Title: English Language Learners & Library Partnerships
1English Language Learners Library Partnerships
- Ruth Hall, ACL, Earl Haig SS Library, TDSB
- Sandy Katz, Instructional Leader, ESL/ELD, TDSB
- Session 1808
- Ontario Library Association Superconference, Feb
27, 2010
2Workshop Focus
- Relationships with ESL students
- ESL curriculum and research tasks
- Connections to a Research Model
- Building a skills continuum with research
assignments - Modifications and accommodations for ESL learners
- Other Issues Differentiated End Products
3What does it mean..
4Building Relationships
- The Library is a safe place
- T-L connects with many classes, subjects, grades
- Support students
- Help with assignments, resources, avoiding
plagiarism - Support teachers
- Help with assignments, resources, avoiding
plagiarism
Library as ESL advocate
5Curriculum Rationale
- Inquiry is at the heart of learning in all
subject areas. p.52
- In ESL and ELD courses, students will develop
their ability to pose questions and to explore a
variety of answers to those questions p.52 - ESL and ELD Ontario Curriculum grades 9 -12 (2007)
6Locating Information
ESLAO, ESLBO, ESLCO
- Locate key information relating to the school and
community in a variety of simple texts - Locate information for a variety of purposes in
simplified or adapted informational and graphic
texts selected in collaboration with the
teacher-librarian - Locate information on classroom topics from
appropriate research materials selected in
consultation with the teacher-librarian, and
acknowledge their sources
7Extract Organize Information
ESLAO, ESLBO, ESLCO
- Extract and organize key facts from information
texts designed or adapted for beginning learners
of English - Extract information from informational and
graphic texts designed or adapted for English
language learners, and organize it using a
graphic organizer - Extract information from a variety of sources and
organize it using appropriate outlines and
graphic organizers
8Critical Thinking
ESLAO, ESLBO, ESLCO
- Identify the sources of information used
- Compare information from a number of sources on a
topic for a classroom research assignment - Identify sources of information used and evaluate
them for reliability and point of view
9Inquiry ESL Friendly Assignments
- Teacher-librarian offers help with
- Creating or modifying the assignment
- Finding resources at the right level
- Co-teaching
- Assessment
10Library Resources
- Elementary resources which can be modified to
hide the junior audience - Sources with headings and graphics
- Online encyclopedias and reference books
- Online news articles (different levels)
- Reluctant reader materials
- Knowledge Ontario databases
- Elementary KO resources
- Recommended websites (pathfinders)
- Public Library
11Considerations with English Language Learners
(ELL)
- Support literacy skills in first language
- Expect use of first language
- Silent period
- Opportunities to demonstrate what they know
- Different end products, not always language based
- Teach reading strategies (features of text)
- Projects should support broad language
acquisition - Move beyond mere copying to critical thinking
- Providing resources as a way to focus students
12What is school like in other places?
- Learning environment
- Role of teacher
- Type of learning - K/U
- Challenges with critical thinking
- Plagiarism issues
13Research Model have kids had this kind of
teaching?
