19
Teachers’ Practices When Teachers’ Practices When Working with U.S. Latino Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio, Texas, USA

Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Teachers’ Practices When Working with Teachers’ Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners U.S. Latino English Language Learners

with Reading Related Disabilitieswith Reading Related Disabilities

Dr. Rocio Delgado

Trinity University

San Antonio, Texas, USA

Page 2: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

ContextContext

Increasing cultural and linguistic diversity Latinos in the U.S. fastest growing “minority” 5 million identified as English language learners (ELLs) Latino ELLs have the lowest educational attainment Low performance on achievement tests High dropout rates Disproportionately represented in special education

Page 3: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Purpose of the StudyPurpose of the Study

To investigate reading practices implemented by teachers of Latino ELLs with reading-

related disabilities and the beliefs, knowledge, and skills reflected in their work.

Page 4: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Research QuestionsResearch Questions

What is the nature of reading instruction provided Latino ELLs with reading-related disabilities?

What beliefs, knowledge, and skills are reflected in teachers’ reading instructional practices?

What other factors do teachers perceive as influencing reading instruction?

Page 5: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

ParticipantsParticipants• Elementary teachers who provided reading instruction to Latino ELLs

with disabilities. Students provided the context for understanding what the teachers were doing in their classrooms.

Three Special education resource room teachers- European American, female- Assigned to work with 2nd, 4th and 5th graders- Range of experience between 5 and 24 years

Two Bilingual education teachers- Latino, female- Assigned to work with 3rd and 4th graders- Range of experience between 5 and 24 years

Page 6: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Data Collection ProceduresData Collection Procedures

Eight 90 min. observations over 12 week period in each teacher’s classroom

Debriefing sessions following each observation

Two semi-structured 60 min. interview with each teacher

Initial Final

Document analysis Student records Lesson plans Daily reflection journals

Page 7: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Mrs. Emerson: 2nd GradeMrs. Emerson: 2nd Grade

Focus of Reading Instruction•Phonological instruction (blending/segmenting)•Phonics •Fluency

Strategies•Systematic instruction•Sight words•Small group instruction•Immediate, corrective feedback

Beliefs, Knowledge and Skills Reflected in Practices•Multiple purposes of reading, but limited opportunities to read for enjoyment due to on-going assessment of skills•Limited understanding of BICS and CALP•Difficulty translating theory into practice

There could have been a better way for Dinora

Page 8: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

“I am very lucky that I have Mrs. Gómez [a bilingual teacher] to talk to. She is very knowledgeable about bilingual education and is always willing to explain to me what she knows about language and how to take that into consideration when

making decisions.”

“We decided to teach her in English only because the bilingual teacher and I felt she [the student] was getting confused by having to go from one language to the

other.”

“If I had really felt that Dinora needed to be in a bilingual resource, I could have really pushed the issue [with administration], but I did this before and was told to just do my job. With Dinora, we really feel this was a good decision, but it’s not

that easy.”

“I understand the theory about the need to work collaboratively and to talk about students’ language, but I think it is very different when it actually comes to having to make a decision about which language to instruct children, how to differentiate what's difference from what’s disability, and who that student is to work with in

the classroom.”

Page 9: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Mrs. Ornelas: 3rd GradeMrs. Ornelas: 3rd Grade

Focus of Reading Instruction•Integrated ESL and other content areas•Comprehension•Story sequencing•Memory

Strategies•Graphic organizers•Think-alouds•Small and large group instruction•Visual and auditory cues

Beliefs, Knowledge and Skills Reflected in Practices•Perceptions about parents/families•Questioning language of instruction

What are we doing to give Jorge success?

Page 10: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

“He has been going to his special education teacher for the whole year. My concerns are that there are no set expectations for him in there. What is she

[special education teacher] doing so that he has success? She can’t serve him there because she doesn’t speak Spanish! And we have some teachers who do,

but not in his special class.”

“I’ve said to him, “Jorge, you’re the only one that can help yourself. You need to focus on your story and study it from beginning to end. You can track your text to stay on the story.” We do little things like that. I show him how to keep his

hands together, like rubbing his hands together instead of tapping them on the table. One of the things that helps me is sign language, because sometimes I

will do the sign of words or letters he’s reading. Or squeeze a ball or rub your hands together; and it’s just having your body moving in a different way to focus on what you need to attend to, which is your reading. I do these little

things for him to be able to be focused when he needs to be focused. He hasn’t implemented them. Sometimes I’ll have to re-direct him.”

