Title: Reading with English Language Learners
1Reading with English Language Learners
We learn language, we learn through language,
and we learn about language. (Freeman Freeman,
2004)
- Dr. Susan Rutledge, Ph.D
- Curriculum and Instruction in TESOL
- woyaoni_at_yahoo.com
2Empathy Exercise
- Close Your Eyes Listen
- Song
- Open your eyes
- How do you feel? Lets listen again!
- Now how do you feel? What made this experience
different?
3READING
4Who are ELL learners?
- ELL learners come from a variety of backgrounds
- Spanish speakers represent the largest number of
ELL learners nation wide. - Some are 1st generation, some are 2nd generation,
and some are 3rd generation. - They can be from a foreign country and they can
be born in the U.S.
- They may or may not have an educational
background. - They may or may not be literate in their native
language. - They may or may not be able to write in their
native language
5 English/ Second Language Reading is Complex
Phonological processing abilities in English
Oral language abilities in English
Print Related abilities/ experiences in English
Background Knowledge in English
LITERACY IN NATIVE LANGUAGE
6What Can Teachers Do?
- Have a deep Understanding of English?
- What does this mean?
- Phonology, Morphology, Syntax, Semantics,
Pragmatics - Understand First and Second Language Acquisition
- First Language Stages
- Second Language Stages
- Language is a moving Target (Levine, 2008)
- Social English
- 1-3 years
- Academic English
- 5-7 years
- Teaching any Subject requires teaching the
language, vocabulary, and organizational
structures
7What Can Teachers Do?
- Understand and utilize your ELL learners
proficiency level to guide your instruction. - What is proficiency? The degree of skill with
which a person can read, write, speak, or
understand a language. (Richards Schmidt,
2002) - How do you know your students proficiency level?
- ASK the English language learner teacher/ tutor
- Understand the Proficiency Assessment Used
- CAN DO Descriptors
- Informed
- Ask questions!!
- Has the student gone to school in his/ her home
country? - Is the student literate in his/ her native
language? - What is your students English proficiency?
- What does the proficiency test examine?
8What Can Teachers Do?
- Limited English Proficiency affects learning
assessment - Not familiar to them culturally and
linguistically - Reading is a cognitive and socially constructed
pursuit - Incorporate students cultures
- Multicultural Literature
- Multicultural Video
- Compare English to the Students native language
- Oral
- Written
- Communicate clearly
- Does not mean talking loudly to student!!
- Clear goals expectations
- Collaborative
- Work with the ELL provider
- Talk with the parents!!!!!!!
9Cultural Influences
- Culture produces and develops background
knowledge, words, sentences, and text structures - Spanish speaking students are accustomed to a
phonetically stable alphabetic spelling in which
each letter represents a sound - English readers use less consistent letter and
word cues to determine the meaning and the
grammatical function of a word. - The Chinese character system has no link between
speech sounds and the written symbol. - Reading directionality also varies among
languages. - Languages such as English and Russian are read
left to right, top to bottom, while Arabic is
read right to left. - Making inferences, where students challenge or
reinterpret text, is a critical reading
comprehension skill for American readers, but is
considered inappropriate and even disrespectful,
in other cultures.
10Oral Language
- Classroom Talk is IMPORTANT!
- Multiple opportunities to talk with peers and
teachers - Primary source of information and language about
the topics being discussed - Learners internalize and use to express their own
meanings. - adaptations may include speaking slowly, using
short sentences, paraphrasing the same message
several different ways, and explaining word
meanings. - use gestures, pictures, and props to make meaning
more clear. - Teachers need to model how adults converse about
books. - Literacy requires large blocks of time for
reading, but it also must provide for discussion,
conversations, reflection, and revision
(Allington Cunningham, 2002).
11Word Level
- Word Study Activities Help ESL students
understand and use Academic Language - Content Specific
- Plasma, Square,
- Other Vocabulary
- Directions, fill-in the blank,
- Factor, compare, similar
- Words that have multiple meanings such as wave
- Wave of immigrants vs. Ocean wave
- Examples
- Vocabulary
- ClosedCaptioning Television
- offers a novel experience for students to
interact with the spoken and printed word
simultaneously. - TPR helps the least proficient ELL students
actively and physically understand vocabulary and
concepts. - The idea is for the teacher to choose words or
concepts that are easily demonstrated physically
such as commands, movement directions,
prepositions, and body parts.
12Whole Text
- Paired Reading
- pairing a skilled reader with a less-skilled
reader. - The skilled reader demonstrates appropriate
reading rate, inflection, and pausing for the
less-skilled reader - The skilled reader in each pair reads the
connected text first. Then the less-skilled
reader reads the same text - The less-skilled reader has a role model of
fluent reading, as well as repeated exposure to
text - Writing to Read Gaining Knowledge from Texts
- Helps meaning construction and comprehension
- Formal writing such as personal narrative,
comparison/contrast, and expository compositions
assist ELL students make deeper connections to
their reading - Allows students to analyze and synthesize texts
- Think of your experience as an immigrant.
Describe a special experience you have had as an
immigrant? Why was it special? What did that
experience teach you about the immigrant
experience in the U.S? Relate your experience to
the section we read on immigration to the U.S.
