Title: Principled Training for LESLLA Instructors
1Principled Training for LESLLA Instructors
- Patsy Vinogradov,
- Hamline University, Minnesota, USA
- Astrid Liden,
- Minnesota Department of Education, USA
2Agenda
- Our context
- Teacher training experiences
- Key knowledge skills for LESLLA instructors
- Teacher training workshop demo
- Teacher training in your context
- Resources next steps
3Our context Minnesota, U.S.
4Minnesota
5Our students
- Minnesota has
- the highest proportion of refugees of any state
in the US - the largest population of Somali immigrants in
the country - the second largest population of Hmong and the
largest urban Hmong population in the country
6Adult Basic Education (ABE) System in MN
- The mission of Adult Basic Education (ABE) in
Minnesota is to provide adults with educational
opportunities to acquire and improve their
literacy skills necessary to become
self-sufficient and to participate effectively as
productive workers, family members, and citizens.
7ABE in Minnesota
- Free ESL instruction for eligible students
- Must be 16 and over, not enrolled in secondary
school, and functioning below the 12th grade
level in any of the basic academic areas
including reading, math, writing and speaking
English. - Typically, ABE programs are located in every
school district in Minnesota as a part of the
community education program. - There are 53 ABE consortia statewide and over 500
delivery sites - Sites vary classes may be held in school
buildings, community centers, libraries,
churches, etc
8What does a Minnesota adult ESL class look like?
- Huge varietythere is no typical class
- Class size may range from a few people to over 30
- Schedules vary average from 4 20 hours/wk
- Most classes offered in the morning or evening
some in afternoon very few on the weekends - Most classes are open enrollment (students may
enter or exit at any time during the year there
isnt a beginning or end of the course) - Class levels may vary in smaller programs,
levels are often combined into one class in
larger programs, there are leveled classes
9Our adult ESL teachers
- Majority are part-time
- Those working in school districts have a teaching
license but may not have experience training in
working with adults and or ESL - Many volunteer instructors in community-based
organizations - Most have not had formal training on working with
LESLLA students
10Your contexts
- What is your role in LESLLA teacher training?
- How are LESLLA instructors in your context
trained (if at all) to work with LESLLA students?
11What do literacy-level language teachers need to
know and be able to do?
12Knowledge
- Refugee experience
- Types of literacy-level learners
- Child acquisition of literacy in L1 vs. adult
acquisition of literacy in L2 - Empathy for experience of emergent reader
- Principles of second language acquisition
(affective filter, comprehensible input, factors
affecting langauge learning, etc.)
13Knowledge, cont.
- Key LESLLA L2 literacy research
- Components of reading (phonemic awareness,
phonics, vocabulary, fluency, comprehension) - Balanced approach to literacy
- Approaches to literacy instruction (project-based
learning, language experience approach, etc.) - L1 literacy as a vehicle for L2 literacy
14Skills
- Assessment
- Assess literacy and language skills in L1 and L2
- Conduct student needs assessments
15Skills, cont.
- Course design classroom practice
- Lower the affective filter create a welcoming
productive learning environment - Build oral language and vocabulary
- Teach pre-literacy skills (holding a pencil,
identifying similar shapes/patterns, using
appropriate directionality, etc.) - Contextualize literacy instruction within
real-life relevant themes
16Skills, cont.
- Course design classroom practice
- Design and teach multi-level lessons to address
various levels of literacy in a classroom setting - Design and teach lessons that address components
of reading - Design and teach lessons that develop top-down
and bottom-up strategies - Teach learning strategies and study skills
appropriate for LESLLA students
17Skills, cont.
- Selection and development of appropriate
materials - Adapt published materials for LESLLA students
- Use authentic materials for instruction
- Value and use student-generated texts
18Think Pair Share
- What changes or additions would you make to the
above checklist? - Which seem most important to you in your setting?
19LESLLA Teacher Training Workshop
- Developed based on our teaching and teacher
training experiences - First offered at TESOL 2008 in NYC
- Repeated at various professional development
events since - Positive response from participants
20Primary components of workshop
- Who are LESLLA learners?
- Foreign language demonstration debrief
- Discussion of components of reading
- Annotated bibliography of LESLLA research
- Principles of LESLLA literacy instruction
- Scenarios of effective practice
- Demonstration of literacy-level unit
- Workshop development of literacy-level unit
21Annotated bibliography
- Objectives
- Provide annotated list of research that can be
used as a reading list for further study - Point to gaps in the research
- Promote research-based practice
- Task
- Skim bibliography and identify 2 articles on
topics they would like to learn more about - Share with a partner
22Principled LESLLA instruction
- Keep it in context.
