Title: Dual Language Immersion
1Dual Language Immersion
2Introduction
3Dual Language and Head Start Similarities
- Hands-on learning
- Print rich environments
- Parent, support, participation, and input on
decision-making - Appreciation and value of students cultures
- Focus on staff development
- Use of language models
- Research demonstrated results
4One path to establishing a Dual-Language program
- Parent request to school board
- Agreement and support of superintendent
- Agreement, support, and action of school
principal - Teacher and parent training
- Recruitment of parents
5What is a Dual Language Immersion Program?
6What is a Dual Language Program?
- An educational model that integrates native
English speakers and native speakers of another
language for all or most of the day, with the
goals of promoting high academic achievement,
first- and second-language development, and
cross-cultural understanding for all students. - In two-way immersion programs, language learning
takes place primarily through content
instruction. Academic subjects are taught to all
students through both English and the non-English
language. As students and teachers work together
to perform academic tasks, the students' language
abilities are developed, along with their
knowledge of content area subject matter.
Tools for Schools - April 1998
7Why did it get started?
- The earliest two-way immersion programs began in
the 1960s and 1970s, in programs such as Coral
Way in Miami and the Inter-American Magnet School
in Chicago. - Recent increasing interest in the two-way
immersion model is most likely due to the
convergence of bilingual education research,
which has indicated that extended native language
development has positive educational outcomes for
language-minority students, and foreign language
immersion research, which has shown that native
English speakers benefit from early foreign
language instruction through the immersion model.
Tools for Schools - April 1998
8What does it look like?
- Programs require a balance of Spanish-Dominant
and English-Dominant students. - There are several program models, the most common
being 50/50 and 90/10. - Spanish-speaking, bilingual, and English-only
students are intermixed, and generally not
divided. - Can be implemented school-wide.
- Entry into the Dual-Language program generally
occurs in kindergarten or first grade.
Spanish-speaking students who have been schooled
in Spanish may add later.
9Class Composition
10Instructional Time50/50 model
11Instructional Time90/10 model
12Video 1
13Funding for Dual Language programs
- Title I
- Title III
- Comprehensive School Reform (CSR)
- No Child Left Behind Act (NCLB)
14Dual Language Program Characteristics
- In recent years, many school districts in the
U.S. have implemented dual language programs.
Dual language programs may also be called two-way
bilingual programs. Both these names reflect the
fact that all students develop their first
languages and add a second language that is also
developed to a high level of proficiency.
Literacy for Dual Language Programs by Freeman
(Language MagazineJanuary 2005)
15Benefits to students
16Spanish-Speaking Students
- Fluency in both English and Spanish at an
academic level - Long-term home language support
- Increased achievement in all academic areas
- Self-esteem because language and culture is
supported and valued
17English-Only Students
- Fluency in both English and Spanish at an
academic level - Increased achievement in all areas
- Increased awareness and value of other cultures
18Research indicates that dual language students
- Work hard in school.
- Are successful in high level classes in high
school. - Are more likely to attend college.
- Are highly employable in both local and world
business. - Develop strong pronunciation and expression
skills in both English and Spanish. - Develop excellent communication skills.
19Second Language of BusinessWhat executives of
the USAs 1,000 largest companies say is the most
valuable second language in business
Source Accountemps By Cindy Hall and Marcy E.
Mullins, USA TODAY
20Program Components
21Successful Dual Language Immersion programs have
- A Master Plan
- Qualified teachers who are fluent in English and
Spanish - Knowledgeable and committed administrators
- Full parental commitment ensuring continuous
student enrollment - A variety of Spanish and English learning
materials - A balance of Spanish and English-speaking students
22Goals
- High academic achievement for all students
- English and Spanish language fluency and literacy
for all students - Positive cross-cultural attitudes promoting high
self-esteem for all students
23Video 3
24(No Transcript)
25Getting buy-in from the administration
- Parent Interest
- Research
- Student achievement scores
- Program goals
- Other Dual Language programs
- Eligible students
26Getting buy-in from the teachers
- Staff Development
- Research/Principles of Dual Language instruction
- Teaching methods for Dual Language instruction
- Interaction/support from current Dual Language
teachers - Materials
- Providing teachers with many Spanish English
materials
27Getting buy-in from the parents
- Research
- Student achievement
- Dual Language program goals
- Ability to learn English will not suffer
- Advantages to children for the future
- Hearing other parents stories
- Seeing current Dual Language students present
28Getting buy-in from the community
- Cultural festivals
- Literacy festivals
- Get community sponsors for the program in whole
or specific activities - Media
- Newspaper/TV coverage on the Dual Language
program - Recruit students in Newspaper or at community
events
29Dual Language in practice
30Tools for Language Development
- Daily songs
- Games
- Hands-on science and math lessons
- Cassettes Videos
- Books
- Radio TV
Dual Language Instruction, A Handbook for
Enriched Education (Cloud et.al)
31Instructional Emphasis for Early/Emergent Learners
- Vocabulary development (matching words and
pictures) - Phonemic Awareness
- Language pattern acquisition (songs chants)
- Comprehension (dramatizations illustrations)
- Decoding (producing rhyming words)
- Innovating (personalizing creating stories)
- Story mapping (visual representations of reading)
- Technology (audio/videotaped stories/ CD ROM)
Dual Language Instruction, A Handbook for
Enriched Education (Cloud et.al)
32Materials for Second Language Learners should
- Have an attractive and inviting layout
- Use many useful illustrations/graphics to aide
conceptual learning - Not have an overwhelming amount of text
- Be written in a logical and cohesive manner
- Be written at a level that students can read
independently - Be free of cultural bias and culturally diverse
- Have an easy typeface (easy to decipher sized
appropriately for childrens age)
Dual Language Instruction, A Handbook for
Enriched Education (Cloud et.al)
33Video 3
34Research
35Wayne P. ThomasVirginia P. Collier
- A National Study of School Effectiveness for
language Minority Students Long-Term Academic
Achievement
36Thomas CollierMajor Policy Implications
- Parents who refuse bilingual/ESL services for
their children should be informed that their
children's long-term academic achievement will
probably be much lower as a result, and they
should be strongly counseled against refusing
bilingual/ESL services when their child is
eligible. -
- The research findings of this study indicate
that ESL or bilingual services, as required by
Lau v. Nichols, raise students' achievement
levels by significant amounts.
