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Literacy Instruction: Techniques on How to Teach a Beginner
Jackie FosterShari Vass
Jolene Helgason
November 24th, 2008
EDPY 413University of Alberta
Literacy Instruction
Key Points About ELLs Phonics and Phonetics Vocabulary Building Comprehension/Assessment Reflection
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Key Points to Remember about English Language Learners
Differences between immigrants and refugees.
ELLs need a supportive learning community.
ELLs’ ability to decode does not equal ability to understand (vocabulary & context).
ELLs may lack knowledge of grammatical structure. Ex. When I went to the park, I …
Key Points to Remember about English Language Learners
Some ELLs need to learn an entirely new orthography and phonology (writing and sound systems).
Some ELLs may never have had formal schooling in their L1 and as such, they need to learn to read, in addition to learning to read in English.
Key Points to Remember about English Language Learners
Key Points to Remember about English Language Learners
Teaching styles vary widely from country to country. E.g. making inferences from texts
may be a completely new concept.
Some ELLs who have formally studied English in their home country, may have a preference for reading and writing or speaking and listening, depending on how they were taught.
Some ELLs may experience difficulty hearing certain sounds. E.g. Distinguishing between two sounds.
Some may have a high level of BICS but a low level of CALP.
ELLs competent in reading in their L1, can use some of the same strategies to read in English.
Key Points to Remember about English Language Learners
Phonology & Phonetics
What is it?
Why is it important to ELLs?
How do you teach it?
What is it? (Congdon, 1974, pp. 1-2)
Phonetics: The science of sounds.
Phoneme: Spoken sound. The smallest unit of sound in a word. E.g. BATH has three (3) phonemes: /b/ /a/ /th/.
Phonics: The visual representation of speech sounds found in the various letters or clusters of letters in written words.
Grapheme: The written visual representations. E.g. the letters of the alphabet (the ‘b’ ‘a’ ‘t’ ‘h’).
What Does it Meanto Teach Phonics?
Phonics instruction examines the relationships between the letters of written language (graphemes) and the individual sounds of spoken language (phonemes) and how these relationships are
used to read and write words (Carnine et al, 2006 p. 55).
Phonemic Awareness(Carnine et al, 2006, p. 35)
Refers to the awareness of phonemes (the smallest units of sound in spoken language).
Focus is on identifying and manipulating individual sounds within words.
The Reading Teachers Book of Lists, Fifth Edition, 2006, by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Phonemic Awareness (cont’d)
Carnine et al (2006) identified Phonemic Blending and Phonemic Segmentation as the two most crucial components.
This is because they are directly related to sounding-out words.
Why is having Phonemic Awareness Important?
More specifically, why is it important for English Language Learners?
Phonetics & Pronunciation
Amy Gregory (2003) taught two applied linguistics courses in Spanish.
She was not happy with the pre-service teachers’ level of knowledge in Phonetics and Phonology.
The teachers did not see the relevance of it to their future teaching careers.
Phonetics & Pronunciation (Cont’d)
Gregory (2003) notes that “the knowledge of phonetics and phonology can be vital in the acquisition of target [language] pronunciation” (p. 203).
She states that teaching the learner how the sounds of the L2 are different from the L1 is a useful method to help the learner perceive the L2 phonemes.
Phonetics & Pronunciation (Cont’d)
Instructors are likely to be more concerned that their students are communicating meaning rather than proper pronunciation (Gregory, 2003).
On that note, she quoted one of her students saying that:
…the professors and peers stop correcting us after they think that we know sufficient enough Spanish to get by. So then you have students who aren’t afraid to speak it in front of a big group and sometimes we really can’t understand them because they are speaking very fast and unclear (p. 203).
How is Proper Pronunciation Relevant to Reading?
Roberts (2005) conducted a study and reported that “quality of English articulation was found to have a robust influence on children’s phonemic awareness and beginning word reading” (p. 610).
Furthermore, she found that English oral proficiency (having basic communicative competence) was not significantly related to phonemic awareness or word reading.
Roberts (2005) (cont’d)
Articulation and vocabulary were found to be highly correlated and both were associated with higher levels of phonemic awareness.
However, articulation had a much stronger effect.
In fact, vocabulary only had an effect through articulation. Having a larger vocabulary results in better articulation. Better
articulation has a strong effect on phonemic awareness.
So what?
We have seen how having better articulation and pronunciation helps ELLs improve their phonemic awareness.
Does this help them read better?
The Development of Reading in Children Who Speak English as a Second Language
(Lesaux & Siegel, 2003).
This study examined students’ reading levels in Kindergarten and classified the students as being L1 or ESL.
From there, they divided each group into “at-risk” for reading failure and “not-at-risk”.
