| The
purpose of this workshop is provide information and background needed
to identify "potentially English proficient" (PEP) students
and provide them with appropriate instruction and learning opportunities.
To
provide appropriate instruction/learning opportunities, school personnel
must consider who their students are (e. g., their cultural, educational,
and linguistic backgrounds), what they need to learn, and in what
contexts they are supposed to learn (e. g., programs available,
community/home learning opportunities.)
School
personnel must . . .
- Identify
which students need special assistance due to limited English
proficiency, ascertain students home language background,
assess oral and written language proficiency, and carry out various
types of classroom and curriculum-based assessments.
- Learn
about the students, i. e., their cultural, linguistic and home
backgrounds, the resources they have at their disposal, their
attitudes and motivation toward school, their learning styles,
strengths, and weaknesses, and other attributes.
- Decide
what they should be learning (including first language skills,
second language skills, curricular content).
- Understand
the environment (school and home) where the students will be learning
(including the kinds of programs and materials available, parental
support, home/community learning opportunities, etc.).
Course
Goals:
Upon
completion of this course, participants will be able to
- Identify
who in their class needs special services due to limited proficiency
in English;
- Make
decisions regarding appropriate instructional methods and techniques
taking into consideration:
- Who
is being taught (student characteristics);
- What
is being taught (content);
- In
what context it should be taught (context);
- Justify
decisions they have made regarding appropriate instruction;
- Carry
out these decisions in classrooms and schools.
Performance
Objectives:
Section
II:
Recognize
the need for training of teachers who work with Limited English
Proficient (LEP) students and understand the legal, pedagogical,
socio-economic, and demographic rationale for such training.
Section
III:
- Develop
an awareness of the extent to which culture permeates every aspect
of our being ... thinking, feeling, valuing, and interacting with
others.
- Recognize
the difference between visible, surface characteristics of culture
and the many subtle, invisible manifestations of culture known
as deep culture.
- Examine
in-depth, and become familiar with, characteristics of ones
one culture and how this influences our interactions with and
expectations for students.
- Become
knowledgeable about the stages of cultural adaptation for new
comers to any culture and of the behavioral characteristics that
may be associated with each stage of adjustment and which often
appear as classroom problems.
- Become
aware of the wide diversity within any given cultural group and
how to use cultural information without depending on stereotypes
and preconceived ideas concerning cultural characteristics.
Section
IV:
- Understand
the influence that home, school, and community relationships have
on academic achievement and school adjustment of students.
- Recognize
student and parent background characteristics that influence effective
parental involvement.
- Develop
strategies and activities that promote parent, school, and community
relationships with the classroom.
Section
V:
- Understand
the processes of first and second language acquisition and their
relationship to cognitive development and age of the learner and
develop appropriate and positive expectations for students
progress in language learning.
- Recognize/identify
the stages of language acquisition in students and plan instructional
activities that are appropriate to the stage of the students.
- Understand
the similarities and differences between first and second language
acquisition and learning and adapt/develop classroom activities,
procedures, and structures so that they maximize second language
acquisition and learning.
Section
VI:
- Conduct
classroom assessments of oral language proficiency using recognized,
systematic procedures.
- Develop
appropriate learning activities given students oral language
competence.
Section
VII:
- Recognize
the difference between social and academic language.
- Understand
literacy in terms of the stages of literacy acquisition, the relationship
between literacy and language acquisition, and the relationship
between reading and writing acquisition.
- Select
appropriate techniques and create appropriate materials for teaching
literacy.
- Analyze
skills-based and whole-language approaches with reference to teaching
reading and writing to second language learners.
- Create
a literacy learning environment that is sensitive to the learners
language and personal needs.
- Develop
strategies and lessons for teaching reading and writing skills
"holistically."
Section
VIII:
- Utilize
approaches that integrate language and curricular content learning
and corresponding strategies and techniques used to teach language
and content simultaneously.
- Analyze
strategies that combine language and thinking skills and relate
such strategies to the content of the curriculum.
