Title: Six Key Strategies for Secondary Teachers of English
1Six Key Strategies for Secondary Teachers of
English Language Learners Achieving Parallel
Goals in Academic Literacy Instruction
Rain S. Bongolan Development Coordinator ELL
Adolescent Literacy Instruction New Teacher
Center _at_ UC Santa Cruz
Alliance for Excellent Education Adolescent
Literacy Breakfast Forum December 6th, 2005
Washington, D.C.
2Essential Questions
- What and how should secondary teachers learn to
advance the academic literacy of secondary
English Learners and former English Learners?
- What are the parallels between effective
instruction for English Learners and strategies
that ensure ALL secondary students acquire
academic literacy?
3The New Teacher Center _at_ UCSC
MISSION
MISSION
To improve student learning by supporting the
development of an inspired, dedicated, and
highly-qualified teaching force.
4New Teacher Center Induction Model
Quality Teaching and Site Leadership
Observing and Giving Feedback
Student Achievement
Analyzing Student Work
Building School-wide Collaborative Practices
Ongoing Assessment of Teacher Practice
Collaboratively Reviewing Comprehensive Student
Data
Planning Standards-based and Academic Literacy
Instruction
5Who will teach our secondary students to reach
the highest levels of academic literacy?
- Within the next five years, districts across the
country will need to hire enough beginning
teachers to replace up to 50 of all current
secondary teachers! - Beginning principals are often hired to lead
schools that are struggling to close the
achievement gap. - Few states currently require secondary credential
candidates to take courses in literacy
instruction methods needed to advance English
Learners or struggling readers.
6What our ELL students tell us
- When I'm in school, I don't speak English only
if teachers ask me something. I'm scare of them
to laugh at me when I don't pronouns a word
right. With my friends I speak Spanish because
I'm more cofidence to talk in Spanish as I said
before I'm not confidence talking in English
because I could not have a conbersation with
somebody because sometimes I got stock with words
that I don't know how to said them in English.
I'm not confidence speaking English. But I do my
best to learning English." - 10th grade Limited English Proficient (LEP)
Student - Early Advanced level
7Am I teaching content or language?
Students, please paraphrase the following If
cultures and civilizations are the tectonic
plates of world history, frontiers are the places
where they scrape against each other and cause
convulsive change. Felipe Fernandez-Armesto (Qu
ote on the cover of a 10th grade World History
text)
8What do secondary students need to know and do so
they can read and respond to academic language?
- Example Academic language skills for
understanding this quote - Social science and physical science concepts,
high-utility academic words and phrases,
subject-specific vocabulary - Impact on the meaning of a phrase based on
recognizing markers for hypothesis statements
If (then) - Recognizing and interpreting phrasal verbs
scrape against, causechange - Interpreting analogous relationships across
subject matter - Interpreting figurative language metaphors
- Thinking processes specific to interpreting and
paraphrasing
9NTCs synthesis What secondary teachers need to
know and do to advance students academic
language development
GUIDED INTERACTION
METACOGNITION and AUTHENTIC ASSESSMENT
VOCABULARY and LANGUAGE DEVELOPMENT
Accelerating Academic Language Development New
Teacher Centers Six Key Strategies for Teachers
of English Language Learners
MODELING, GRAPHIC ORGANIZERS, and VISUALS
EXPLICIT INSTRUCTION
MEANING-BASED CONTEXT and UNIVERSAL THEMES
101 Vocabulary and Language Development (V/LD)
- Explains essential vocabulary prior to engaging
students in text or task Clarifies unfamiliar
phrases, idioms, cultural references, multiple
meanings - Provides appropriate support based on knowledge
of students stage of English language development
112 Guided Interaction (GI)
- Structures a variety of motivational tasks to
promote speaking, listening, reading and writing
academic language - Flexibly groups students and provides resources
that clarifies and guides students interaction
and response to text
123 Meta-cognition andAuthentic Assessment (M/AA)
- Teaches a variety of thinking processes for
reading including identifying reading purpose,
pre-reading and monitoring comprehension - Facilitates multiple opportunities for students
to demonstrate and assess their understanding of
key concepts
134 Explicit Instruction (EI)
- Clarifies key ideas, builds students background
