Title: Closing the Achievement Gap
1Closing the Achievement Gap
- Powerful Pedagogy For Advancing Learning In
Underachieving Students
Educational Seminar Lemon Grove School
District Presenter Noma LeMoine,
Ph.D. noma.lemoine_at_lausd.net
2School ReformNo Child Left Behind
- Schools are being asked to redefine and
restructure themselves to provide education to
individuals previously ignored -
Berliner Biddle (1995)
3Whos been ignored and Whos IN THE GAP?
4Standard English Learners
5MAJOR DIMENSIONS OF LANGUAGE
PRAGMATICS The level of language as it functions
and is used in a social context.
Language in Communicative Context
SEMANTICS The level of meaning of individual
words and of word relationships in messages
Language as a Meaning System
SYNTAX The level of combination of words into
acceptable phrases, clauses, and sentences
MORPHOLOGY The level of combination of sounds
into basic units of meaning (morphemes)
Language as a Structured, Rule-Governed System
PHONOLOGY The level of combination of features of
sounds into significant speech sounds
6Hawaiian American SELs
7Mexican American SELs
8 Native American SELs
9African American SELs
10Common Experiences of SELs
- SELs
- Have been told systematically and consistently
that they are inferior and incapable of high
academic achievement. - Are often taught by teachers who would rather not
teach them and who have low expectations for
their success
11The Uniqueness of the Cultural Experiences of SELs
- Experiences are not equivalent though oppression
is common to all - The displacement and forced removal of indigenous
people - Native Americans
- The forced immigration of people for the
expressed purpose of labor exploitation - African Americans
- The colonization of people
- Hawaiian Americans
- Mexican Americans
12The Silence of the Literature
- The culture of SELs is not viewed as a useful
rubric for addressing their language, literacy,
or learning needs. - their cultures are deligitimized in the classroom
- their cultures are treated as if it is a
corruption of the dominant culture - schools and teachers treat their language, prior
knowledge, and values as aberrant - teachers often presume that their job is to rid
SELs of any vestiges of their own culture.
13DECLINING ACHIEVEMENTReading and Math scores for
predominately Black schools in Philadelphia
(1995)
age of students below the 16th ile
Source Labov 1995
Rickford 1997
14Difference vs. Deficit
- Language Variation, Literacy Acquisition, and
Learning SELs
15Carter Woodson on AAL-1932
- Carter G. Woodson in 1933, wrote in The
Mis-Education of the Negro - In the study of language in school pupils were
made to scoff at the Negro dialect as some
peculiar possession of the Negro which they
should despise rather than directed to study the
background of this language as a broken-down
African tongue - in short to understand their own
linguistic history(p.19, italics added ).
16HISTORICAL DEVELOPMENT OFAFRICAN AMERICAN
LANGUAGE
DEFICIT PERSPECTIVE
DIALECTOLOGISTS VIEW
DIFFERENCE THEORIES
CREOLIST HYPOTHESIS
ETHNOLINGUISTIC THEORY
17WEST AFRICAN (Niger-Congo) LANGUAGES THAT
INFLUENCED AAL
Bambara Ewe Fanta Fon Fula
Hausa Igbo Ibibio
Kimbundu Longo Mandinka Mende
Twi Umbundu Wolof Yoruba
Source Turner, Lorenzo Africanisms In The
Gullah Dialect 1973
18Ebonics - A Definition
Ebonics is the linguistic and paralinguistic
features which on a concentric continuum
represent the communicative competence of the
west African, Caribbean, and the United States
slave descendants of African origin.
Williams (1973)
19African American Language (AAL) - A Definition
(African American Language) refers to the
linguistic and paralinguistic features of the
language that represents the communicative
competence of the United States slave descendants
of African origin. Adapted from
Williams (1973)
20LINGUISTIC SOCIETY OF AMERICA RESOLUTIONExcerpt
from Resolution Issued, January 3, 1997
- The variety known as Ebonics. African American
Vernacular English (AAVE), and Vernacular Black
English and by other names is systematic and
rule-governed like all natural speech varieties.