The Development of Reading in Children Who Speak English as a Second Language
(Lesaux & Siegel, 2003) Cont’d
All Kindergarten children were then given phonological awareness training in the form of classroom-based small group learning. Some carried on into Grade 1.
Students were then re-assessed in Grade 2
The Development of Reading in Children Who Speak English as a Second Language
(Lesaux & Siegel, 2003) Cont’d
Findings: “It is clear that Kindergarten phonological awareness
instruction in the context of a balanced early literacy program is as effective for ESL speakers as it is for L1 speakers in the early grades of school” (p. 1016).
By Grade 2, ESL children were reading at the same level or higher than the L1 children.
“Phonological processing was the single best predictor of Grade 2 word reading ability” (p. 1017).
The Development of Reading in Children Who Speak English as a Second Language
(Lesaux & Siegel, 2003, p. 1016)
The Development of Reading in Children Who Speak English as a Second Language
(Lesaux & Siegel, 2003) Cont’d
As with Roberts (2005), this study also found that fluency and proficiency in English were less important in determining reading level than successfully acquiring the sound-symbol relationship of the language.
Phonological Awareness ability (or lack thereof) has been linked to difficulties with early reading acquisition in both L1 and ESL children.
Phonology in Second Language Reading: Not an Optional Extra
(Walter, 2008)
Walter’s study compared two ESL groups to an L1 English group.
The two ESL groups were divided by their L2 reading comprehension ability into either the “Good C” group, or the “Poor C” group.
Phonology in Second Language Reading: Not an Optional Extra
(Walter, 2008) Cont’d
Phonological Similarity Effect: “Good C” L2 group performed just as well as the
L1 group. The “Poor C” L2 group, performed significantly
worse than both groups. A follow-up study confirmed that the poorer
performance by the “Poor C” group was not due to insufficient grapheme correspondences.
How To Teach Phonetics to ESL Students
Walters (2008) concluded that to improve L2 reading comprehension, it may be necessary to spend time explicitly teaching ELLs to recognize L2 phonemes.
She recommends games that differentiate minimal pairs.
How To Teach Phonetics to ESL Students Cont’d
Minimal Pairs are sets of words that are exactly the same except for one phoneme. E.g. “cat” and “sat”. Only the /c/ and /s/ differ.
BINGO!
www.eslhq.com
Elkonin Boxeswww.bogglesworldesl.com
Each pair has one sound in common. Students listen for the common sound. Then mark it on the Elkonin box.
As an optional exercise students can stretch out the words and fill in the boxes with the corresponding graphemes for each phoneme.
Elkonin Boxeswww.bogglesworldesl.com
Elkonin Boxeswww.bogglesworldesl.com
Teaching Phonemic Awareness
The National Reading Panel identified Rhyming as a phonological awareness skill (as cited in Carnine et al, 2006).
It focuses students on the parts of words that are bigger than phonemes, but smaller than syllables.
Teaching rhyming prepares students to put word parts together.
The Reading Teachers Book of Lists, Fifth Edition, 2006, by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
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Vocabulary
Vocabulary knowledge is knowledge; the
knowledge of a word not only implies a definition, but also
implies how that word fits into the world.
(Stahl, 2005)
Vocabulary Development
Words are grouped into 3 tiers by Beck and colleagues so that a systematic method of selecting vocabulary to teach to students is possible(Calderon, 2007, pp. 30 – 33)
1) Tier 1 Words that English-speaking students already know
2) Tier 2 Words that have importance and utility Words that have instructional potential Words for which students already have a conceptual understanding
3) Tier 3 Words that students are unlikely to know and are not frequently used
Tier 1(Calderon, 2007, p. 30)
These are words that ELLs need for everyday speech, for academic conversations and for explanations. Examples: Connectors: so, if, then, and, the
ELLs typically know the concept in their primary language but not the label in English. Examples: Basic words: find, answer, tooth
Example: A tier 1 word may be “butterfly”; it may be a word that is unfamiliar but can be easily taught in a lesson just by showing a picture.
Tier 2(Calderon, 2007, p. 32)
These are words that have importance and utility because they are in grade-level texts.
These words are targeted for instruction Some research shows that tier 2 words get
missed by ESL teachers as they typically teach tier 1 words and mainstream teachers generally teach tier 3 words (content words).
These are words in which the students may understand the general concept but would need assistance in describing it.