- Develop
a thematic course section using strategies designed to teach language
and content simultaneously.
- Develop
strategies that infuse multiculturalism throughout the curriculum.
Section
IX:
- Recognize
types of tests and their appropriateness for use with language
minority students.
- Critique
and select assessment instruments designed to be used with language
minority students.
- Use
alternative/classroom-based assessment to place language minority
students in educational programs and to monitor programs.
- Collect
and evaluate language minority student data when special needs
are suspected.
Section
X:
- Conceptually
integrate all sections of this course and note how they fit together
or complement each other.
- Decide
which approaches, methods, and techniques are appropriate with
which students in order to work toward course goals.
- Justify
decisions regarding instruction based on information from various
domains.
- Carry
out those instructional decisions with students.
Case
Study/Final Activity:
The
Case Study/Final Activity must be completed before points are awarded
for the workshop. Course sections III-IX each have, in addition
to activity assignments, an assignment which will become part of
the Case Study. Some of these assignments should be completed and
forwarded to the facilitator before going on to the next section.
Some will require the creation of a plan or collection of artifacts
or data which will be used in later assignments. Many of the activity
assignments are also work that may be used in the Case-Study/Final
Activity (e.g., various aspects of a lesson plan are part of several
activities. This lesson plan may be refined and/or expanded for
a case-study activity.) DO NOT POSTPONE DOING ASSIGNMENTS EVEN THOUGH
THEY HAVE NO PRODUCT DUE IMMEDIATELY. Keep a copy of each assignment
for use in the Final Activity. The Final Activity is based on all
the data collected by each participant during the course of the
Case Study.
Each
participant will be required to select a student to study. Ideally,
this student should be one of the participants LEP students
who has yet to achieve native-like fluency in English. This case
study student can be at any stage of development (beginning, intermediate,
or advanced), any age, and from any background. When the ideal is
not feasible, participants may select a native English-speaking
student (preferably one in participants classroom who is having
difficulty with language) or a non-English speaking child. The participant
should have regular contact with this student.
Case
Study Assignments
(These
are also included at the end of each section with specific directions/documents):
Section
III:
Part
A: List specific cultural/background questions or information to
be obtained about your case-study student and develop a plan detailing
how to obtain the information. (Product: list of questions and
detailed plan)
Part
B: Written descriptions that compare and contrast how specific daily
routines are carried out in your school vs. the students home
culture (culture capsule). (Product: written assignment)
Section
IV:
Design
and develop a student profile form that will include information
regarding your case-study student and his/her family. (Product:
completed copy of the student profile form specifically designed
for your case-study student)
Using
the student profile as a starting point, build a mini-ethnography
for the case study student by collecting data on various elements
of deep culture from his/her background. (Product: summary of
all ethnographic data gathered on the case-study student)
Section
V:
Collect
an oral language sample from your case-study student. (Product:
audiotape of the language sample)
Section
VI:
Apply
the Student Oral Language Observation Matrix (SOLOM) to the audiotape
of the case-students verbal language production collected
in Section V. Select and/or create activities/techniques which would
be beneficial to the case-study student given his/her results on
the SOLOM. (Product: results of the SOLOM analysis and a list
of "appropriate" techniques and how each would benefit
the student)
Section
VII:
Use
a series of instruments to collect information on various aspects
of case-study students literacy proficiency. The data will
be complied and added to the case-study portfolio. (Product:
completed literacy data collection instruments.)
Section
VIII:
Develop
a whole language lesson plan for your case-study student. (Product:
lesson plan)
Section
IX: Design alternative assessment procedures and apply them to case-study
students taking into account the strategies discussed in the section.
The accumulated data collected from these procedures should be incorporated
into the case-study. A summary of the results of this information
must be included in the final ethnographic report you began in section
IV. (Product: summary of information collected.)
Evaluation
The
collection of products from these assignments will constitute a
complete case-study portfolio. The portfolio and the final activity
will be evaluated as the posttest for the course. The successful
and timely completion of the assignments for each activity, the
case-study assignments, and the final activity are required for
awarding of points. |