESL
4
WHAT EXACTLY IS ESL ANYWAY?
5
ESLEnglish as a Second Language
  • English as a Second Language is a set of
    strategies used to teach English language skills
    to students whose first language is not English.
    ESL instruction includes building on skills that
    students have acquired in their first language.
    Activities for ESL instruction are hands-on,
    visually-rich and applications-based.

6
LEGALLY SPEAKINGWhat does the law say about ESL
and ESL programs?
7
The Elementary and Secondary Education Act (Title
VII) 1968
  • Created bilingual education programs that
  • Teach English
  • Provide access to the core curriculum through the
    home language while students are gaining English
    language proficiency.

8
HISD Board Policy for Multilingual Programs
(effective July 22, 1999)
  • Goals
  • Compliance with state and federal laws
  • Emphasis on student achievement
  • Emphasis on English reading proficiency
  • Implement consistent curriculum/assessment
  • Increase parental involvement
  • Encourage fluency in 2 languages for all students

9
De-mystifying ESL
10
What are the different levels of ESL?
  • BeginningLevel 1
  • IntermediateLevel 2
  • AdvancedLevel 3
  • Pre-literateLevel 4
  • TransitionalLevel 5

11
What might a beginning student understand?
  • Roller coaster cars are pulled to the top of the
    first hill by a chain. Then gravity moves the
    car for the rest of the ride. The plunge down
    the first hill builds up enough speed for the
    cars to get up the next hill and so on until the
    end of the ride.

12
In other words
  • _______cars are_____ ___ ___ top __
    _____first____ ___ _ ______. ___ ______ _____
    _____ ____car ___ _____ ____ ____ _____ _____.
    ____ _____ down ____ first___ ____ ____ ____ ____
    ____ ____ cars____ ____ ___ __ _____ _____ _____
    _____ _____ _____ ___end _____ _____ _____.

13
What might an intermediate student understand?
  • Roller coaster cars are pulled to the top of the
    first hill by a chain. Then gravity moves the
    car for the rest of the ride. The plunge down
    the first hill builds up enough speed for the
    cars to get up the next hill and so on until the
    end of the ride.

14
In other words.
  • Roller coaster cars are ____ ____ ____top of the
    first hill__ _ _____. Then _____ moves the car
    for the rest of the _____. The _____ down the
    first hill ______ __ enough speed for the cars __
    ___ __ the next hill ___ __ __ _____ the end of
    ____ _____.

15
What might an advanced student understand?
  • Roller coaster cars are pulled to the top of the
    first hill by a chain. Then gravity moves the
    car for the rest of the ride. The plunge down
    the first hill builds up enough speed for the
    cars to get up the next hill and so on until the
    end of the ride.

16
In other words
  • Roller coaster cars are pulled to the top of the
    first hill by a chain. Then gravity moves the
    car for the rest of the ride. The _____ down the
    first hill ______ __ enough speed for the cars __
    ___ the next hill and __ __ until the end of the
    ride.

17
Name That Test.
  • Identification Criteria
  • CAT 6 (reading), IPTIdea Proficiency Test (oral
    language)--administered to new students who
    indicate a language other than English on the
    Home Language Survey. Students who score below
    40 on either oral language or reading are
    identified as LEP (Monthly)
  • RPTE--Reading Proficiency Test in English
    (administered to ESL students in grades 3-12 who
    did not score in the advanced level on the
    previous years RPTE) (March 22-26, 2004)
  • Stanford/AprendaBeginning level ESL students
    take the Aprenda, all other ESL students take
    Stanford (See testing calendar)
  • TAKSHISD grants a one year exemption from TAKS,
    after one year, all ESL students take English
    TAKS (See testing calendar)

18
ESL Program Goals
  • Provide a smaller, inclusive learning environment
    to support the affective needs of immigrant
    students
  • Acquire and develop English listening, speaking,
    reading and writing skills
  • Develop academic language and core subject
    knowledge in native language or through ESL
    methodology
  • Mainstream into regular program

19
Who are these children and where do they come
from?
20
Demographic DataHISD Profile 2002-03
  • 210,964 Students
  • 57.2 Hispanic
  • 30.5 African American
  • 9.3 White
  • 3 Asian
  • 0.1 Native American
  • 38,744 (18.3) in Bilingual Education
  • 16,281 (7.7) in ESL
  • 60,466 (28.5) LEP
  • 13,979 (6.6) Immigrant (born outside US/less
    than 3 years)
  • 1,447 (.7) Migrant
  • 162,985 (77.3) Free/ Reduced Lunch
  • Major Language Groups of LEP Students
  • 94.5 Spanish
  • 1.9 Asian
  • 2 Urdu, Arabic Russian
  • 150 Countries of Origin

