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4th grade slump

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Title: 4th grade slump


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4th grade slump
  • Due more to an increase in demands than a
    decrease in skills
  • Early instruction focuses mostly on word reading
  • By 4th grade, assessments are about comprehension
  • Reading comprehension becomes an expectation
    across subject areas

3
4th grade transition for ELLs
  • Similar challenges, but more intense for ELLs
  • Kids with lower vocabulary and limited
    proficiency with language have greater difficulty
    with comprehension
  • Problem becomes more apparent in 4th grade

4
Newcomers in 4th 6th grade
  • Need to build both conversational skills and
    academic language skills
  • Greater demands on comprehension abilities than
    for native English speakers

5
Academic language
  • Language of print is different than
    conversational language
  • Complex sentence structures
  • Different vocabulary (analyze, abstract, observe)
  • Multiple word meanings
  • Function words (therefore, however)
  • Comprehension requires understanding of purpose
    of reading and authors intent

6
Academic language Strong predictor of
comprehension
  • Good comprehenders tend to have good academic
    language
  • They understand nuances, difficult syntax

7
How long does it take to develop academic
language?
  • Depends on type and amount of instruction
  • Roughly 3 7 years to develop full academic
    proficiency
  • Some kids never become fully proficient due to
    lack of proper instruction

8
Effective ways to improve academic language
  • Anchor instruction in print
  • Discussion about text language, ideas,
    connecting sentences
  • Written activities feedback, revising,
    rereading, summarizing
  • Download list of academic words
  • http//www.colorincolorado.org/content/vocab.php

9
Video Maricely
  • Hartford, CT
  • 5th grader, born in Puerto Rico
  • Learned English as a second language
  • Faced challenges learning to read in second
    language

10
Addressing diversity within ELL population
  • Differences in reading and language abilities
  • Differences in experiences and reasons for coming
    to this country
  • To do
  • Create goals for instruction around student
    profiles
  • Group native/fluent speakers with ELLs to
    scaffold language development through peer
    learning

11
Utilizing first-language literacy skills
  • First-language literacy can be a strong asset
  • Many aspects of reading are not language-specific
  • Knowing how print is used
  • Thinking about authors intent
  • Reading for meaning

12
Impact of prior schooling
  • First language may be well-developed
    conversationally but not academically (oral
    skills but not literacy skills)
  • Children with well-developed literacy skills in
    first language need new labels (English
    vocabulary), but may already know the concept

13
Activating prior knowledge
  • Have them represent knowledge through
  • Graphics
  • Casual conversation
  • In native language with support materials, in
    preparation for learning it in English

14
Does a child need oral proficiency before
learning to read?
  • In an English-only instructional environment
    dont wait!
  • Some bilingual programs start strictly in first
    language and transition to second
  • Reading is a powerful tool for developing
    vocabulary

15
Value of writing
  • Writing is an excellent way to gauge literacy
    skills, and proficiency with language
  • Allows kids to experiment with language

16
Teaching unusual spelling patterns
  • Teach spelling in a meaningful way
  • Traditional rote methods have been unsuccessful
    because they are taught in isolation
  • Teach the ph pattern, for example, through a
    character named Christopher
  • Spelling is an opportunity for language
    development!
  • Kids should be learning meaning along with
    spelling

17
Teaching strategies for spelling
  • Free write
  • Structured activities alongside text in any
    content area
  • Writing activities that focus on improving
    spelling and vocabulary

18
Developing vocabulary in your native language
  • Research shows that kids learn vocabulary by
    being exposed to words, high-quality language
  • Conversation
  • Kids learn through language models teachers,
    but also older peers
  • Vocabulary develops when there is interaction
    between people
  • Reading
  • Reading is necessary to develop academic language
  • Kids acquire vocabulary at a rapid rate and in a
    short time when reading
  • Kids should leave high school with a working
    understanding of about 50,000 words.

19
Developing vocabulary in a second language
  • Develops in similar way but is dependent on
    instruction
  • ELLs need structured opportunities with language,
    print, writing, and discussion

20
Strategies for vocabulary learning in 4th-6th
grade
  • Importance of breadth and depth of word knowledge
  • Use direct instruction (vocabulary worksheet or
    activity)
  • Teach strategies for word learning so kids can
    problem solve with new words independently (root
    words)

21
Which words should we teach?
  • High utility academic words
  • Words that cut across curriculum (analyze,
    frequent, compare)
  • Teach kids to look for cognates
  • They do not always pick this up on their own!
  • Beware of false cognates (embarazada in Spanish
    sounds like embarrassed, but means pregnant)
  • Find a list of English-Spanish cognates at
    www.colorincolorado.org/introduction/cognates.php

