Title: Saddlebacks ESL Diversity: Meeting the Challenge Roni Lebauer, ESL
1Saddlebacks ESL Diversity Meeting the
ChallengeRoni Lebauer, ESL
2ESL students a heterogeneous group
- In what ways?
- Ethnicity, religion, language, current age,
socioeconomic situation, current work - But also...
- Age of arrival to U.S.
- Educational background in L1
- Attendance/graduation from U.S. high schools
- Degree of cultural assimilation
- Degree of interaction with non-standard Englishes
3ESL student variation
- Some
- Learned English outside of U.S. or
English-speaking environments - Learned English in a sequenced and managed manner
(even in the U.S.), while surrounded by limited
English input - Developed L1 literacy before attempting L2
literacy - These students typically have the meta-language
to talk about grammar and language skills. They
fit in well in ESL classes at Saddleback and
identify as ESL students. - Some
- Learned English in U.S. or English-speaking
environment - Learned English primarily by ear and through
experience through multiple means (interaction,
classes including High School, media) - Received lots of language input but less
sequenced and managed - These students may not have the meta-language
to talk about grammar and language skills and may
or may not identify as ESL students.
4Generational differences
- 1st generation Generation 1.5 2nd generation
- Adult immigrants Childhood
immigrants Children of
OR immigrants - Foreign Born US born and
raised in U.S. born -
L1 enclave - Foreign-educated Partially foreign educated U.S.
educated - or U.S. educated but
-
ESL identified - L1 dominant L1 or
English dominant English dominant -
possible interrupted -
literacy in both languages
5Gen. 1.5 Informal Language Acquisition and
Language Practices
- Gen 1.5 may have acquired English informally
through aural and oral learning - ?
- Well-developed communicative strategies but
- Non-salient grammatical structures are missing
from linguistic repertoire and limits on
academic, formal, or register code-switching
ability - Gen. 1.5 may have acquired English in communities
where their primary or only interlocutors are
urban dialect speakers or other ESL speakers. - ?
- They may have influences from multiple
ethnic/regional dialects with dialect features
that look ESL-like - They may have possible fossilization of
learner-like errors
6Gen. 1.5 basic skills students differ from
foreign/EFL students because
- They dont see themselves as foreign
- They have native-sounding oral/aural skills (even
if highly informal or non-standard) - They have typically attended high school here
- They have not necessarily learned English in a
progressive sequence or in managed segments, but
rather have learned by ear - They have little meta-language to talk about
grammar - Their writing mistakes are often those that can
be attributed to ear versus language
interference or typical language acquisition
progression.
7An example of orally-acquired writing
- Whats the funniest thing youve seen or
experienced in the U.S.? - One of the funiest moment in my life happen when
a was on the park. Just playing soccer with some
friend when a another friend bring his American
friends. I just haven a few months on California
and a did speak English really well but I tried
to have a conversation with her. Everything was
OK. We are laught and haven fun.
8An example of Gen 1.5 high school grad Arrival
Age 9 Yrs in U.S. 9
- Imagine that you could have some special ability
or quality that you do not now possess. What
quality or ability would you choose to have?
Explain and support your answer. - We all have some kind ability inside us. Well,
some of us could make our self rich, like with a
good singing voice or something. And other
people have different kinds a stuff they can do.
But anyway, even thought were all create it
equal but human is human, we are selfish, we
always want more. Since I am just like any other
human been, I wish I could wake up one morning
and have the ability to turn into an insect no
just kidding. I wish I have the ability to see
through objects.
9So who are your ESL student?And why does
knowing their unique situation matter?
- Do they identify themselves as ESL?
- Are they willing to take ESL classes?
- EASY ANSWER The ESL program offers 25 courses
from beginning to advanced in all skills. Send
students to any of our ESL faculty (C. Bander, K.
Smith, R. Lebauer, C. Lam) or a counselor for ESL
advice. - If not, why not? Is it lack of time, money,
willingness to accept the need, social
identification.? Would they take language
classes that werent identified as ESL but
included grammar, reading, and writing skills? - If they wont, how might they be willing to face
and deal with their academic language problems?
10What are some options besides ESL classes for
students to do?
- LAP (general language help or teacher-directed
activities for content courses) - On-line independent grammar activities (see LAP
website) - Supplemental instruction for content courses
(e.g. linked Psych 1 and ESL class) - ENG 310 lab
- Reading Labs ENG 332
- Grammar workshops offered for all.
11What can content teachers do to make classes more
accessible for ESL students?
- Give a short reading and writing content-based
evaluation early in the semester and direct
students for help early. - For traditional ESL students (with limited oral
skills), in particular - Be organized in your own presentation. Consider
a pre-lecture overview of what to expect. - Consider using Powerpoint or other organizers to
guide students to listening. - Speak clearly, not necessarily more slowly. Be
aware of idiomatic usage. - Give assignments well in advance for those highly
motivated ESL students who would start early,
knowing their limitations - Use CATs (short classroom assessment techniques)
that give you immediate feedback about students
learning. - Help Gen 1.5 recognize that there is a difference
between oral informal language and the language
they will hear, read, and produce in academic
environments. Discuss with them the importance
of developing that academic language, while
recognizing their aural/oral skills.
12What can English composition teachers do to help
Gen 1.5?
- Scaffold the pre-writing, writing process, and
revision process. - Build on students strong oral communication
skills. - Help students make the transition from purely
oral composing to more analytical composing and
revising. - Analyze and compare informal, conversational
samples of writing to revisions for academic
style and grammatical correctness. - Give students academic language structures that
they can use in their writing (e.g. In order to
understand why people have supported ____ in the
past, we have to look at. Evidence clearly
indicates that) - Recognize that simply reading over a paper will
just confirm oral language. Teach proofreading
strategies as a system (e.g. find each verb
consider whether the tense is right and why
then see if the subject agrees.) - In discussions of texts, note and discuss tenses
and reasons for tense use. - Keep grammar information succinct and accessible.
13What can English comp. teachers do to help all
ESL students?
- Teach and model proofreading strategies
- Teach and Target 1-3 grammar proofreading areas
at a time (e.g. subject-verb agreement, tense,
and correct reference.) - Teach grammar points in concrete ways rather than
as abstract concepts. (e.g. Circle the subject
and underline the verb. ) - Prioritize error correction. Focus on some
errors, not all. Consider how global the error
is and whether it interferes with meaning or not.
Consider what is reasonable to expect (e.g.
prepositions and article mistakes are common even
with the most advanced students). - Have students create their own reference
materials such as grammar cards with proofreading
rules in their own words, vocabulary cards with
sentences copied from context, an editing/
proofreading/ grammar log.
14More ideas
- Focus on content, organization, and development
first. Work on grammar editing at the final
stage of the writing process. - Teach students to do language-related annotations
in texts they read. - Maximize input and output through intensive and
extensive reading and writing with multiple
genres, registers, roles, audiences, and tasks. - Establish dialogues with ESL colleagues to
discuss ESL and English composition writing
levels and expectations, different correction
strategies, and ways to explain common grammar
errors simply.
15AND on a positive note
- Despite language limitations, ESL students can
bring something to your class a more global
perspective, a wider perspective. They may have
something to add to everyones learning. - Those who have finished higher education in their
native countries also can MODEL educational
success strategies for many native speakers.
16References
- Mark Roberge, Working with Generation 1.5
Immigrant ESL students, Presentation at CATESOL
2007