- Go up and down the ladder.
- Provide a buffet of learning opportunities.
- Tap into strengths.
- Nurture learners confidence.
23Scenarios of effective practice
- Objectives
- Move from abstract/theory to concrete/practice
- Highlight practices that reflect balanced,
meaning-based instruction - Task
- Groups of participants read and analyze a
scenario - How are the 5 principles put into action?
- How are the 5 reading skills (phonics, phonemic
awareness, vocabulary, comprehension, and
fluency) addressed? - How would you/do you respond to this situation?
24Scenarios
- Multi-level, 0/1
- L1 literacy instruction
- Meaningful assessment
- Learning beyond the classroom
- Using authentic texts
- Choosing and creating materials, adapting for use
- Extensive reading
25Demo of literacy-level unit
- Objectives
- Move from theory to practice
- Demonstrate classroom practices that reflect
balanced, meaning-based literacy instruction.
26Neighborhood unit
- Functional Literacy Objectives
- LWBAT write address.
- LWBAT read relevant street signs.
- Literacy Development Objectives
- LWBAT read and write about current neighbors and
neighborhoods. - LWBAT read and write about past neighbors and
neighborhoods.
27- Oral Skills Objectives
- LWBAT talk about their neighborhoods, past and
present, and express likes and dislikes. - LWBAT work together to complete cooperative
tasks. - Grammar Objectives
- LWBAT recognize affirmative and negative
sentences in the present tense. - LWBAT recognize the third person s in present
tense. - LWBAT write at least one grammatical sentence in
the present tense. - Vocabulary Objectives
- LWABT name and recognize in print a variety of
words related to neighbors and neighborhoods,
such as
28Key vocabulary
- street
- store
- school
- Cub Foods
- Caribou Coffee
- address
- across from
- house
- Holiday gas station
- neighbor
- next to
- park
- post office
- bank
- bus
- There is
- There are
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30(No Transcript)
31Language experience story
- We take a walk near our school. We see many
things. Many cars, bus. We see Cub Foods, a
store for food. Across the street, there is a
big park. Very beautiful. On the corner, we see
Holiday gas station. Humboldt avenue. On other
side there is Caribou Coffee. We walk back to
school. Next to school there are many houses.
32LEA follow-up
- 1. Circle we. How many times do you see we?
- 2. Underline all the words that begin with c.
- 3. Circle There is and There are.
- 4. Look at school, store, street
- How are these words the same? How are they
different? - 5. Teacher cuts the story into 5 sections on
slips of paper. Pairs must re-order the story
and read it to each other. - 6. Teacher hands out one sentence each to
students. Students mingle until they have the
order ready, and then stand in order and read
their sentences aloud. - 7. Teacher provides a cloze exercise with the LEA
story theyve created.
33LEA follow-up Cloze story
- We take a walk near our___________. We see
many things. Many cars, bus. We see _______
Foods, a _______ for food. Across the street,
there _____ a big park. Very beautiful. On the
corner, ____ see Holiday gas station. Humboldt
avenue. On other side there is Caribou
____________. We walk back ______ school. Next
to school there are many __________.
34LEA follow-up YES or NO?
- 1. Near my school, there is a park. YES NO
- 2. Near my school, there is a Holiday station.
YES NO - 3. Near my school, there are no cars. YES NO
- 4. Near my school, there is Cub Foods. YES NO
- 5. Near my school, there are no houses. YES
NO - 6. Near my school, there is no coffee shop. YES
NO
35LEA follow-up Sort by letters
S School, street, store C Cub, Caribou Coffee, corner
A Avenue, across, are H houses, Humboldt, Holiday
36Next day or after break LEA re-tell
37Writing sentences using pictures
- Show 6 photos we took on our walk. Give one to
each table. - Informal chat
- What do you see in each picture?
- What do people do at this place?
38- Then, with the teacher, volunteer, or slightly
more advanced student, create a sentence or two
to describe what happens at this place. - Examples
- There is a Holiday gas station. We buy gas for
the car. - There is a school. We study English.
- There is a park. We walk.
- There is Cub Foods. It is a store for food.
- There are houses near our school.
- There is Caribou Coffee. We like to drink coffee
here.
39Extensive reading
- Gives teacher time to create a follow-up practice
worksheet with student-generated sentences. - Provides valuable silent reading time when
students can read their choices of texts at their
own pace. After a few minutes, students are
asked to talk to a partner about what they read.
After a couple of minutes, students switch
partners and re-tell once more.
40Individual reading practice
- There is a Holiday gas station. We buy gas for
the car. - There is a school. We study English.
- There is a park. We walk.
- There is Cub Foods. It is a store for food.
- There are houses near our school.