A MODEL FOR INQUIRY
Together for Learning school libraries and the
emergence of the Learning Commons a vision for
the 21st century. OSLA. (2010)
14Why a research model works for ELLs
- Provides a structure or map for students
- consistency and common language
- transferable to all subjects and grade
- framework for
- designing projects
- developing skills
- assessing evaluating
15Stage 1 Exploring(Preparing for Research)
- Starts in the classroom
- Introduce content
- Introduce skills
- Engage interest
16ESL A Stage 1 Preparing
- The Animals Project
- Start with classroom activities about riddles
answer question about wolves - Students learn how to answer questions on a
nonfiction topic using a graphic organizer - Engage interest using visuals which allow
students to engage prior knowledge and to choose
topics - Quick write (from the picture prior knowledge)
- Next step - research in the library
17ESL B Stage 1 Preparing
- The Unexplained Mysteries Project
- In classroom read Marie Celeste
- Practice writing and answering 5 W research
questions - Brainstorm - what other unexplained mysteries do
you know? - View slideshow of mystery topics
- Guess what it is
- What its called
- What makes this a mystery
- Choose 1 mystery to research in the library
- Write research questions
18ESLC Stage 1 - Preparing
- Inventors and their Inventions Project
- In classroom teacher introduces the inventor,
Alexander Graham Bell - Use the question matrix to create questions about
Bell under the headings - The inventor
- The process
- The invention
- Read a simple info text on Bell to find answers
- Formative activity
- View CBC Website - choose an invention
19The Greatest Canadian Invention
20Using the Research Process Putting it into
Context
- Ensures students understand the research project
- Activates students prior knowledge and higher
level thinking skills - Acknowledges the need for accessible resources
- Diminishes cut and paste research assignments
- Teaches students a transferable skill
21Using the Research Process Putting it into
Context cont
- High Yield strategies
- Questions, Cues, and Advance Organizers - 22
(Marzano) - Note-taking Summarizing - 34 (Marzano)
- Other than attendance, the greatest impact on
student achievement comes from non-fiction
writing (Reeves)
22After Stage 1 A through C
- Take some time to notice how the projects fits
into the steps of the research process - Use the graphic organizer to identify the
scaffolding of skills from level A to C
23Modifications Accommodations
- Working with ELL students who are not in ESL
classes - adaptation
- accommodations /or modifications
- OR Differentiated Instruction (DI)
24What is Differentiated Instruction (DI)
- (Based on Carol Tomlinsons model of
differentiated instruction)
Differentiated Instruction
Product
Process
Content
25ELL Considerations
- Research in first language (background)
- Building literacy skills in both languages
- KO - translation
- MP3
- A note about Wikipedia
26Knowledge Ontario
- Gale Cengage - Virtual Reference Collection
Science of Everyday Things
27Writing Questions Putting it into Context
- Taps into students prior knowledge
- Clarifies/reinforces knowledge and
- understanding
- Provides a low-risk environment where ELLs can
share ideas and participate in consensus-building
tasks
28Writing-to-learn strategy Graffiti
- Put students in groups of 3
- Choose from 6 WH charts to stand beside
- Write research questions for the topic The
Bermuda Triangle under your wh heading - Every 3 minutes move to the next chart.
- Read the questions on the chart and add your own.
- Go back to where you started. Label the questions
thick and thin. - Choose the three best questions and present them
to the group.
29Other Issues Plagiarism
- How to minimize copy paste responses
- Answering questions, not general topics
- Being engaged in the topic
- Use of visuals to activating prior knowledge
- Formative activities in the classroom
- Student generated questions, not teacher
- Monitor the process in stages (e.g. notes by
source, storyboard planner)
30Other Issues Presentations
- Using Storyboard organizers to plan effective
presentations - Why breaking down tasks is essential
- How storyboarding works
- Understanding the difference between slide
content and spoken content - Plan first - use computer after
31Different End Products
- The process remains the same but the outcome can
be different - Provide a situation - zoo guide, invention
convetion - create a podcast to listen to at each station
- Use comic life to publish your mystery on the web
- Forest of Reading - class book club in wiki
-
32White Pine Wiki
tabs make navigation simple
33The goals of the White Pine Award program
- promote reading for enjoyment
- make students aware of Canadian issues addressed
in young adult books - provide opportunities for students to discuss the
nominated titles in an authentic, academic manner
34Student responses
- When you dont feel the school and class
environment, I think you feel more comfortable so
you can share ideas easier. - We need to use formal English we cant use MSN
language or swearing words. And it can correct
our bad habits.
35Benefits of ESL-Library Relationship
- Build student trust
- Ongoing support, all subjects
- Safe haven
- Skill building, all grades
- Access to technology
- Support new
- experienced teachers
http//balancingacts.wordpress.com/
36The Exit Slip Strategy Final Reflections
- Reflection Framework 1
- 3 important ideas that I want to remember
- 2 things I would like to know more about
- 1 idea/strategy that I will implement with my
students -
-
37Thank you very much!
ESL Library - partners in student
success