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Effectively Teaching Tecnolog

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Effectively Teaching Tecnolog a en Espa ol to Spanish Speakers Mario A. Maga a Regional 4-H Educator Oregon State University Extension 105 Ballard Extension Hall – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Effectively Teaching Tecnolog


1
Effectively Teaching Tecnología en Español to
Spanish Speakers
  • Mario A. Magaña
  • Regional 4-H Educator
  • Oregon State University Extension
  • 105 Ballard Extension Hall
  • Corvallis, OR 97331
  • mario.magana_at_oregonstate.edu

2
Goal of Presentation
  • To provide an overview on how to teach computer
    classes to Spanish-speaking audiences.

3
Topics
  • Why the Latino audience
  • Why computer classes
  • Getting started
  • Recruiting students
  • Finding a computer lab
  • Scheduling
  • Instructors

4
Topics
  • Retention of volunteers
  • Teaching strategies
  • Curriculum
  • Outcomes
  • Challenges
  • Trust building
  • What we have learned

5
Why the Latino AudienceBy the Year 2020 in the
US
  • 1 in 4 new workers in the US will be Latino.
  • The Latino population will increase by 60
    million.
  • This indicates the Latino labor force will
    increase by 56, while the non-Latino labor force
    is projected to grow by 9.

6
Latino Population Projections
  • Percentage of Latinos in the U.S.
  • Year 2010 15.5
  • Year 2050 24.4
  • Source U.S. Census Bureau. 2004. U.S. Interim
    Projections by Age, Sex, Race, and Hispanic
    Origin. Washington, DC U.S. Census Bureau.

7
Why Technology for Latinos?
  • The U.S. workforce will depend in large part on
    Latinos in the near future.
  • Military operations.
  • Business community.
  • Higher education system.
  • Political institutions.
  • Health care system.
  • Religious institutions.

8
What Does This All Mean?
  • Invest today in the preparation of Latinos for
    the future.
  • An unskilled or uneducated workforce cannot
    compete in a global economy.

9
Getting Started
  • Community Needs Assessment.
  • To find out if this is a need or interest.
  • Focus groups to identify needs/resources.
  • Meet with community leaders.
  • Meet well established people.
  • Attend Hispanic organizations meetings.
  • Collaborate with church groups.
  • Partner with public schools, colleges, etc.

10
Get to Know the Community
  • Are the people immigrants?
  • From what countries?
  • Mono-lingual parents vs. bilingual kids.
  • Low literacy in both languages.
  • American born, first/second generation.
  • Other differences?

11
Building Relationships with the Majority Community
  • Be patient.
  • Be willing to step out of the norm.
  • Develop allies.
  • Identify funding opportunities.
  • Walk your talk.

12
Recruiting StudentsWhat do they want to Learn?
  • Door-to-door invitation.
  • Connect with organizations and leaders in the
    community to get the word out.
  • Promote your classes in churches, schools,
    meetings, on radio, with flyers, etc.
  • Offer classes that attract adults and meet the
    needs of their children.
  • Classes to meet the community's workforce.

13
Finding Your Computer Lab
  • Accessible and well known to audience.
  • Write grants for computers.
  • Partner with public schools and community
    colleges for computer labs.

14
Setting the Schedule
  • Time of day and days of the week.
  • Length of each class 1-2 hours.
  • How many classes? 6-8 per session.
  • If offer adults class only, arrange (4-H
    activities) for children.
  • Be true to the schedule. If you cant make it,
    you may hire a substitute, but people may not
    come.
  • Trust factor. Reliable and constant instructor.

15
Instructors Staff or Volunteers
  • Identify volunteers/staff with teaching
    experience and technology skills.
  • Do not accept people just because they want to
    help, unless you plan to train them.
  • Extend a personal invitation and be specific
    about your request and their commitment.
  • Recruit professionals that want to give back to
    the community.
  • College students internships
  • For teaching and developing curriculums.

16
Retention of Volunteers
  • Recognition at the end of the year.
  • Support them with materials and as needed.
  • Provide training opportunities to build skills.
  • Acknowledge their work.
  • Treat them with respect.
  • Support them when they have problems.

17
Teaching Classes
  • What are the goals for the classes?
  • For adults to find new jobs or to communicate
    with family.
  • For youth to gain confidence to take regular
    computer classes.
  • Where do you start?
  • At the beginner level unless teaching
    professionals.

18
Teaching Classes
  • How many students per class?
  • 5-15 and 10-20 with teachers assistant.
  • How many to a computer?
  • One per computer or two if they are a married
    couple or a parent of a child less than 12 years
    old.

19
What teaching strategies work?
  • Hands on activities.
  • Separated vs. mixed classes.
  • Elementary and middle school kids OK with
    parents.
  • High school youth do better alone or working with
    adults NOT their parents.
  • Extra help in the classroom.
  • Use Spanish, but introduce English terms.
  • Students working together.

20
Curriculum
  • Printed curriculum vs. delivering all instruction
    verbally.
  • Spanish vs. English issues.
  • Find a bilingual instructor with teaching
    experience.
  • All explanations should be done in Spanish.
  • But because all the software is in English, teach
    all the vocabulary in English and Spanish.

21
Curriculum
  • Using existing curriculums.
  • A written curriculum is not the best way to teach
    people who dont read, write or know how to
    follow a curriculum.
  • Curriculums found to work well.
  • Develop your own curriculum.
  • What do they enjoy or need?
  • Word, Excel, PowerPoint, E-Mail, Internet, and
    Publisher.

22
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23
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24
Outcomes
  • Students gained enough confidence to enroll in
    regular computer classes.
  • Adults applied knowledge to jobs.
  • Children and youth communicate with other family
    members by email.

25
Challenges
  • Funding Soft funding issues.
  • Retaining volunteers.
  • Hard to find Latinos with technology skills.
  • Recruiting bilingual teachers
  • Scheduling classes
  • Evenings and weekends.
  • People do not have flexible jobs.
  • Transportation only one car in the family.

26
Tips To Build Trust
  • Embrace the family aspect.
  • Look for staff preferably of the same culture.
  • Learn some Spanish.
  • Value culture, tradition, and language.
  • Respect myths.
  • Do not use stereotypes

27
Tips To Build Trust
  • Be honest with yourself.
  • Get to know your audience.
  • Slowly acclimate yourself.
  • Find community leaders.
  • Dont be afraid.
  • Think of new ways of doing things.
  • Deliberate intent.

28
We Have Learned That
  • Working with Latinos is not easy.
  • It can take years to build trust.
  • Additional money and energy is needed.
  • Personal invitations really work.
  • Paperwork discourages Latinos.
  • Sometimes a Yes really means NO.
  • We need to be sincere, clear, open minded,
    patient, helpful, supportive, respectful, caring,
    truthful, and most of all friendly.

29
Gracias
Mario A. Magaña Regional 4-H Educator Oregon
State University Extension 105 Ballard Extension
Hall Corvallis, OR 97331 Phone
541-737-0925 mario.magana_at_oregonstate.edu
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