13CARS Content Area Reading Strategies
- Content Texts are Expository
- What does this mean?
- Specific actions readers take to make meaning
from text. - Reading is like a conversation between author and
reader. - Authors make decisions about how to effectively
communicate through a piece of writing. - Readers use specific strategies to help them
understand what authors are trying to
communicate. - Before, During, and After Reading
- What are they?
- Higher order Thinking Skills/ Questions
- Reading Strategy
14Examples
- Dual Language Books
- Spelling City
- Sight Word Activities
- WordSift
- ESL Class Introduction
15Why?National Statistics
- ELL students comprise the fastest growing K-12
population in the U.S. (Reeves, 2002
Karabanerick Clemens-Noda, 2004) - 10.3 of K-12 population (Batalova, Fix,
Murray, 2006) - 44 of 4th grade ELLs scored below basic in
Math 70 scored below basic in Reading (NCES,
2007) - 69 of 8th grade ELLs scored below basic in
Math - 70 of 8th grade ELLs scored below basic in
Reading
16Mississippi ELL stats
- ELL Population Approximately 1 of total student
population - 75 free-reduced lunch
- 6 special education
- Number of years student has been an ELL
- Less than 1 11.2
- 1 year 18.3
- 2 years 19.3
- 3 or more years 29.2
- Monitored 22.1
- (Kasse, AMTESOL, 2008)
17MississippiReading Achievement on the MCT
(2005) (Percent of Students Scoring Proficient
or Advanced)
(Kasse, AMTESOL 2008)
18Conclusion
- Remember to think of the LANGUAGE first.
- words not only have direct and literal dictionary
meanings, but also have affective meanings and
connotative meanings - Crawl, Walk, Run
- Explain Demonstrate
- Practice
- Perform
- Improvement in reading skills depends mostly on
what students do with what they read how they
engage the text
19We are ALL Language Teachers
Doh-mo - ardei ga-toe
XIE XIE
Kamsa hamnida
THANK YOU!!!
GRACIAS
20Resources
- Colorin Colorado www.colorincolorado.com
- Mary Lou McCloskey www.mlmcc.com
- Chen Mora-Flores, (2006). Balanced Literacy
for English Language Learners, K-2. - Bear, Helman, Templeton, Invernizzi, Johnston,
(2007). Words Their Way with English Language
Learners Word Study for Phonics, Vocabulary,
and Spelling Instruction
21Resources
- Smallwood Haynes (2008). Singable books sing
and read your way to English proficiency. Center
for Applied Linguistics - Freeman Freeman (2004). Essential Linguistics
What you need to know to teach reading, ESL,
spelling, phonics, grammar. - Balanced Reading http//www.balancedreading.com/se
condlang.html - Dual Language Books http//thornwood.peelschools.o
rg/Dual/index.htm
22Resources
- Helman, L. Burns, M. (2008). What does oral
language have to do with it? Helping young
English language learners acquire a sight word
vocabulary. Reading Teacher, 62(1), pp.14-19. - Frys Word List http//w4.nkcsd.k12.mo.us/kcofer
/fry_words_pg.htm - Elementary Literacy http//knowledgeloom.org/pract
ice_basedoc.jsp?t1bpid1427aspect3location2
parentid1426bpinterid1426spotlightid1393test
flagyes1
23Resources
- Allington, R.L., Cunningham, P. (2002). Schools
that work (2nd ed.). New York Longman. - Mora, J.K. (1999) Using Multicultural
Literature to Teach Reading Processes
http//coe.sdsu.edu/people/jmora/MulticulturalLit/
- Hispanic American Images http//comminfo.rutgers.e
du/professional-development/childlit/ChildrenLit/h
ispanic.html
24Resources
- Asian American Images http//comminfo.rutgers.edu
/professional-development/childlit/ChildrenLit/asi
an.html - Word Sift http//www.wordsift.com/
- Kasper, L.F. (1996). Writing to read Enhancing
ESL students reading proficiency through written
response to text. TETYC - Kinsella, K. (2006). Academic Vocabulary
information.
25Resources
- Karabenick, S.A. Clemens-Noda, P.A. (2004).
Professional development implications of
teachers beliefs and attitudes toward English
language learners. Bilingual Research Journal,
28 (1), 55-75. Retrieved October 15, 2005, from
http//brj.asu.edu/content/vol28_no1/art4.pdf - Batalova, J., Fix, M., Murray, J. (2007).
Measures of change The democracy and literacy of
adolescent English learners -A report to Carnegie
Corporation of New York. Washington, DC
Migration Policy Institute. - Reeves, J. (2001). Secondary teachers attitudes
and perceptions of inclusion of ESL students in
mainstream classes. Doctoral dissertation.
Dissertation International Abstracts, (UMI No.
3062322)
26Resources
- Law and Eckes, (1995). Assessment and ESL A
Handbook for K-12 Teachers. - Using Paired Reading To Help ESL Students Become
Fluent And Accurate Readers Reading Improvement,
Summer, 2001 by Daqi Li, Sandra Nes - Capps, R., Fix, M., Murray, J., Ost, J., Passel,
J. Herwantoro, S. (2005). The new demography
of Americas Schools Immigration and the No
Child Left Behind. Washington, DC The Urban
Institute