22
Comprehension instruction for ELLs
  • Same principles structured time and
    comprehension strategies
  • More attention to oral comprehension for ELLs
  • Discussion around text
  • Practice becoming an active reader

23
Strategies for improving comprehension
  • Small group oral reading
  • Students read aloud, stumble, get corrective
    feedback, keep going
  • Discuss comprehension in a group
  • Generally used today in early elementary special
    ed, but beneficial for ELLs in upper grades
  • Small group discussion, small group work
  • Previewing
  • Generates interest in topic
  • Provides background knowledge
  • Predicting, clarifying, summarizing

24
Independent Reading
  • Independent reading can improve comprehension,
    provided there is a good reader-text match!
  • Too many unfamiliar words is not a useful way to
    build vocabulary or comprehension
  • A good match requires 90-95 accuracy

25
Do comprehension skills transfer?
  • Best case scenario newcomers with lots of formal
    schooling in native language
  • Many aspects of reading comprehension are the
    same across languages
  • Do I know why Im reading this? What information
    am I looking for? Am I supposed to be
    summarizing? Am I thinking about what Im
    learning?

26
Teaching literacy in the content areas
  • Reading is both the mechanism by which we deliver
    curricula, and the method by which we assess
    achievement too large a job to fall only on
    Language Arts teachers
  • Content area teachers can
  • Teach registers that pertain to their subject
    (math sum, estimate, fraction, proportion)
  • Help kids attack word problems
  • We are always mediating the curriculum with
    language

27
Video Reciprocal teaching
  • Frank Love Elementary School
  • Bothell, WA
  • Goal Prepare students to run their own
    discussion
  • Asking a question
  • Clarifying the meaning of unfamiliar words
  • Summarizing, finding the main idea
  • Prediction

28
Reciprocal teaching In the classroom
  • Capitalizes on diversity of language and reading
    ability
  • Uses peers and teachers as models
  • Opportunity for structured discussion
  • Heterogeneous grouping is part of the goal
  • Scaffolded approach
  • Chance for teacher to conduct informal assessment
  • Goal Gradual release of responsibility to
    students

29
Content areas Fitting in reading instruction
  • From the outset, think of language and reading as
    part of content area delivery
  • Integrate reading instruction in the curriculum
    planning process
  • Many native English speakers struggle with
    language issues as well and benefit from reading
    instruction in content areas too

30
Sheltered Instructional Observation Protocol
(SIOP Model)
  • Helps teachers identify, in planning stage,
    content area goals and language demands
  • Originally developed for adolescent newcomers but
    can be adapted for upper elementary
  • For more information on the SIOP Model, visit
    www.colorincolorado.org/webcasts/1004.php

31
Vocabulary Improvement Program (VIP)
  • Published by Brookes, developed by Maria Carlo,
    Catherine Snow, Diane August and colleagues
  • Designed for upper elementary grades
  • Teaches word families, relationships among words,
    use of words in both oral language and print
  • Goal Develop deep understanding of high-utility
    academic words

32
Literacy assessment for ELLs in grades 4-6
  • Standards-based tests only give broad
    understanding of achievement level
  • Ideal assessments tease apart elements of oral
    language and reading
  • Accuracy, fluency, and comprehension
  • Literal comprehension questions vs. inferencing
  • Academic language
  • Syntax
  • Morphological awareness

33
Assessment at school and district level
  • Typically use large-scale standards-based
    assessments
  • Recommendation Take kids for whom that
    assessment raises red flag and do more in-depth
    assessment
  • Find out what aspect of the skill had broken down

34
Language of assessment
  • Depends on instructional goals
  • Do we have tools to do native language assessment
    well?
  • May get useful information, but not enough to
    classify children
  • Native language assessments have often been
    created using monolingual students may be
    inaccurate for bilingual students

35
Using assessments to inform instruction
  • Good instruction starts with good assessment
  • ELLs are developing at rapid and uneven rates
  • Monitor progress, then think about modifications

36
Final thoughts
  • Focus on better academic language instruction in
    regular classrooms
  • Consider language diversity as an aspect of K-12
    classrooms, rather than treating ELLs as a
    subgroup

37
Final thoughts (cont.)
  • This approach parallels
  • Middle school literacy reform content-based
    literacy, writers workshop, improved academic
    language for all students
  • Special education reform universal design,
    preventing difficulties, increasing opportunity
    to learn before labeling child, adjusting
    curriculum to promote success

38
Thank you!
  • Visit our Web site for recommended readings,
    discussion questions, and more on this topic
  • http//www.colorincolorado.org/webcasts/2004.php
  • For general information on teaching English
    language learners to read, visit Colorín
    Colorado! http//www.ColorinColorado.org
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