In fact, all human linguistic systems... are
fundamentally regular. - The systematic and expressive nature of the
grammar and pronunciation patterns of the African
American vernacular has been established by
numerous scientific studies over the past thirty
years. Characterizations of Ebonics as slang,
mutant, lazy, defective, ungrammatical,
or broken English are incorrect and demeaning.
21CHARACTERISTIC PHONOLOGICAL FEATURES OF AFRICAN
AMERICAN LANGUAGE
PHONOLOGICAL VARIABLE
AFRICAN AMERICAN LANGUAGE
MAINSTREAM AMERICAN ENGLISH
CONSONANT CLUSTER / TH / SOUND / R /
SOUND STRESS PATTERNS / L / SOUND
DESK, TEST, COLD THIS, THIN, MOUTH SISTER,
CAROL PO LICE, HO TEL ALWAYS, MILLION
DES, TES, COL DIS, TIN, MOUF SISTA,
CAOL POLICE, HOTEL AWAYS, MIION
22CHARACTERISTIC GRAMMATICAL FEATURES OF AFRICAN
AMERICAN LANGUAGE
LINGUISTIC VARIABLE
MAINSTREAM AMERICAN ENGLISH
AFRICAN AMERICAN LANGUAGE
LINKING VARIABLE POSSESSIVE MARKER PLURAL
MARKER VERB AGREEMENT HABITUAL BE
He is going Johns cousin I have five cents He
runs home She is often at home
He going John cousin I have five cent He run
home She be at home
23Third Person Singular
Mainstream American English
Irregular Third Person
Singular Plural
I swim we swim you swim you swim he
swims they swim
African American Language Regular Third Person
Singular Plural I
swim we swim you swim you swim he
swim they swim
24Past Tense Copula Verbs
Mainstream American English Irregular
Past Tense
Singular Plural
I was we were
you were you were
he was they were
African American Language Regular Past
Tense
Singular Plural
I was we was
you was you was
he was they was
25Reflexive Pronoun
Mainstream American English Irregular Reflexive
Pronoun
Possessive Objective Reflexive
My Me Myself
Your You Yourself
His Him Himself
Her Her
Herself
Its It Itself
Our Us Ourselves
Their Them
Themselves
26Reflexive Pronoun
African American Language Regular reflexive
pronoun
Possessive Objective
Reflexive
My Me Myself
Your You Yourself
His Him Hisself
Her Her
Herself
Its It
Itself
Our Us
Ourself
Their Them
Theirself
27Spontaneous Language Sample 5 year old African
American Child
28Language Sample 5-year-old African American
Child
- Where is her shoe at?
- She pick it up
- those cookies
- She rub it on her hands.
- He see hisself
- I been known how to count.
- She want to know can she ride her bike.
- She jump rope
- The mother dress
- The mommie purse
29Written Language Sample Middle School African
American Student
- Jonny is a hero
- Johnny was iniallgent. He was iniallgent
by taking people to his house so they can be in
wone house. And they pick Johnny house. Johnny
was intelligent because he trick the aliens from
winning and taking over the world. Johnny is
inteligent, and, brave no body else would of did
what a eight year old boy did. People were so
afraid of the aliens but not Johnny. I think
Johnny personality is nice.
30Written Language Sample High School Mexican
American Student
- Well, what I have learn there are good things and
there are bad things. Well the good things I
say is that there are stuff that doesnt bore me
to death some classes are very educational and
some are very interesting. Well to tell you the
truth I feel some of the teachers dont do as
good of a job than other teachers do. Some
teachers get more into there work than others.
To me older teachers starts to just go into a
different worlds when it comes to teaching. Well
most of them. Why? Because it makes me feel like
they been through this already a thousand times
and dont want to go through it again.
