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ELL Tips of the Week

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Title: ELL Tips of the Week


1
ELL Tips of the Week
2
ELL Tip of the Week Immersion
  • Surround students with print. Having your class
    label a few objects in the room helps beginning
    English speakers. The classroom should be
    dripping with print. Environmental print is
    affixed to walls, doors, and furniture. A
    comfortable, orderly classroom library invites
    students to select books. Authentic reading and
    writing are everywhere. How many of us learn a
    new word just by hearing it? Language acquisition
    requires listening, reading, writing, and
    speakingthe listening and reading being easier
    and developing first.
  • Walter, Teresa. (2004) Teaching English Language
    Learners.

3
ELL Tip of the Week Affective Variables
  • There are 3 affective variables that influence
    language acquisition
  • Self-esteem students with higher self-esteem are
    more apt to take risks (a huge part of language
    learning).
  • Motivation motivated students are more focused
    and take greater risks
  • Level of anxiety anxiety inhibits language
    acquisition. Anxious students focus more on form
    than communication and take fewer risks.
  • To promote these affective domains praise
    specific appropriate behaviors, use caution in
    correcting small grammatical errors, and provide
    instruction that is academically, linguistically,
    and age-level appropriate.
  • Walter, Teresa. (2004) Teaching English Language
    Learners.

4
ELL Tip of the Week Home Language
  • Validating and appreciating the students home
    language helps build the affective domains that
    are beneficial to second language learning.
    Taking 30 seconds to greet the student in his/her
    home language or to teach the class a phrase in
    the home language will help to lower anxiety.
    Here are a few hellos to beginSpellings and
    pronunciations came from the kids, so Im not
    sure.
  • Spanish- hola (oh- lah)
  • Telugu- Namaste (naw-mah- stay)
  • Korean- OnyungHaSayo (oniong-haw-say-oh)
  • Persian- Salam (suh-lahm)
  • Russian- privet- (pree-vet)
  • Chinese- Knee-how-mah
  • Japanese- Konichiwa- (koh-knee-chee-wah)
  • French- Bon Jour

5
ELL Tip of the Week 10 Things Mainstream
Teachers Can Do To Improve Instruction for ELLs
  • 5) Try to avoid idioms and slang wordsor explain
    them when you do use them.
  • 6) Present new information in the context of
    known information.
  • 7) Announce the lessons objectives and
    activities and list instructions step-by-step.
  • 8) Present information in a variety of ways.
  • 9) Provide frequent summarizations of the salient
    points of a lesson, and always emphasize key
    vocabulary words.
  • 10) Recognize student success overtly and
    frequently. But, also be aware that in some
    cultures overt, individual praise is considered
    inappropriate and can therefore be embarrassing
    or confusing to the student.
  • 1) Enunciate clearly, but do not raise your
    voice. Add gestures, point directly to objects,
    or draw pictures when appropriate.
  • 2) Write clearly, legibly, and in printmany ELL
    students have difficulty reading cursive.
  • 3) Develop and maintain routines. Use clear and
    consistent signals for classroom instructions
  • 4) Repeat information and review frequently. If a
    student does not understand, try rephrasing or
    paraphrasing in shorter sentences and simpler
    syntax. Check often for understanding, but do not
    ask Do you understand? Instead, have students
    demonstrate their learning in order to show
    comprehension.

6
ELL Tip of the Week Reasonable Accommodations
  • Identify common language learner mistakes when
    grading written work, but do not take off points
    for these mistakes.
  • Verb tense, spelling, missing helping verbs,
    misplaced prepositions, no apostrophes, misplaced
    articles, etc.
  • Allowing an extra day or two on deadlines.
  • Be clear as to when they can have extra time. We
    dont want to make bad habits, but sometimes they
    completely miss the homework assignments.
  • Allowing students to use a note-card full of
    notes for a test.
  • Working in groups. Be sure to vary the groups
    frequently.
  • Writing a paragraph and using the native language
    when they cannot remember an English word.
  • Shortening a test. It takes ELL students much
    longer to read the problems and formulate
    answers. Multiple choice helps, but only some.
    The student still has to decode and read each
    answer.
  • Asking for one well organized paragraph instead
    of a five-paragraph essay.

7
ELL Tip of the Week Myths
These are NOT true! Feel free to send me
questions or arguments.
  • School districts are not obliged to enroll
    students who are not legal residents of the U.S.
  • Teachers should not allow students to speak in
    their native language in the classroom.
  • Learning a second language is entirely different
    from learning ones native language.
  • Younger children are more effective language
    learners than are older learners.
  • Academic success is determined primarily by a
    students ability to learn English.
  • Language students need about one year to learn
    English. Therefore, the emphasis should be on
    transitioning students out of special programs as
    quickly as possible.
  • When teaching newcomers, it is best to hold off
    on reading and writing instruction until they
    have a pretty good grasp on oral language.
  • ELL teachers need to be able to speak a language
    other than English.
  • Its impossible for us to involve ELL parents
    more, as most of our teachers are monolingual
    English speakers.

