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Title: LEP Students in the Classroom Author: James May Last modified by: James May Created Date: 8/9/2006 11:40:03 PM Document presentation format – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
This Just In
  • According to an article written yesterday by
    Brian Feagans of the Atlanta Journal-Constitution
  • One out of every four of Gwinnett countys
    719,398 residents is foreign born.
  • Gwinnett is now 19 Black, 16 Hispanic 10
    Asian
  • Non-Hispanic whites, who were 90 percent of the
    population in 1990, were 54 of the population in
    2005.
  • What does this mean for Technical College
    Faculty?????

2
Youre not in Kansas anymore!Instructional
strategies for technical college faculty
addressing the needs of Limited English
Proficient students and students of other cultures
  • By James S. May
  • Professor of English as a Second Language
  • Valencia Community College
  • Orlando, FL

3
Faculty Questions on Culture
  • How do we approach individuals from other
    cultures that fear authority?
  • What about those who are shy and afraid to ask
    questions in class?
  • Is this true that some cultures are insulted when
    you point a finger at them?
  • Are there certain hand or body motions or
    distances that must be considered?
  • Is it true that some cultures have a required
    time lapse or pause before responding to a
    question from a teacher?
  • Are there some general characteristics of various
    cultures regarding learning and interacting with
    teachers?

4
Multicultural IntellegenceQuiz
  • Directions On page 2 of your handout, you will
    find a ten question multiple-choice quiz. Please
    take a few minutes to take that quiz right now.

5
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • You decide to use PowerPoint this semester while
    going over your syllabus with your students. You
    have carefully chosen to contrast important
    elements like your name with bolded red letters.
    You notice, however, that this draws peculiar
    looks from some international students. This is
    because
  • Buddhists tend to write someones name in red
    when he or she is dead.
  • Red is the color of mourning in parts of Africa.
  • Some Mexicans find a name in red offensive.
  • All of the above

6
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Not all languages cultures use/view text in the
    same ways.
  • Typographical cuing techniques (bolding,
    italicizing, underlining, using colors, etc.)
    differ across languages. Unfortunately, there is
    limited research on the effects of cuing on ESL
    students.
  • Even though most teachers share a preference for
    visual and aural learning, most Americans appear
    to prefer a combination of tactile and
    kinesthetic learning. (Dunn, Dunn, Price, 1979)
    The majority of ESL students also show a
    preference for tactile and kinesthetic learning
    (Reid, 1987 Rossi-Le 1995 Stebbins, 1995 Park
    2002)

7
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • There are obvious differences among people of
    different cultures however, universals do exist.
    For example, pointing with your index finger is
    universal.
  • True
  • False

8
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • This statement is false different cultures point
    with various parts of their bodies their lips,
    chins, palms, thumbs, etc.
  • It has been estimated that 93 of communication
    is non-verbal 55 coming from facial expression,
    posture, gesture and 38 through tone of voice.
  • Things that might offend you second language
    students include shaking hands, posture, facial
    expressions, appearance, voice, tone, hairstyle,
    clothes, expression in your eyes, smile, how
    close you stand to others, how you listen,
    confidence, your breathing, the way you move, the
    way you stand, the way you touch people, color
    choice, silence.

9
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Suggested Reading
  • Kiss, Bow, or Shake Hands The Bestselling Guide
    to Doing Business in More Than 60 Countries by
    Terri Morrison and Wayne A. Conaway
  • Multicultural Manners New Rules of Etiquette for
    a Changing Society by Norine Dresser

10
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • The common Everythings O.K. gestures
    (thumbs-up a circle with the index finger and
    thumb) are extremely rude in many parts of the
    world. Pick the country where one or both of
    these O.K. gestures are obscene.
  • Australia
  • Brazil
  • Spain
  • The Middle East
  • All of the above

11
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Suggested Reading
  • Gestures The Do's and Taboos of Body Language
    around the World by Roger E. Axtell

12
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Along with many other countries originally
    colonized by Spain, pesos are the accepted form
    of currency in Old San Juan, Puerto Rico.
  • True
  • False
  • Puerto Rico is a commonwealth of the United
    States and uses US currency.

13
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • In the United States, time is money, but being a
    hyper-critical manager of time is viewed
    suspiciously by every one of these ethnic groups
    except
  • Africans
  • Arabs
  • Latin Americans
  • Polynesians
  • White South Africans

14
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Asians may show disagreement by squinting and
    sucking air through their teeth.
  • True
  • False
  • Many Asians find it difficult to actually say the
    word no, and instead more comfortably indicate
    their displeasure or disagreement with a gesture.

15
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • The quote, "If English was good enough for Jesus
    Christ, it's good enough for me." has long been
    used to show how little most Americans know about
    other languages and cultures. Last semester, I
    heard two of my Aruban students, Aruba being a
    small island country off the coast of Venezuela,
    discussing this quote. What language could they
    have been discussing it in?
  • Spanish
  • English
  • Dutch
  • Papiamento
  • All of the Above

16
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • In Aruba, most people speak, write, and read
    English, Spanish, Dutch and Papiamento. Many also
    speak French and German.
  • Assignment
  • Talk briefly with those sitting next to you How
    do you think the rest of the world stereotypes
    Americans? If you could summarize these
    stereotypes in one or two words, what words would
    you choose?