37(No Transcript)
38Thomas CollierMajor Policy Implications
- Enrichment 90-10 and 50-50 one-way and two-way
developmental bilingual education (DBE) programs
(or dual language, bilingual immersion) are the
only programs we have found to date that assist
students to fully reach the 50th percentile in
both L1 and L2 in all subjects and to maintain
that level of high achievement, or reach even
higher levels through the end of schooling. The
fewest dropouts come from these programs.
39subtractive
additive
Dual Language Teaching and Learning in Two
Languages (Soltero)
40(No Transcript)
41(No Transcript)
42(No Transcript)
43(No Transcript)
44Thomas CollierMajor Policy Implications
- The strongest predictor of L2 student
achievement is amount of formal L1 schooling. The
more L1 grade-level schooling, the higher L2
achievement. - Bilingually schooled students outperform
comparable monolingually schooled students in
academic achievement in all subjects, after 4-7
years of dual language schooling.
45Figure A-1 Quasi-longitudinal analyses
46Figure A-2 Quasi-longitudinal analyses
Thomas Collier Northeast Figures
47Thomas CollierMajor Policy Implications
- When ELLs initially exit into the English
mainstream, those schooled all in English
outperform those schooled bilingually when tested
in English. But the bilingually schooled
students reach the same levels of achievement as
those schooled all in English by the middle
school years, and during the high school years
the bilingually schooled students outperform the
monolingually schooled students (see Figure C-2).
48(No Transcript)
49Video 4
50Dual-Language Schools
51Alicia Chacón Dual Language Program
- Comparison of Dual Language school to district
and state averages on state mandated test - Program began over ten years ago.
- 90 Spanish
- 10 English
- 10 German, Chinese, Japanese or Russian
52(No Transcript)
53Alicia R. Chacón International SchoolEl Paso
Texas
- Program coordinator
- We start literature in Spanish in kindergarten.
We dont separate the groups, we dont
translate. - Third-grade teacher
- When they come to third grade, most of the
students have a very solid foundation in Spanish
literacyThey make a natural transition somewhere
toward the middle or end of second grade. They
start to read in English all by themselves. They
pick up a book in English and say, Hey, I can
read!
Designing and Implementing Two-Way Bilingual
Programs (Calderón Minaya-Rowe)
54Alicia R. Chacón International SchoolEl Paso,
Texas
- Parent(translated from Spanish)
- At home, with my five children, my husband
speaks English and I speak Spanish. But I
noticed that the three older sons were beginning
to forget Spanishand they dont want to speak
Spanish...right now I have a daughter in seventh
grade and she speaks and writes in Spanish very
well and a daughter in second grade and she also
speaks Spanish very well and she writes it wellI
believe that my young girls will have more
opportunity to be completely bilingual in this
school. - Eighth-grade student(translated from Spanish)
- I think I am going to go to college because I
want to study politics and maybe become an
ambassador to Germany.
Designing and Implementing Two-Way Bilingual
Programs (Calderón Minaya-Rowe)
55Madawaska Gateway Elementary Schools, Maine
- Two-Way Bilingual Education Immersion Program is
a K-5 French/English program which will
eventually go through grade 8. - Between these two school districts, there are
eight bilingual classes involving a total of
about 300 students.
56Madawaska Gateway Elementary Schools, Maine
- CTBS/4 Grade 2 (Madawaska) (1997) Immersion
program students outperform non-immersion
students in reading, vocabulary, language
mechanics, and total language score - CTBS/4 Terra Nova Grades 1-2 (Van
Buren)Immersion students outperform
non-immersion students in all areas of the test
(reading, language mechanics, math, vocabulary,
language composite, and computations)
57Barbieri Elementary, Two-Way BilingualFramingham,
Mass.
- The Two-Way Bilingual Program in Framingham
started in 1990-1991 with support from a Title
VII grant in first grade - Each year a grade level was added and the first
cohort of students is currently (SY 1999-2000) in
the 10th grade at the high school.
58Barbieri 4th Grade MCAS(Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment System)
59Barbieri 4th Grade MCAS(Massachusetts
Comprehensive Assessment System)
60Question Answer
- Jewelee Hotchkiss
- jhotchkiss_at_stancoe.org
61Recommended Reading
- Designing and Implementing Two-Way Bilingual
Programs by Calderón Minaya (2003) - Dual Language Education by Lindholm (2001)
- Dual Language Instruction, A Handbook for
Enriched Instruction by Cloud et.al. (2000) - Dual Language, Teaching and Learning in Two
Languages by Soltero (2004) - A National Study of School Effectiveness for
Language Minority Students Long-Term Academic
Achievement conducted by Thomas Collier (2002)