Title: Effectively Teaching Tecnolog
1Effectively Teaching TecnologÃa 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
-
2Goal of Presentation
- To provide an overview on how to teach computer
classes to Spanish-speaking audiences.
3Topics
- Why the Latino audience
- Why computer classes
- Getting started
- Recruiting students
- Finding a computer lab
- Scheduling
- Instructors
4Topics
- Retention of volunteers
- Teaching strategies
- Curriculum
- Outcomes
- Challenges
- Trust building
- What we have learned
5Why 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.
6Latino 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.
7Why 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.
8What 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.
9Getting 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.
10Get 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?
11Building Relationships with the Majority Community
- Be patient.
- Be willing to step out of the norm.
- Develop allies.
- Identify funding opportunities.
- Walk your talk.
12Recruiting 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.
13Finding Your Computer Lab
- Accessible and well known to audience.
- Write grants for computers.
- Partner with public schools and community
colleges for computer labs.
14Setting 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.
15Instructors 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.
16Retention 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.
17Teaching 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.
18Teaching 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.
19What 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.
20Curriculum
- 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.
21Curriculum
- 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.
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24Outcomes
- 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.
25Challenges
- 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.
26Tips 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
27Tips 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.
28We 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.
29Gracias
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