17
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
Actual Student Comments Politically Correct Version
Americans are RUDE! Business Oriented
If we dont understand it, we change it or kill it. (Not necessarily in that order) Xenophobic
In international relations, its the American way or no way at all. Ethnocentric
Americans on vacation in Europe often say stupid things like, Why arent you using English? Monolingually Myopic
18
Contrastive Rhetoric
19
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • In 1969, Honduras and El Salvador fought a brief
    war. What sporting event led to the outbreak of
    this war?
  • Baseball
  • Cricket
  • Soccer
  • Rugby
  • The five-day Soccer War ended when El Salvador
    withdrew from Honduran territory.

20
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Unintended Cultural Bias
  • When you teach, do you use?
  • Analogy Story telling Realia
  • Current events Pop Culture

21
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • The United States, Australia, Canada, Guyana,
    Liberia, Malaysia, New Zealand, Trinidad and
    Tobago, Western Samoa, Hong Kong, and Singapore
    all use a basic unit of currency called the
    dollar.
  • True
  • False
  • The word "dollar" comes from the German word
    "Taler" (Low German "Daler"). "Taler" is short
    for "Joachimstaler," a coin made with metal from
    Joachimsthal, a town in the Erzgebirge Mountains,
    Czech Republic.

22
Vocabulary
  • The History of English
  • Cognates
  • Free Online Tools for Reading and Vocabulary

23
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • To quote Little Orphan Annie, "You're never fully
    dressed without a smile." A smile is a universal
    expression of genuine pleasure.
  • True
  • False
  • In much of Asia, a smile can be used to cover up
    embarrassment, shock, or fury.

24
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Bonus Question Alfred Nobel of Sweden
    (1833-1896) left the bulk of his fortune to
    establish the Nobel Prizes, which are awarded
    each year in the categories of medicine, physics,
    literature, chemistry, peace, and economics.
    Nobel made his fortune inventing and marketing
  • The pneumatic drill
  • Dynamite
  • The modern syringe

25
Multicultural IQ Answers Implications
  • Nobel made his money on his new explosive called
    dynamite which he patented it in 1867.
  • Close to 47 percent of the Nobel laureates in the
    world are Americans however that does mean 53
    come from some other country/culture.
  • For a statistic more near and dear to the hearts
    of English teachers, only 25 percent of the Nobel
    laureates in literature are English speaking and
    only 12 percent of those are American.

26
More Questions from Teachers
  • I have students who seem to read the text or seem
    to understand what is gone over in the classroom,
    but they do poorly on tests. Why?
  • Why is it that students speak English fluently,
    but then they demonstrate more errors in their
    writing?
  • Some of my students Ace grammar tests, but then
    fail the essay. Why?
  • Why is it that even if they get it in class they
    still mess things up when they write essays?

27
BICS CALP
  • BICS (Basic Interpersonal Communication Skills)
    is the language used in social, face to face
    interactions sometimes referred to as playground
    language. It is context embedded and low in
    cognitive demands. Research has shown that it
    typically takes second language learners 2 to 3
    years to acquire BICS. On the other hand
  • CALP (Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency) is
    the language required for academic achievement.
    It is language that is reduced in context and
    high in cognitive demands. Research has shown
    that it takes anywhere from 7 to 10 years to
    acquire CALP.

28
The Morpheme Studies
  • Morphemes are grammatical items in English such
    as ing, plural /s/, and third person singular
    /s/.
  • Certain morphemes, such as ing and plural /s/,
    tend to be acquired relatively early, while
    others, such as the third person singular /s/ and
    the possessive /'s/ tend to be acquired late.
  • Unfortunately, not one study showed that the
    natural orders could be changed.

29
Input or Output?
  • In the 1970s, Krashen suggests that
    Comprehensible input is what leads to acquisition
    of language
  • In the 1980s, Swain suggests opportunities to
    produce language are what is necessary for
    important for acquisition.
  • Modern beliefs are that no one side is correct,
    teachers are supposed to create interactive
    learning environments for students, where they
    can get input and create output in the Authentic
    negotiation of language.

30
Writing Feedback
  • I recommend one-on-one feedback for second
    language students. I also recommend teachers and
    tutors to use these following tricks.
  • Backchanneling Cues
  • Open Ended Questions
  • Wait Time

31
  • In China, the teacher is a moral guide, like a
    parent, who has valuable knowledge that is a
    students duty to learn. Students and teachers
    both expect students to obey and pay attention,
    so little time is spent on discipline even in
    classes of 60 students (Jin Cortazzi, 1998).
  • Western students often ask questions in class to
    fill gaps in learning, Chinese students ask
    questions after they have studied on their own.
    They believe that questions should be based on
    knowledge and may consider westerners to be rude
    for asking questions based on their ignorance
  • In Lebanon, teachers are like prophets. Students
    memorize everything that is presented to them.
    Practical or creative applications of the given
    knowledge and personal reactions to this
    knowledge are not encouraged (Kibbi, 1995).

32
  • In the United States direct eye contact is a sign
    of honesty, and a lack of eye contact means a
    person is hiding something. However, other
    cultures view direct eye contact as intrusive,
    inappropriate, shameful, or disrespectful.
  • In the United States direct eye contact is a sign
    of honesty, and a lack of eye contact means a
    person is hiding something. However, other
    cultures view direct eye contact as intrusive,
    inappropriate, shameful, or disrespectful.
  • In some cultures emotional expressions are
    considered inappropriate in the classroom, while
    American teachers often hope to rile up students
    and get them excited about a topic.
  • In some countries there are topics that are not
    discussed publicly even apparently inoffensive
    topics can be problematic for some students.
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