Title: How Harrisonburg City Public Schools
1- How Harrisonburg City Public Schools
- Is Redesigning and Recreating
- Its Secondary ESL Program
- VESA 2006 Barbara Fagan, Deanna Benavides, Pat
Harmon
2OVERVIEW
- The Original Picture
- A New Structure
- Aligning Assessment
- Refining Instruction
- Continuing Change
3 4Schedule
- High School Five Levels of ESL in place of
English - Middle School Three levels of ESL in place of
Language Arts - Students placed in mainstream content elective
classes
5Assessment Placement
- Students given the IPT oral, reading writing in
the fall Spring - High School placement not tied to assessment, but
rather to the periods which worked best in
students schedules
6Instructional Focus
- Teachers were using random materials and were
focusing primarily on grammar and oral language
skills. - Very little attention was given to direct
teaching of the reading process for students with
weak native language reading proficiency. - Content instruction was limited to helping
students with the content class homework that
they didnt understand.
7A Need for Change
- ESL students were not succeeding in content
classes were becoming discipline problems - ESL students were not making the expected
progress in reading and writing. - As the program grew, teachers began to complain
about overlap in materials instructional topics
within the various levels of ESL classes
8 9Schedule
- When the No Child Left Behind Act was passed
the levels were renamed to reflect state levels
more accurately describe the level each class was
to address. Level 1 was divided into A, B C. - Sheltered ESL Content classes were added.
- Content teachers were recruited to teach
sheltered classes for level 2 3 ESL students.
10Current Middle School ESL Program
- Level 1
- Language Arts A, B, C
- Sheltered Science, Social Studies Math (if
needed) - Electives/PE with mainstream students
11Current Middle School ESL Program
- Levels 2 - 3
- Transitional Language Arts Class taught by team
of mainstream LA teacher reading specialist - Mainstream Science, Social Studies Math
- After school homework help available
- Electives/PE with mainstream students
12Current Middle School ESL Program
- Level 4
- Mainstream Language Arts, Science, Social Studies
Math - Reading Support during Elective Block
- After school homework help available
- Electives/PE with mainstream students
13High School ESL Program
- Level 1
- Intensive English Newcomer, A, B, C
- Newcomer A receive additional Reading Block
- B C receive additional sheltered Science/
Social Studies block - Math Concepts or SOL Math courses
- Modified Elective Choices some sheltered
sections
14High School ESL Program
- Level 2-3
- Transitional English
- Sheltered Science / Social Studies classes to
integrate content literacy skills vocabulary
into instruction - Math Concepts or SOL Math courses
- Mainstream PE/Electives
15High School ESL Program
- Level 4
- Full Year English Classes
- Science/Social Studies SOL courses
- Math Concepts or SOL Math courses
- Mainstream PE/Electives
16 17Assessment Placement
- Reading and writing assessments were added which
were more in line with assessments given to other
middle and high school students - Placement was tied more closely to assessment
results.
18Assessment Placement
- Reading Assessments
- Pre-DRP DRP
- STAR (computer based assessment)
- QRI-3 (informal reading inventory)
- Writing Assessments
- Ganske (spelling inventory)
- Rubric scored writing prompt
19 20Change in Focus
- Monthly secondary ESL staff meetings focused on
how to incorporate best practices in reading
and writing strategies for beginning level
students, rather than on paperwork program
management issues.
21- October 5, 2005
- Good Afternoon,
- I am delighted to be working with you again this
year as we continue learning about providing
effective reading and writing strategies for our
English language learners. Today we will focus
on the Balanced Literacy Instruction Framework
that you are using in your classes to guide your
lesson plans. Your first task is to complete the
Venn Diagram that is on your table. You must
compare and contrast the changes you have made in
your teaching from last year to this year. Think
about your planning, time, students and
materials. This should be an easy task for you!
Well check your work in a few minutes. - Barbara
- 2005-06 2004-05
22Reading/Writing Strategies
- Daily Message
- Guided Reading with overt strategy instruction
- Developing background knowledge
- Before/During/After Reading Activities
23Textbook Adoption Process
- Throughout the year, ESL teachers participated in
reviewing, analyzing, evaluating materials that
would integrate new instructional strategies for
each proficiency level. - Decisions were made for materials at middle and
high school levels and all students had
designated books for September 2005.
