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Flint Community Schools Alternative Program for LEP Students

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5-6, Kindergarten and First grade. Reading Readiness ... Children will invent their own spelling until acquisition of conventional forms ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Flint Community Schools Alternative Program for LEP Students


1
Flint Community Schools Alternative Program
for LEP Students
English as a Second Language (ESL) Workshop Series
2
Year 2 Workshop 3Reading
  • John P. Lesko and Kerry Segel
  • Saginaw Valley State University

jplesko_at_svsu.edu ksegel_at_svsu.edu
3
Workshop Series Preview
ESL in Flint Community Schools From Standards to
Students
Year 1 Contexts for ESL Learning Year 2 Basic
ESL Methodology Year 3 Advanced ESL
Methodology, Materials, Assessment
4
Year 2 Basic ESL Methodology
  • Workshop 1 Second Language Acquisition
  • Workshop 2 Oral Language Development
  • Workshop 3 Reading
  • Workshop 4 Writing

5
Todays Workshop
  • Exploring literacy development
  • Emergent literacy perspectives
  • Best practices
  • Content areas and educational standards
  • Tutoring and teaching helps
  • Practicing ESL reading techniques

6
Todays Workshop Schedule
Morning Sessions Session 1 Overview of ESL
Reading Session 2 Best Practices for ESL
Reading Lunch ! ! !
7
Afternoon Sessions
  • Session 3 Being an Effective ESL Reading
    Tutor
  • Session 4 Practicing Your ESL Reading
    Techniques

8
General Session 1
  • Overview of ESL Reading

9
Emergent Literacy
  • Braille Activity Using the Braille Alphabet
    guide, read your story with a reading partner.
    Your partner will help you if you run into
    difficulty (giving hints, modeling, or other
    clues to help decipher the Braille text).

10
Becoming Readers
  • Birth to age 3
  • 3-4, Preschool
  • 5-6, Kindergarten and First grade

11
Reading Readiness
  • This perspective suggested that children are not
    developmentally ready for reading until age 6
  • The result was a postponement of reading until
    the 1st grade

12
Emergent Literacy
  • This perspective suggests that children begin
    learning about reading from birth onwards
  • Comprehensible input, social interaction, and
    childrens gradual approximations to mature
    reading and writing are important factors.
  • (Peregoy and Boyle)

13
Oral/Written Language Development
  • The emergent literacy perspective highlights the
    similar ways in which students acquire oral and
    written literacies
  • Teachers/reading tutors are influential models of
    literacy

14
Literacy Functions in the Classroom
  • Q. What are the purposes of reading and writing,
    and how are these communicated to students at
    early stages of literacy?
  • A. Through imaginative and creative literacy
    activities/functions in the classroom
  • (see Written Language Functions and Classroom
    Experiences)

15
The Visual Form of Written Language
  • Childrens early writing approximates mature
    writing
  • Students learn very early in their lives that
    language can be represented through visual forms
  • This emergent literacy leads to early literacy in
    the form of decipherable written language

16
Example A First Graders Story
17
(No Transcript)
18
Connecting Symbols and SoundsCategories of
Writing Strategies
  • Writing via drawing
  • Writing via scribbling
  • Writing via letterlike forms
  • Writing via reproduction
  • Writing via invented spelling
  • Writing via conventional spelling
  • (not necessarily sequential)

19
Print Concepts and Emergent Literacy
  • Print carries meaning
  • Spoken words can be written down
  • Written words can be spoken
  • Directionality of print in English
  • Sounds/letters/alphabet
  • Linear sequence in time/on pages
  • Sound/symbol correspondencewith many exceptions
    in English ! !

20
Invented/Temporary Spelling
  • Children will invent their own spelling until
    acquisition of conventional forms
  • But this demonstrates an understanding of the
    meaning and purpose of writing

21
Emergent Literacy and ESL/ELLs
  • Important differences for ESL/ELL emergent
    literacy
  • Language proficiency
  • Primary language literacy
  • Immersing ELLs in meaningful, functional literacy
    activities
  • Explicit instruction
  • (see developmental continuum and ESL Reading
    Rubric)

22
Environments that Nurture Emergent Literacy for
All Students
  • Environments which build on home language and
    literacy backgrounds
  • Literacy modeling in the home
  • Family literacy programs
  • Language rich experiences

Video A Literacy Nurturing Environment
23
Intermediate-Advanced Reading
  • Academic Content Areas

24
General Session 2
  • Best Practices for ESL Reading

25
Early Literacy Goals
  • Awareness and appreciation
  • Understanding of print/oral language relation
  • Knowledge of print conventions
  • Knowledge of phonics
  • Sight word recognition

26
Creating a Literacy-Rich Classroom Environment
  • Activity centers
  • Variety of literacy props
  • Themes
  • Subjects
  • What is the layout of your classroom? (see class
    floor plan)
  • Good readers . . .

27
Books and Daily RoutinesEncouraging a
Fascination w/ Books
  • Child-made books
  • Trade books
  • Childrens journals
  • Poetry
  • Holiday books
  • Big Books
  • Dictionaries and
  • encyclopedias
  • Alphabet books
  • Phone books
  • Recipe books
  • Teacher-made books
  • Photo albums
  • Sign language books
  • Author of the month books
  • Songs and poems learned at school
  • (organized by topic, color-coded bins, display
    racks)

28
Reading Aloud
  • Modeling the reading process
  • Stopping at certain places to discuss a
    picture/plot/questionthis is known as the think
    aloud method
  • Professionally recorded audio

Video The Think Aloud Method
29
Shared Writing and Reading The Language
Experience Approach
  • Using your students language creations to
    promote literacy
  • Students generate the content and create a text
    that is appropriate for their age, experience,
    and interests
  • Useful for phonics and sight word instruction

30
Dialogue Journals
  • Students write in their journals on a topic of
    choice
  • Teachers respond to entry content (not form)
  • This shows interest in student ideas, encourages
    questions, and models literacy through dialogue

31
Alphabet Books
  • Phonics
  • The alphabetic principle
  • What are your favorite alphabet books?

32
Sight Words
  • Immersion in meaningful, functional literacy
    environments leads to a growing sight word
    vocabulary

33
Phonics and Word Families
  • Teaching phonics strategies enables students to
    recognize words independently
  • Phonics strategies give students a tentative
    pronunciation, and the context of a word leads to
    meaning and comprehension
  • Word familiesonsets and rimes

34
Developmental Levels
  • Pre-phonetic spelling
  • Phonetic spelling
  • Transitional spelling
  • Conventional spelling

35
Evaluation and Assessment
  • Portfolio documentation
  • Checklists
  • Self assessment and evaluation
  • (see ELD and Reading Intervention Programs for
    ELLs)

36
Best Practices
  • Intermediate-Advanced Reading

37
General Session 3
  • Being An Effective ESL Reading Tutor

Video Cooperative Reading
38
General Session 4
  • Practicing your ESL Reading Techniques

39
Works Cited
  • Butler-Pascoe, Wiburg. Technology and Teaching
    English Language Learners. Boston Allyn and
    Bacon, 2003.
  • Gebhard, J.G. Teaching English as a Foreign or
    Second Language. Ann Arbor U of M Press, 1999.
  • Peregoy and Boyle, Reading, Writing, and Learning
    in ESL A Resource Book for K-12 Teachers.
    Longman, 2001.
  • Schifini, A. Institute for Educational
    Development. 2003.
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