- There is Caribou Coffee. We like to drink coffee
here. - 1. Where can I buy coffee? _______________________
___ - 2. Where can I study English? ____________________
____ - 3. Where can I take a walk? ______________________
___ - 4. Where do people live? _________________________
___ - 5. Where can I buy food? _________________________
__ - 6. Where can I buy gas for my car?
__________________
41Sound chain
- house gt school gt like gt cold gt December gt rabbit
gt time gt my gt ice
42Write first letters/sounds
- C H S
- ___aribou ___offee
- ___ub Foods
- ___oliday
- ___ouse
- ___tudy
- ___chool
43Same or different
house house
cub cut
school scoot
food foot
guy buy
like like
44Building schema for reading/Personalizing the
lesson
-
- What do you like about YOUR neighborhood?
- What DONT you like about your neighborhood?
- Who are your neighbors?
things I like things I dont like
my house big dogs
my school dark street
coffee shop many cars
nice stores no people
? ?
? ?
45Journal writing
- Students who need/want one are given the
following prompt - In my neighborhood, I like ______________
_________________________________. - I dont like __________________________
_________________________________.
46Grammar focus Present tense and negation
- Elicit examples such as the following, with
complete sentences - I like I have I study
- I dont like I dont have I dont study
- Faduma likes Jose likes Shoua
studies - She doesnt like Jose doesnt like
Shoua doesnt study - How do we say no? Students express the rule.
47- Teacher elicits responses to the above prompts,
and asks students to focus on the third person
s. For example - Faduma I like coffee.
- Teacher You like coffee? You dont like juice?
- Faduma No, I dont like juice. I like coffee.
- Teacher (to others) What does she like?
- Sts She likes coffee.
- Teacher Yes, she likes coffee.
- Teacher Do you buy coffee at Caribou?
- Faduma Yes.
- Teacher (to others) So Faduma ?
- Sts She buys coffee at Caribou.
48Grammar focusCreate-a-sentence activity
Names Actions Things
Faduma likes Cub Foods.
Patsy drinks coffee.
Andrea buys food.
Astrid drives cars.
? ? ?
49Building schema for a textbook story
- Elicit and review students neighborhood likes
and dislikes - Find Virginia, U.S., Latin America, and Ethiopia
on world map - Where are your neighbors from?
50 Textbook story
- friendly
- What does this mean?
- Are your neighbors friendly?
- What do friendly neighbors do?
- Unfriendly neighbors?
51Progressive reading
- Teacher reads aloud as learners listen and follow
along - Learners read silently
- Choral reading
- Paired reading
- Individual silent reading
52Sequencing
- Students put sentence strips of story in order
- Advanced students can do this on their own or
work with phrases/individual words - Lower literacy students can work with a partner
and refer to the story
53Follow-up activities
- Circle neighbor and neighbors.
- How many times do you see these words?
- Recognize same letters Orally, students point
out words that begin with the same letter or
sound. - F, L, B, N, H, S
- friendly, from, front
- live, left, Latin
- bump, busy
- neighbors, not, know, nobody
- hi, has
- street, say
54Nine patch
1 2 3
4 5 6
7 8 9
55Nine patch
1 hi 2 has 3 house
4 street 5 say 6 store
7 friendly 8 from 9 food
56Build a person
- B - U M P
- B busy, breakfast, bye
- U up, under, umbrella
- M my, mother, minute
- P Patsy, party, pan
57Wheres the sound?
beginning sound middle sound end sound
N O T
H A S
I N
L I V
58Journals
- Students journal about their own neighborhoods.
- What is in your neighborhood? Expand on your
previous journal entry about what you like and
dont like. - Who are your neighbors? Are they friendly?
- Teacher, volunteer, and more literate students
help as needed. Students who would like to can
read their journal entries aloud to the class.
59Neighborhoods Now and before
In Minnesota
60Expansion follow-up
- Expand journal entries to include info about past
neighborhood - Ask 2 people outside of class about their current
and past neighborhoods report back to class
61Workshop
- Objectives
- To apply knowledge gained from the workshop.
- To create and share with each other practices
that reflect balanced, meaning-based literacy
instruction. - To receive feedback guidance from trainers
- Task
- Create a thematic unit (15-20 hours of
instruction) - Share 2 key ideas or activities with another
group - Share highlights and questions with whole group
62Discussion
- What can you take from this LESLLA Teacher
Training Workshop and apply to your context or
setting? What here do you think is particularly
useful for teachers that you train? - What are YOU doing with LESLLA instructor
training that seems to really be working?
63Wrap up and next steps
- What resources need to be developed to help us
with LESLLA teacher training? - What resources can we share?