Page 11: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Mrs. Carrillo & Mrs. Glasser: Mrs. Carrillo & Mrs. Glasser: 4th Grade4th Grade

Focus of Reading Instruction•Integrated ESL and other content areas•Vocabulary development•Letter/sound recognition

Strategies•Instructional conversations•Culturally relevant lit•Individual tutoring•Visuals and TPR

Beliefs, Knowledge and Skills Reflected in Practices•Need for raised expectations•Limited understanding of interrelationship of ELL status and disability•Lack of preparation to effectively teach ELLs with LD

Poco a poquito Melissa and Julio se van apagando

Page 12: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

“I've heard many people who know more about bilingual education than me and they have different opinions on it. I feel sometimes bilingual students are kept in Spanish classes for

too long. They have low skills not because of special education needs. I just think they haven’t had enough English.” [Mrs. Glasser]

“A lady in the district told me they manage it [working with ELLs with LD] using a lot of pictures. I use more pictures and identifications to try help them get the meaning. I do more

of this than I would with English speaking students. I guess it’s just providing more context. I feel I could do a better job if I actually had someone come in to show me how to do it.” [Mrs.

Glasser]

“I sometimes feel like I'm drowning. It's not that I don't want to help. I just don't know how to help. I try to read and read with them [bilingual special education students] but there's

something else that's going on because they're not getting it.”

[Mrs. Carrillo]

“That’s one less kid that I'm responsible for. I've given it my best shot and I'm sure she [Melissa] has given it her best shot. I tend to put her aside because the responsibility has been shifted to special education teachers. They [special educators] should be the ones to

bring Melissa along.” [Mrs. Carrillo]

Page 13: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Mrs. Zimmerman: 5th GradeMrs. Zimmerman: 5th Grade

Focus of Reading Instruction•Fluency•Comprehension•Vocabulary development

Strategies•Summarization•Comprehension questions•Fluency•Vocabulary Development

Beliefs, Knowledge and Skills Reflected in Practices•Limited understanding of BICS and CALP•No need for differentiated instruction

Linda doesn’t need the bilingual stuff

Page 14: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

“I’ve always had children that spoke English and Spanish in my classrooms, but generally I have not had to do any kind of differences in their assignments because

they were able to understand and do what we asked them to do.”

“I never felt they [ELLs with disabilities] needed bilingual support because they understand everything I say to them in English. If they don’t understand I don’t believe it’s because of the language barrier. It could stem from that, but it’s not

because they want you to explain in Spanish. I think they just need further explanation in English.”

“Problems might have to do with cultural or family exposure. There are many things we read about that they have never been around or never seen. For example, we

read two poems to compare and contrast. I found they weren’t able to do it because I don’t think they’ve had a lot of exposure to poetry. I don’t know that has to do with them being bilingual. I think it’s just a matter of them thinking “we’ve never done this before” or “we’ve only done this one other time maybe and we

don’t remember reading poems like these before,” or “I don’t even know what a poem is,” you know? That’s just my interpretation of the problem.”

Page 15: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Factors Influencing InstructionFactors Influencing Instruction

Impact of high-stakes assessment on instruction

Limited collaboration between general and special education

Limited understanding of the interrelationship between students’ ELL status and their disability

Page 16: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

ResultsResults Reading instruction for Latino ELLs with disabilities in non-

bilingual special education settings was characterized by limited student engagement and accommodations for culture/language or disability, but not both.

The delivery of reading services for ELLs with LD reflected limited opportunities for collaboration and instructional planning between bilingual and special education teachers.

Although teachers had a positive disposition towards bilingualism and family and cultural resources, their reading programs reflected limited understanding of the interrelationship between students’ ELL status and LD.

Page 17: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Results - ContinuedResults - Continued

The findings of this study illuminated two unintended consequences of the NCLB Act:

(a) Pressures associated with accountability and high stakes assessment seemed to displace teachers’ attention and efforts from teaching reading to teaching to the test

(b) The definition of highly qualified teachers for ELLs with LD seems inadequate in addressing these students’ instructional needs.

Page 18: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Discussion and ImplicationsDiscussion and Implications

Systemic inequities in educational system Children Left Behind

Professional development in schools Shared responsibility for students and services Opportunities for sharing of teachers’ expertise Systemic, on-going collaboration across programs and personnel Working toward same instructional goals

Preparation in teacher education programs Interdisciplinary classes Diversity infused throughout university courses Preparation of higher education faculty to teach CLD students with

and without disabilities and to work collaboratively

Page 19: Teachers Practices When Working with U.S. Latino English Language Learners with Reading Related Disabilities Dr. Rocio Delgado Trinity University San Antonio,

Contact information:Contact information:

[email protected]

THANK YOU!!