31Quote from Atlantic Monthly William Labov
- There is no reason to believe that any
nonstandard vernacular is itself an obstacle to
learning. The chief problem is ignorance of
language on the part of all concerned . Our job
as linguists is to remedy this ignorance - Teachers are now being told to ignore the
language of black children as unworthy of
attention and useless for learning. They are
being taught to hear every natural utterance of
the child as evidence of his mental inferiority.
As linguists we are unanimous in condemning this
view as bad observation, bad theory, and bad
practice. - That educational psychology should be influenced
by a theory so false to the facts of language is
unfortunate but that children should be the
victims of this ignorance is intolerable.
32Moving SELs Toward Academic and Career Success
Facilitate shifts in Educator Attitude toward
non-standard languages.
Facilitate shifts in language instruction
strategies.
Second- language
acquisition
Deficit Difference Cognitive
Linguistic
Corrective
Eradication Additive
33Cultural Proficiency
- A way of being that enables both individuals and
organizations to respond effectively to people
who differ from them
34Non-productive policies, practices and behaviors
- Cultural Destructiveness-See the difference,
stamp it out-The elimination of other peoples
cultures - Cultural Incapacity-See the difference, make it
wrong- Belief in the superiority of ones
culture and behavior that disempowers anothers
culture - Cultural Blindness - See the difference, act like
you dont Acting as if the cultural differences
you see do not matter - Cultural Precompetence See the difference,
respond inadequately-Awareness of the limitations
of ones skills or an organizations practices
when interacting with other cultural groups
35Healthy policies, practices and behaviors
- Cultural Competence- See the difference, and
understand the difference that difference makes - Cultural Proficiency- See the difference, and
respond positively and affirmingly - Cultural Responsiveness- Adjust how we teach to
the needs and experiences of students - Culturally Responsive Pedagogy- Center
instruction in multiethnic cultural frames of
reference - encompasses curriculum, content,
learning context, classroom climate,
student-teacher relationships, instructional
techniques, and performance assessments.
36Culturally Responsive Pedagogy
- Educating Other Peoples Children
37What is Culture?
- Culture is to humans
- as water is to fish
38Culture
- A groups preferred way of perceiving, judging,
and and organizing things they encounter in their
daily lives (Maehr, 1974) - A set of invisible patterns that become normal
ways of acting, feeling, and being (Edward Hall
1989) - A collective consciousness or a group state of
mind, a common way of speaking, acting, thinking,
and believing (Shade 1997)
39Why should Teaching be Culturally Responsive?
40Traditional pedagogy has always been culturally
responsive.
- To students who are primarily middle class and
European American
41There has always been a profound and inescapable
cultural fabric of the schooling process in
America
- This cultural fabric (primarily of European and
middle class origin) is so deeply ingrained in
the structure, ethos, programs, and etiquette of
schools that it is considered simply the normal
and right thing to do. Boykin
(1994)
42Culturally Responsive Teaching
- Adjusting how we teach to the needs and
experiences of diverse students in - appropriate and effective ways
43Purpose of Culturally Responsive Teaching
- To maximize learning for students who are
traditionally failed by the American educational
system. Villegas (1991)
44What happens to students when their culture is
rejected or not recognized by schools?
- Miscommunication
- Confrontations between the student, the teacher,
and the home - Hostility
- Alienation
- Diminished self esteem
- School failure
- (source Irvine 1990)
45Educating Other Peoples Children
- A child cannot be taught by anyone whose demand,
essentially, is that the child repudiate his
experience and all that gives him
sustenance Baldwin, 1997
46Principles of Culturally Responsive Teaching
47 Principle 1
Principles responsive to the needs of students
Source Carol Lee
- Learning is optimized when students are able to
make connections between
what they already know and what they are expected
to learn.
48INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY Contrastive Analysis
49A Communication Instruction Program
- In a communication instruction program there
should be three major foci - underlying thought (the idea or message to be
shared) - communicative function (the purpose, audience,
and context of the communication), and - the linguistic structure,( the form i.e.
grammatical, syntactical, and lexical choices).