knowledge, and provides additional resources that
facilitate comprehension and task completion - Explains the processes for specific thinking
skills e.g. summarizing, interpreting, writing
applications
145 Meaning-based Contexts and Universal Themes
(MBC/UT)
- Makes new concepts or language forms
understandable by introducing them with
culturally-responsive resources or activities - Elicits students prior knowledge and builds
motivation by connecting new concepts to high
interest themes and authentic purposes for
learning
156 Modeling, Visuals, andGraphic Organizers
(M/V/GO)
- Demonstrates how to apply academic language
skills e.g. word analysis, identifying text
purpose, pre-writing - Provides visuals and resources that graphically
highlight essential concepts and clarify student
tasks
16Multiple entry points Supporting teachers,
mentors, and administrators to improve the
quality of academic language instruction
New Teacher ProjectELL Workshops
NTC professional development models featuring
several language development resources
includingSix Key Strategies for Teachers of
English Learners
NTC Online Course ELL Success
Mentoring for English Language Learner
Success!MELLS
Secondary Content and Academic Literacy
EducationSCALE
NTCs Year Two Mentor TrainingFormative
Assessment System
Site Leadership Development trainingImproving
Student Achievement for English Learners
17Moving language instruction theory to teacher
practice
- Teachers receive comprehensive support from
subject-alike mentors trained in language
development methods! - Beyond strategiesTeacher and mentor engage in
structured inquiry Students, content,
instruction, context
18Mentoring with the Six Key StrategiesObserved
Impact on Instructional Quality
- Increased
- Modeling and direct instruction of reading and
writing processes - Reference to students socio-cultural and
linguistic backgrounds in planning tasks and
selecting appropriate materials - Opportunities and modalities by which students
are able to demonstrate and self-assess learning - Use of the breadth of language development
strategies
19Teaching with the Six Key StrategiesObserved
Impact on English Learners
- Developmental Reading
- Increased motivation to persist with reading
tasks fostered by links to compelling themes and
texts - Increased amount of time reading and persisting
in written responses to text
- Algebra I, II
- Increased participation and homework completion
with new skills for understanding directions and
other text features - Increased number of word problems attempted
20Teaching with the Six Key StrategiesObserved
Impact on English Learners
- History/Social Sciences
- Increased engagement using new skills for word
analysis and reading comprehension - Increased motivation and time reading fostered by
development of background knowledge, link to
culturally-responsive themes and resources
- Sciences
- Increased persistence in reading tasks with
instruction for reading procedures, graphics - Increased background knowledge w/ access to
visuals plus developing vocabulary logs of key
concepts procedural terms
21Current Challenges
- New secondary teachers teaching classes with
higher numbers of English Learners or struggling
readers - Secondary mentors lack recent training or
experience with language development instruction - Many secondary contexts resistant to providing
language-supportive instruction beyond ESL
programs - Identifying the specific impact of Six Key
Strategies among NTCs array of mentoring and
site leadership resources
22Possibilities
- Research grants examining secondary teacher
development and the impact of mentoring with a
language development focus - Piloting series for Small Learning Communities
with D.O.E. regional labs Differentiated
Instruction for Academic Literacy Development
23RecommendationAdvance adolescent literacy via a
language development approach in all classes
- All secondary students need similar instruction
to learn content-specific, grade level academic
English A second language for most native
speakers!
- ELL students need language-based instruction to
learn academic English in specific content areas
In actuality, a third language for non-native
speakers!
24Recommendation Ensure high quality mentoring
- Every beginning secondary teacher should be
supported by a well-trained mentor versed in - Academic language and English language
development methods (Reading instruction
Plus!) - Best practices recommended for theircontent
area - Standards-linked learning using methods for
differentiated instruction - Comprehensive mentoring skills provided
one-on-one to advance literacy instruction and
teacher development overall
25New Teacher Center University of California Santa
Cruz