Tier 2 Word Listaccelerate
achieveadjacent
alternativeanalyze
approachapproximate
arbitraryassert assessassign
assumeauthorizeautomaticchapter
compensatecomplex
complicatecomply
componentcomprehend
conceiveconcentrate
conceptconclude
consequentconsist
constantconstruct
consultcontextcontrast
contributeconvertcreate
criterioncrucialdata
defineDefinite
demonstratedenotederivedesigndevisedevote
dimensiondistinctdistort
elementemphasizeempiricalensureentity
environmentequate
equivalent
establishevaluateevidentexpandexposeexternalfeasiblefluctuate
focus formulatefunction generate
guaranteehypothesis
identifyignore
illustrateimpact implicitimply
indicateindividual
Inhibitinitial
innovationintenseinterpretintuitiveinvolve
isolateMagnetic
magnitudemajor
manipulatemathematics
methodminimummodify
negativenotionobtain
obviousoccur
passiveperiod
perspectivepertinent
phasephenomena
portion portion
potential precedeprecise
presume
primeprincipleproceedpublishpursuerandomrangereact regionrequire
respectiverestrictreverse
rolesection
segmentselect
sequenceseries
shiftsignifysimilar
simultaneoussophisticated
speciesspecify
stablestatisticstatus
structuresubsequent
sufficesum
summarytechniquetechnology
tensetheorytrace
traditiontransmitultimateundergousagevalidvary
verbalverify vertical
http://mercury.educ.kent.edu/database/eureka/documents/introducingnewvocabteacherresourcechart_handout.doc
Tier 3(Calderon, 2007, p. 33)
These words are specific to certain content areas, thus they are low-frequency words in English.
Students will likely learn these words as they learn a new concept. An example of a tier 3 word,
would be photosynthesis.
Teaching Vocabulary
New vocabulary needs to be explicitly taught to get the English language learner caught up to grade level.
Teaching Vocabulary
Word Definition Context Connection Prompt
regionAn extensive, continuous part of
an area or space.
A part of the earth's surface (land or sea) of considerable and usually indefinite extent: a
tropical region.
What region of the world would you like to visit?
http://mercury.educ.kent.edu/database/eureka/documents/introducingnewvocabteacherresourcechart_handout.doc
Teaching new vocabulary before introducing it in a new unit is critical for comprehension!
It is vital to the student that the teacher pre-teach the words that will be in the material. The ELL student may not know any English words in that subject area.
Teaching Vocabulary
7 Steps To Pre-Teaching Vocabulary
(Caleron, 2007, p.34)
1. Say the new word in English
2. State the word in context from the text
3. Provide a definition
4. Provide an example that clarifies the word’s meaning (use student-friendly language)
Have the students repeat the word 3 times
1. Get the students engaged with the word
2. Have the students say the word again (either alone or in the original sentence).
Use visuals when introducing new vocabulary Create a word wall in the classroom Put labels around the classroom so that students can make
connections between oral and written English. Use real objects to encourage students to use all of their senses
to learn Use graphic organizers so that students are able to see the
relationship between new and existing concepts. Venn diagrams are used to compare and contrast words
across subjects, which helps them remember that the new word may have multiple meanings.
Flow charts and mind maps are also useful.
Teaching Vocabulary
Allow for lots of practice through a variety of activities. Allow students to make their own dictionaries/
glossaries Allow for group work
Example: Students could work in pairs and draw pictures to remember the word or make a poem
Read-Alouds Vocabulary is developed through the ongoing dialogue
between the teacher and the students regarding the text that is being read. The teacher will use different types of questions and stop at specific times to initiate a discussion.
Teaching Vocabulary
Where Do We Go From Here? Use Frequency Lists – The 2000 highest frequency
words in English comprise about 80% of the text The General Service List of the top 2000 frequent
words: http://www.auburn.edu/~nunnath/engl6240/wlistgen.html http://www.lextutor.ca
Choose Words From Tier 2 – these academic words cross over domains and broaden vocabularies
Use Engaging Materials - use visuals, pictures, labels and real objects when ever possible. Picture dictionaries and bilingual dictionaries may also
be very useful.
The Reading Teachers Book of Lists, Fifth Edition, 2006, by John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Strategies to Teach New Vocabulary
(Caleron, 2007, p. 43)
For Reviewing Words With Numbered Heads Together Students number off from 1 – 4. The teacher gives them a typed list of Tier 1, 2,
and 3 words learned that week. Students must make sure everyone in the team
knows the definition, spelling, pronunciation, and how to use that word in a sentence.
The teacher calls a number, the corresponding student is given a word and must answer for the team by saying it, spelling it, and using it in a sentence.
Strategies to Teach New Vocabulary
For Reviewing Words with Expert Jigsaw The teacher gives each team a different set of
laminated index cards with vocabulary words on one side and definitions on the other.
Students must make sure everyone in their team knows the definition, spelling and pronunciation of each word and how to use it in a sentence.