50Linguistic Competence
- Knowledge of the form or the structure of a
language - (subconscious and conscious)
51Metalinguistic Awareness
- The conscious awareness and manipulation of the
rules of language - (awareness of morphology syntax)
52Contrastive Analysis
- The skill and ability to compare and contrast the
linguistic differences between the home and
school language to build linguistic competence
and metalinguistic awareness
53Contrastive Analysis
- Systematic Use of Contrastive Analysis
- Affirms, and accommodates the students home
language culture - Facilitates linguistic competence in SE
- Supports Written Language Development in SE
- Supports Oral language acquisition in SE
- Facilitates cross cultural communication
competence - Increases Metalinguistic awareness
54Mainstream English Language Development (MELD)
- The use of standard English for educational, and
career purposes (acquiring listening, speaking,
reading writing skills in SE) - Implies competence in SE at levels of
- Phonology
- Grammar
- Lexicon
- Pragmatics (communication behaviors)
55Strategies for engaging in Contrastive Analysis
- Linguistic Contrastive analysis
- Contextual Contrastive analysis
- Situational Contrastive analysis
- Elicited Contrastive analysis
56Linguistic Contrastive Analysis
- Using literature, poetry, songs, plays, student
elicited sentences, or prepared story scripts
which incorporate examples of specific SAE and
AAL or SAE and CE form contrasts, the student
performs contrastive analysis translations to
determine the underlying rules that distinguish
the two language forms.
57Contextual Contrastive Analysis
- The student reads or is told a story that is
heavily embedded with the target form (standard
English) and is then required to tell the story.
The students story retelling is taped and
compared and contrasted with the language of the
text.
58Situational Contrastive Analysis
- Students contrast and analyze the mainstream and
non-mainstream versions of targeted language
forms with an emphasis on situational
appropriateness, i.e., communication,
environment, audience, purpose, and function.
59Elicited Contrastive Analysis
- The teacher elicits spontaneous
verbalizations/responses from students about
material read or presented and creates teachable
moments for conducting contrastive analysis of CE
ans SAE or AAL and SAE.
60Contrastive Analysis vs.Traditional English
Dept. Techniques
Traditional Techniques
Contrastive Analysis
8.5
- 59
Source H. Taylor. 1991. Standard English,
Black English, Bidialectalism
61Reflection Debrief
62 Principle 2
Principles responsive to the needs of
students Source Carol Lee
- The meaning or significance that learners impose
on experience shapes how and whether knowledge is
stored in long term memory
63INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGYDeveloping Academic
Vocabulary
- The Personal Thesaurus of Conceptually coded
words
64Development of Academic Vocabulary
- Personal Thesaurus of Conceptually Coded Words
- Prior Knowledge
- Synonym/Antonym Development
- Word Parts
- Culturally Specific Vocabulary
65 Personal Thesaurus
- Students place words that they already know (ex.
mad) in the word box area above the synonym
lines. As synonyms that are not an active part of
the students vocabulary are encountered in
stories, vocabulary-rich literature, and other
language intensive activities and instruction,
they are listed on the lines beneath the familiar
word, preferably in a different color.
66The Personal ThesaurusBuilding Academic
Vocabulary
T
Tattletale
Instigator
inciter
Provocateur
67The Personal ThesaurusBuilding academic
vocabulary
H
hatin
hating
abhorring
jealous
envious
loathing
invidious
detesting
loving
68Principal 3
Principles responsive to the needs of
students Source Carol Lee
- Learners can demonstrate competence in
non-traditional ways
69INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY Building on the Learning
Styles Strengths of SELs
70The cultures of schools and different ethnic
groups often are not compatible
- Congruence between how the educational process is
ordered and delivered, and the cultural frames of
reference of diverse students will improve school
achievement - for students of color.