21
Student Countries of Origin

Pakistan 348 India
297 Nigeria 210 Philippines
207 Cuba 195 Nicaragua
162 Venezuela 163
El Salvador 2,030 Mexico
24,593 Honduras 1,473 Vietnam
618 Guatemala 486 China
461 Columbia 352
22
How will I recognize these students in my
classroom?
23
Characteristics of ESL Students
  • Usually speakers of other languages may be
    refugees
  • Unfamiliar with the American school system
  • Participants of various religions
  • Representative of the entire spectrum in academic
    ability and experience
  • Reluctant to ask for help or clarification
  • Caught in a cultural conflict between home
    values and U. S./school values

24
How do I get to know these students?
25
  • Find out basic facts about the children
  • Become aware of basic features of the students
    cultures
  • Religion, customs, foods, etc.
  • Obtain information about prior school experiences
  • Are they literate in their home languages?

26
How do I make the students feel comfortable in my
classroom?
27
  • Create a feeling of safety and security
  • Assign a personal buddy
  • Seat students in the middle or front of the
    classroom
  • Repeat classroom routines

28
Whats available to assist me with ESL
instruction?
  • Support
  • Materials
  • Professional Development
  • Resources

29
Support for ESL Teachers
  • Mentor teacher or another ESL teacher
  • Bilingual Instructional Supervisors
  • Lead Teachers
  • School program administrator
  • Department Chair/Cluster or Team leader
  • Multilingual Department personnel

30
Materials for ESL Teachers
  • State-adopted books for all required ESL courses
  • ROCsSee Curriculum or Multilingual website
  • CLEAR/Model Lessons
  • TEKSSee Multilingual website link to TEA
  • Supplemental Best Practice GuidesSee
    Multilingual website

31
Professional Development for ESL Teachers
  • HISD Professional Development resources
  • Outside resources such as Region IV, TEA
  • Campus-based professional development
  • ELA Curriculum Department training for model
    lesson coordinators, department chairs and lead
    teachers

32
Professional Resources
33
Resources
  • Adopted textbooks (Secondary)
  • Making Connections 1, 2, and 3
  • Voices in LiteratureBronze, Silver and Gold
  • (Heinle and Heinle)
  • Teacher resource kits
  • Model Lessons
  • CLEAR Online
  • HISD Multilingual Department
  • HISD Professional Development
  • Region IV Education Service Center
  • TEA

34
Looking at the Lessons
  • Unit 3
  • American Individualism

35
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 1
  • Historical context
  • Vocabulary development- using reference materials
  • Metaphors, similes, and analogies
  • Questioning Strategy

36
Questioning Strategy
  • Choose a poem from the packet
  • As an individual or group, read through the poem
    and note questions you have about it
  • Apply different levels of questions to poem

37
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 2
  • Denotation/Connotation
  • Imagery
  • Tone
  • Try this yourself

38
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 3
  • Main Idea
  • Summarizing
  • Personal essay

39
A TAKS Moment
  • Provide students examples of a variety of writing
  • Model the writing process
  • Review rubrics frequently
  • What does the rubric mean?

40
TAKS Writing Rubric
  • Root of rubrics
  • PROGRESSION of thought
  • Sentence to sentence
  • Paragraph to paragraph
  • Relationship of ideas across paragraphs
  • Transitional sentences and thoughts

41
Voice
  • The paper has a face
  • Personality on paper
  • ATTITUDE
  • 7th graders in field testing best at bringing
    organizational methods that showed good
    writingnatural voice

42
Looking at the Lessons
  • Read through Lessons 4, 5, 6. What planning do
    you need to do to implement these?
  • What would you modify?

43
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 4
  • Revision (Adjective phrases/Allusions)

44
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 5- Poetry Workshop
  • Poetry Analysis- Making Inferences
  • Speaker/Tone
  • Reference Materials

45
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 6
  • Introduction to Poe and American Gothic
  • Word Origins/Word Structure Analysis
  • Imagery Rhyme

46
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 7
  • The Raven
  • Literary Analysis- Inquiry Questions
  • Requires thoughtful preplanning

47
Looking at the Lessons
  • Lesson 8
  • Unit exam
  • Project presentations

48
Skills Menu
  • Read Alouds

49
Read Alouds
  • My suggested books
  • McDougal Littell suggested books
  • Holt essays
  • English III bibliography

50
Independent Reading
51
Supplementary Instructional Guides
  • SIGS/English II Implementation Calendars
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