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Working with Working with English Learners English Learners

Working with English Learners

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Working with English Learners. Things to know. Various English language proficiency levels. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Working with English Learners

Working with English Working with English LearnersLearners

Working with English Working with English LearnersLearners

Page 2: Working with English Learners
Page 3: Working with English Learners

Various English language proficiency levels

English learners are assessed in 4 domains: listening, speaking, reading and writing (for further information see http://www.cde.ca.gov/ta/tg/el/ ). Once the assessment is done, they are categorized as:

• Beginning• Early Intermediate• Intermediate• Early Advanced• Advanced

(See for detail information http://www.fuhsd.org/CELDT/CELDTEnglish.pdf http://www.sandi.net/depts/literacy/eldpi.pdf )

Keep in mind that the overall proficiency level is the composite of the levels from the 4 domains listed above so an Intermediate English learner may be at the early advanced level in listening and speaking but at the early intermediate or even beginning level in reading and writing.

Page 4: Working with English Learners

Variety of cultural backgrounds

Since ….• English learners are from one or more cultures and

backgrounds.• Many English learners were born in the US yet they are

living with parents who are first or second generation immigrants.

Therefore …Many activities, objects, animals… that are common to mainstream culture may very well be unfamiliar to English learners.

Page 5: Working with English Learners

Different levels of knowledge in both English and primary

language

• Language transfers; so does knowledge.

• English learners who are literate in their primary language usually do better when learning a new language or concept.

• Similarly, English learners who have been in school often perform better in acquiring knowledge.

Example: concepts like table or photosynthesis does not need to be relearned.

Page 6: Working with English Learners
Page 7: Working with English Learners

Explain what is said

• Content specific vocabularies – condensation, sublimation…

• Academic vocabularies – collect, hypothesize, evaluate…

• Idiomatic expressions – back to square one, days are numbered, behind the time…

• Colloquial – I got an earful from my mother last night. Make sure she does not cross you.

Page 8: Working with English Learners

Provide visual presentation, models,

examples…

• Use realia, pictures, charts, graphs, graphic organizers, videos clips ... to provide concrete understanding.

• Models, examples are very helpful.

Page 9: Working with English Learners

Use analogies

Providing analogies bridges the concepts being learned to students’ prior knowledge, experience or things that they are familiar with.

Example: use peanut butter sandwich or jaw breaker candy to explain the different layers of the earth …(for more examples of science analogies, go to http://www.scienceanalogies.info/webanalogylinks.html )

Page 10: Working with English Learners

Role-play, act-out, pantomime

These provide visual representation and attach meaning to abstract concepts or ideas.

Example: role-play the sun’s, plant’s, and cow’s function in a simple food chain; act out the relationship of bonds between molecules in stages of matter (molecule dance from Dr. Art)…

Page 11: Working with English Learners

Provide abstract/summary

Providing abstract or summary helps students see the big pictures, the overview, or the main ideas/concepts of what they are about to explore/learn.

Like professional papers that you have read.See abstract

Page 12: Working with English Learners

Highlight/underline key concepts, main ideas

When reading texts, highlighting/underlining enables English learners to identify key concepts or main ideas. This is also a study skill that not all students acquired.

Page 13: Working with English Learners

Paraphrase

• Paraphrase presents the same information in a simpler way without the complexity of grammar structures and mechanics and academic or content specific vocabularies.

• Remember to use already learned content or academic language when paraphrasing.

Page 14: Working with English Learners

Provide processing time

• Everyone including English learners need time to process the information as it is how human brain function.

• For English learners, since English is not their first language, they need time to “translate” what they hear or receive into their own language, structure a reply or answer if required then translate it back to English to say it out loud. The whole process takes time.

• Usually, strategies like 10/2 would work well. Teacher instructs for 10 minutes (more or less depending on grade levels), then provide 2 minutes for students to process the information by sketching or jotting down what they just heard, share with a partner….

Page 15: Working with English Learners

Cooperative learning structures/activities

• Cooperative group structures and activities provide students the opportunities to process and discuss information in a low effective filter.

• Examples: pair share, group project, numbered heads together,…

Websites for cooperative learning structures/activities: http://edtech.kennesaw.edu/intech/cooperativelearning.htm

http://www.jalt.org/pansig/PGL2/HTML/Nakagawa.htm http://www.utexas.edu/academic/diia/research/projects/hewlett/cooperative.php

Page 16: Working with English Learners

Keep expectations consistent with students’ proficiency levels

• Tasks assigned, expectations, assessment need to be appropriate to students’ proficiency levels.

• Example: Beginning students should be asked to label, match,

draw pictures or single word answers…Intermediate students can perform all of the above

with the expectation that their answer be in simple sentences or even short paragraph.