- (Spindler Spindler, 1994)
71How Children Enter Classrooms
- As members of different cultures
- As persons with language and thoughts about how
the world is working - With ideas about how to behave
- With their own way of thinking and learning
72The Teachers Job
- Developing a connection between the culture of
the student and the culture of school - Become knowledgeable of childrens cultural
orientations (learning styles and strengths or
ways of thinking and learning) - Linguistic style
- Communication style
- Social interaction style
- Response style
- Use that knowledge to develop a bridge that
provides students an equal opportunity to learn
and grow
73Wade Boykin Research
- MOVEMENT
- LEARNING
- ENVIRONMENT
74 Source Asa HilliardLearning
styles valued by the Learning Styles
ofTraditional School Culture SELs
- Standardized and rule driven
- Deductive, controlled, egocentric
- Low movement expressive context
- View environment in isolated parts
- Precise concepts of space, number, time
- Respond to object stimulus
- Dominant communication is verbal
- Emphasis on independent work
- Variation accepting and improvising
- Inductive, expressive, sociocentric
- High movement expressive context
- View environment as a whole
- Approximate concepts of space
- number and time
- Respond to people/social stimulus
- Communication is non-verbal as
- well as verbal
- Responds to Collaborative Effort
75Reflection and Debrief
76INSTRUCTIONAL STRATEGY Culturally Relevant
Classroom Library
77LITERACY ACQUISITION
- Educational Change Strategies
78School Literacy Experiences
- Literacy is an extension of natural language
learning - Must be built around the language of the child.
- Must draw upon the experiences of students for
learning to be meaningful and relevant - Provide linguistic and cultural benefits to
children.
79 The Home Language and Literacy Practices of SELs
- Being read to is often not a part of the SELs
early literacy experiences - Storytelling may be part of SELs early literacy
experiences - Narrative discourse patterns do not match school
discourse patterns - Phonological sound pool may differ from the
sounds of school phonics
80Access to Books
- Many SELs come from home environments where being
read to is not part of the literacy experience - Young children who are read to before formal
schooling are ushered into an understanding of
the relationships between oral and written
language - For SELs who have not had exposure to books
before school, classrooms must become the venue
for building the relationship between oral
language and print. - A holistic approach to literacy acquisition may
eliminate barriers created by cultural and
linguistic differences.
81- The research documents that authentic literature
in the classroom, time for reading, and
opportunities to be read to enhance reading and
writing skills
82Increased Reading equals improved literacy
development
- In 38 of 40 studies, students using FVR did as
well as or better in reading comprehension tests
that students given traditional skill-based
reading instruction - Students who read more do better on tests of
- Reading comprehension
- Vocabulary
- Writing
- Grammar Krashen, 1993
83Cognitive and linguistic benefits derived from
interactions with literature
- Enhanced critical thinking skills
- Enjoyment of the creative uses of language and
art - Exposure to a variety of linguistic models
- Increased knowledge about oneself and the world
- Models for solving conflict or problems
- Harris (1993)
84American Indian Titles
85African American Titles
86Mexican American Titles
87Hawaiian American Titles
88VIDEO CLIP
89Classroom Conversations
- Socratic Practice
- Allows students to learn academic material more
effectively through the development of habits of
thinking and conversing. - Instructional Conversations
- Classroom conversations that consider cultural
and linguistic diversity and support the
development of academic language, and higher
order thinking skills. - Accountable Talk
- Classroom talk that is accountable to the
learning community, to accurate and appropriate
knowledge, to rigorous thinking and that supports
learning
90Classroom Conversations
- Classroom discourse offers opportunities for
students to adopt authoritative stances - A persistent prejudice is that intellectual life
is elitist and habits of thoughts/mind do not
need to be cultivated for all children - Such discussions (Socratic practice, Accountable
talk, Instructional conversations) happen with
low frequency in classrooms with African American
and other SELs. - How do we address the differences in discourse
patterns?