24Examples of Selected Language Arts Texts
- Middle School High Point Basic supplemented
with trade book units with books from Literacy
Library - High School Keys to Learning Shining Star
supplemented with trade book units - Supplemental Texts Stories from the Heart, Teen
Scene, True Stories Series
25Instructional Delivery Template
- ESL teachers had little experience or training in
incorporating the key components of a balanced
language arts program within their lessons. - ESL/Literacy team identified areas that teachers
should address each day/weekly. - The team then created a Balanced Literacy
Instructional Framework that described key
components to be incorporated into daily weekly
instruction.
26Balanced Literacy Instruction Framework
- Warm-Up Routine
- Oral Language Development
- Journal Writing/Independent Reading
- Guided Reading/Writing (Thematic or Content
Instruction) - Wrap-Up Routine
27Summer Curriculum Writing
- ESL teachers needed time to review their new
textbooks and start working on Pacing Guides
that would guide their teaching curriculum for
Fall 2005. - Some ESL teachers were ready to incorporate
Units of Study based on readings in textbook as
well as trade books such as Dust for Dinner Long
Way to a New Land Balto, the Rescue Dog.
28Examples of Pacing Guides for Texts
29Examples of Units Developed
- Taming Nature Unit including Snowshoe Thompson,
Buffalo Bill, Johnny Appleseed - Change Happens Unit based on Pompeii, Buried
Alive - Making A Difference Unit based on biographies
of Helen Keller Rosa Parks
30- Refining Instruction
- Examples of
- Strategies
- Put into
- Practice
31Making a Difference in Instructional Strategies
- Pat Harmon, LA/Reading Teacher at THMS
- Unit for upper Level 1 / lower Level 2 students
(1st to 2nd grade reading level) - Developed using unit template with available
materials that were appropriate for students
reading level
32Goals Essential Understandings
- Reading the biographies in this unit will help
students to - think about how character is a quality that makes
up - or distinguishes an individual and to learn more
about how a persons character defines what they
can accomplish. - learn about people who developed unique character
- traits to fulfill life long desires.
- learn about people who have tried to make life
better for others. - think about how they can develop their own
character traits/qualities.
33Before Reading Strategy Building Background
- Simulation Activity for Rosa Parks
- Prior to students entering the classroom, select
a physical trait that will be used for
discrimination purposes. Also, prepare to
secretly audio-tape or write down student
responses during the activity. As students enter
the room, reward students with the desirable
trait by giving them a token (candy, pencil etc).
Do not reveal why selected students are
receiving a token. Inquire if students can
identify why some individuals were treated
differently as they entered the room. Share with
them their responses that were recorded as they
entered the room, and talk about how - it felt to be in this situation.
34During Reading Strategy Focus
- Discuss and model reading strategies such as
asking questions, predicting inferring, making
connections, and clarifying. - Complete graphic organizers focusing on
questioning, connecting, summarizing and
comparing and contrasting at designated sections
of the book.
35Culminating Tasks
- Write a biography or create a power point
presentation highlighting three character traits
of a significant individual who made a difference
in their life/country. - Write a personal autobiography or create a power
point presentation that demonstrates three
personal character traits. - Design a biographical or autobiographical poster
depicting three character traits.
36 37Curriculum Writing 2005-06
- During fall and winter staff development days,
teachers continued writing their units pacing
guides, focusing on the following areas - Before/During/After reading activities
- Integrating technology into the unit activities
- Revising the pacing to reflect actual teaching
time needed
38Next Steps
- Continue to look at pacing guides and development
of Language Arts units. - Review Balanced Literacy Instruction Framework
for modifications. - Allow time for teachers to share successful
strategies and lessons that incorporate best
practices. - Assess track students progress in reading and
writing to inform future focus of staff
development.
39Contact Information
- Barbara Fagan
- ESL Consultant/Adjunct Instructor,
- James Madison University
- bfagan_at_shentel.net
- Deanna Benavides
- ESL Specialist
- Harrisonburg City Public Schools
- dbenavides_at_harrisonburg.k12.va.us
- Pat Harmon
- ESL/Reading Instructor
- Thomas Harrison Middle School
- pharmon_at_harrisonburg.k12.va.us