Then, every 3 minutes two students go to a different table to teach and test those students.
Strategies to Teach New Vocabulary
For Reviewing Words with Vocabulary Roundtable Each team uses only one paper and one
pencil. In round-table style, each student writes one
word learned that week and passes the paper to the right. The next student writes a different one, and so on, until the teacher calls time. The team with the most words wins.
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Ideas for Aiding Comprehension
Drucker (2003). What reading teachers should know about ESL learners. The Reading Teacher; Sep 2003; 57, 1; ProQuest Education Journals pg. 23
Comprehension Strategies
Previewing
Choral readings
Shared Reading
Paired Reading
Books with tapes
Multicultural literature
Comprehension Strategies (Cont’d)
Language experience approach
Interactive writing
Total physical response
Narrow reading
Read aloud
Think alouds
GIST (Generating Interaction between Schemata and Text)
Free Voluntary Reading
Story Re-enactment
Group work
Comprehension Strategies (Cont’d)
Assessment
Running records
Acting
Paraphrasing
Illustration
Allowing extra time
Assessment
Use performance assessments, as they show what the child can do and what they know
Graphic organizers Reading inventories Reading conferences Anecdotal notes
Reading Conference Record
Houk, F.A. (2005). Supporting English Language Learners: A guide for teachers and administrators. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann
Reflection
What caught your attention?
What concerns do you have?
What are the key insights here?
What are you personally committed to do?
References Calderon, M. (2007). Reading to English language learners, Grades 6-12: A framework for
improving achievement in the content areas. California: Corwin Press Carnine, D. W., Silbert, J., Kame’enui, E. J., Tarver, S.G., Jungohann, K. (2006). Teaching
struggling and at-risk readers. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education. Cobb, T. (2007). Why & how to use frequency lists to learn words. Retrieved from
http://www.wordhacker.com/en/article/usefrequency2learnwords.htm Congdon, P. J. (1974). Phonic skills and their measurement. Oxford: Blackwell Crawford, B., Cummins, J., Giles, S., Grant, K., Jensen, V., McPhail, S., et al. (2002) Literacy
place teacher’s toolkit: A guide to using literacy place in your classroom. Markham, Ontario: Scholastic Canada.
Davies S. K., Taylor, D. (2007) Teaching English language learners: Strategies that work. New York: Scholastic.
Day, R. R. (Ed.). (1993) New ways in teaching reading. Alexandria, Virginia: Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages
Drucker (2003). What reading teachers should know about ESL learners. The Reading Teacher; Sep 2003; 57, 1; ProQuest Education Journals pg. 22
Fry, E. B., & Kress, J. E. (2006). The reading teachers book of lists (5th ed.). San Fransico, CA: Jossey-Bass
Gregory, A. E. (2005). What’s phonetics got to do with language: Investigating future teachers’ use of knowledge about phonetics and phonology. In N. Bartels (Ed.), Applied
linguistics and language teacher education (vol. 4) (pp. 201-220). Haynes, J. Vocabulary Instruction for English language learners. Retrieved from
http://www.everythingesl.net/inservices/vocabulary_instructi_language__80932.php Herrell, A. L., Jordan, M. (2008) 50 strategies for teaching English Language Learners (3rd ed.).
Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education.
References Houk, F. A. (2005). Supporting English language learners: A guide for teachers and
administrators. Portsmouth, New Hampshire: Heinemann Lesaux, N. K., & Siegel, L. S. (2003). The development of reading in children who speak English
as a second language. Developmental Psychology, 39(6), 1005-1019. doi:10.1037/0012- 1649.39.6.1005
McIntyre, E., Kyle, D.W., Chen, C.T., Kraemer, J., Parr, J. (2009) 6 principles for teaching English language learners in all classrooms. Thousand Oaks, California: Corwin Press.
Muchisky, B. (2007) Classroom strategies: A tool kit for teaching English Language Learners. Westport, Connecticut: Teachers Ideas Press.
Roberts, T. A. (2005). Articulation accuracy and vocabulary size contributions to phonemic awareness and word reading in English language learners. Journal of Education Psychology, 97(4), 601-616. doi:10.1037/0022-0663.97.4.601
Rojas, V .P. (2007). Strategies for success with English language learners. Alexandria, Virginia: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Toohey, K. (2007). English language learners and literacy assessment. The Canadian Modern Language Review/La Revue canadienne des langues vivantes, 64(2), 253–272.
Walter, C. (2008). Phonology in second language reading: Not an optional extra. TESOL Quarterly, 42(3), 455-474. Retrieved from http://www.ingentaconnect.com
West, G. I. (2005). Success with struggling readers: The benchmark school approach. New York: Guilford Press
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