91Classroom Conversations
- SELs can both learn standard English structure
and engage in complex entended discourse around
texts. - Students can become bi-discoursal and bi-dilectal
given equal status interaction with peers
92Reflection and Debrief
93Resources for Teaching SELsPeoples Publishing
Group1-800-822-1080
94Between Teacher and Child
Dr. Haim Ginott
I have come to a frightening conclusion. I am
the decisive element in the classroom. It is my
personal approach that creates the climate. It
is my daily mood that makes the weather. As a
teacher I possess tremendous power to make a
childs life miserable or joyous. I can be a
tool of torture or an instrument of inspiration.
I can humiliate or humor, hurt or heal. In all
situations it is my response that decides whether
a crisis will be escalated or de-escalated, and a
child humanized or dehumanized.
95Reading References Culturally Responsive
TeachingCompiled by Noma LeMoine, Ph.D.
- Cummins, J. (1996). Negotiating Identities
Education for Empowerment in a Diverse Society.
California Association for Bilingual Education
Ontario - Delpit. L.(1995). Other Peoples
ChildrenCultural Conflict in the Classroom.New
PressN. Y. - Delpit. L. Dowdy, J. (Eds) (2002). The Skin We
Speak Thoughts on Language and Culture in the
Classroom. The New Press New York. - Gay, G. (2000). Culturally Responsive Teaching
Theory, Research, Practice. Teachers College
Press. Columbia University. - Hale, J. (1982). Black Children their Roots,
Culture, and Learning Styles. The John Hopkins
University Press Baltimore, MA - Irvine, J. Armento, B. (2001). Culturally
Responsive Teaching Lesson Planning for
Elementary and Middle Grades. McGraw-Hill New
York, N.Y.. - LeMoine, N. (2001). Language Variation and
Literacy Acquisition in African American Students
(p. 169-194). Chapter in Harris, J., Kamhi, A.,
Pollock, K. (Eds) Literacy in African American
Communities. Lawrence Erlbaum Associates Inc.
Mahwah, New Jersey. - Lindsey, R., Robins, K., Terrell, R. (2003).
Cultural Proficiency, A Manual for School
Leaders. Corwin Press, Inc. Thousand Oaks - Shade, Kelly, Oberg (1998). Creating
Culturally Responsive Classrooms. American
Psychological Association. Washington, DC. - Tauber, R. (1997). Self-Fulfilling Prophecy, A
Practical Guide to Its Use in Education. Praeger
Publishers Westport, CT - Villegas, A. Lucas, T. (2002). Educating
Culturally Responsive Teachers A Coherent
Approach. State University of New York Albany,
N.Y.
96Reading References Linguistically Responsive
TeachingCompiled by Noma LeMoine, Ph.D.
- (Adger, C., Christian, D., Taylor, O. (Eds.)
(1999). Making The Connection Language and
Academic Achievement Among - Baugh, J. (1999a). African American Language and
Educational Malpractice Out of the Mouths of
Slaves. Austin University of Texas Press. - Berdan, R. (1978). Dialect Fair Reading
Instruction for Speakers of Black English. Paper
prepared for the Sociolinguistics of Reading
Session, Sociolinguistics Research Program,
Ninth World Congress of Sociology, Uppsala
National Institute of Education, Department of
Health, Education and Welfare. - Cleary, L. Linn, M. (1993). Linguistics For
Teachers. McGraw-Hill, Inc. New ork. - Crawford, C. (Ed.), (2001) "Ebonics Language
Education". Brooklyn, NY Sankofa Publishers - Cummins, J. (1981). The role of primary
language development in promoting educational
success for language minority students. In
Cummins, J. (1996) Negotiating Identities
Education for Empowerment in a Diverse Society.
Ontario, California Association for Bilingual
Education. - Dandy, Evelyn (1991) Black Communications,
Breaking Down The Barriers, African American
Images Chicago, Illinois. - LeMoine, N. (2001). Language Variation and
Literacy Acquisition in African American
Students. In J. Harris, A. Kamhi, K. Pollock
(Eds.), Literacy in African American Communities
(pp. 169-194). Mahwah, New Jersey Lawrence
Erlbaum Associates Inc.