8
ELL Tip of the Week What constitutes reading?
Read the following and then answer the questions
in complete sentences. A krinklejup was parling a
tristlebin. A barjam stipped. The barjam grupped
minto to the krinklejup. The krinklejup zisked
zoely. 1. What was the krinklejup doing? 2. What
stipped? 3. What did the barjam grup? 4. How did
the krinklejup zisk? Is this considered reading?
We can speak the words and answer the questions,
so some argue that it is reading. However, it is
not considered reading unless it goes through
your head and meaning is made. Unfortunately,
this is what happens to our ELLs. They appear to
read wonderfully and answer all the questions
correctly, yet they still have difficulty on
other literacy activities. Encourage students to
interact with the text through predictions
verifications, rejections, and more predictions
9
ELL Tip of the Week Use Tiered Questions
  • You can help ELLs to summarize by using tiered
    questions associated with their level of language
    acquisition. Suppose we had read Goldilocks as
    a class.
  • Preproduction Students can point to a picture in
    the book as the teacher says or asks Show me
    the Papa Bear. Where is the girl?
  • Early Production Students do well with yes/no
    questions and one-or two-word answers. Did
    Goldilocks eat the porridge? Whose porridge was
    just right?
  • Speech Emergence Students can answer why and
    how questions with phrases or short-sentence
    answers, and can also explain their answers
    Explain why Goldilocks didnt like the first
    chair?
  • Intermediate Fluency Students can answer What
    would happen if and Why do you think
    questions Why do you think Goldilocks liked the
    baby bears items the best? What would happen if
    Goldilocks were older?
  • Advanced Fluency Students can retell the story,
    including the main plot elements and leaving out
    the insignificant details.

Hill, J.D. and Flynn, K.M. (2006). Classroom
instruction that works with English language
learners. Alexandria, VA ASCD.
10
ELL Tip of the Week Support Families
  • ELL parents often feel marginalized. We can help
    to elevate their status using some of these
    strategies
  • Avoid using students as interpreters for their
    parents. This shifts the power from parents to
    their children, robbing the parents of any
    parental authority.
  • Use parents as cultural and subject-matter
    experts. Invite them as guest speakers to share
    experiences and/or expertise with the class.
  • Encourage continued development of the primary
    language at home. Benefits include language and
    cognitive development, as well as the development
    and nurturing of family relationships.
  • Understand and be supportive of home culture and
    family structure, including roles and
    responsibilities and forms of discipline.---This
    can be tough with some of our cultural clashes.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
11
ELL Tip of the Week Know the Learner
  • Gathering background information helps the school
    and teacher better understand and meet the needs
    of English learners.
  • Depending on age and level, determine the
    students
  • Primary language
  • Educational background
  • Personal interests, abilities, health
  • Geographical background
  • Culture
  • Have students develop posters to describe the
    place of origin, family, significant events, and
    so on. Students may also bring in significant
    items or artifacts.
  • Find times to teach about the expectations of
    these cultures in ways that are respectful and do
    not embarrass or degrade. Look for opportunities
    to develop cultural literacy related to common
    background knowledge and experiences (i.e. tooth
    fairy, The Boy Who Cried Wolf, etc.)

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
12
ELL Tip of the Week Standardized Tests for ELLs
in Illinois
  • ELL students are exempt from taking the ISAT
  • Instead, they take the IMAGEIllinois Measure of
    Annual Growth in English
  • The IMAGE is administered at the same time as the
    ISAT
  • All ELL students (receiving services or not) will
    take the ACCESS test
  • This measures academic language growth and is
    used to report language progress to parents and
    to qualify/exit students from ELL services.
  • The ACCESS is administered in January and
    February
  • For more detailscome to the ELL update on
    Thursday, 11/9 at 800 am.

13
ELL Tip of the Week Our Kids
14
ELL Tip of the Week Know the Learners Culture
  • What is the dominant cultural background of the
    student and the students family? What are their
    basic beliefs? What are their important days of
    celebration?
  • For most of our ELL students, Thanksgiving and
    Christmas are not considered important days of
    celebration. With lots of American holidays and
    traditions nearing it is important to remember
    that this may be the first time some of our ELL
    students have been exposed to these fun
    traditions. Ive been working to introduce the
    idea of Thanksgiving to most of my ELL students,
    but reading about other peoples celebrations is
    not the same as sitting around grandmas house
    while the men cook, the women watch football, and
    the kids play games (thats what happens at my
    house anyway ?).
  • Be sensitive to our ELL students lack of
    experience with our holidays. Most of them get
    very excited about them, and love to learn about
    everything, but have still never tasted pumpkin
    pieand will likely not do anything special to
    celebrate our traditions.
  • This also opens a great opportunity to learn
    about some of their traditionssome sound very
    interesting.

15
ELL Tip of the Week Cohesion Using Referents
  • Proficient readers carry meaning over chunks of
    text, while less proficient readers focus on the
    meaning of smaller units of text (words, and
    phrases). The result is a breakdown of meaning as
    they continue through the text. The ability to
    carry meaning through a text depends on being
    able to process cohesive devices between and
    within sentences. Native speakers typically do
    this intuitively.
  • There are major areas we use to create
    cohesioneach of these present challenges to
    English learners, and help us to understand the
    root of some of their reading/writing struggles.
    Ill highlight these 5 areas during our next few
    weeks.
  • Reference involves using devices in a text that
    refer to something else in the text. Referents
    signal the need to look somewhere else to in the
    text, usually to something previously mentioned.
  • The weather was perfect. Susan hoped it would
    remain this way. Her friend was visiting from out
    of town and she wanted her to enjoy it.
  • ELLs may not always see the connection between
    the referent and what it is referring to or be
    able to follow this thread through longer text.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
16
ELL Tip of the Week Cohesion Using Substitution
  • Substitution is used in texts to avoid the need
    to repeat a word or phrase. We substitute a word
    or phrase to replace the original text.
  • Bob got coal in his stocking for Christmas. I did
    too.
  • English learners may not always understand that I
    did too means I also (too) got coal in my
    stocking for Christmas. Other substitutions for
    that phrase could include
  • This was the second time that happened.
  • Students may use these substitutions in their
    writing or speaking without always understanding
    exactly what they are saying.
  • When possible, clarify these substitutions with
    students using probing questions appropriate for
    the linguistic levels of that student.
  • Earlier production You also got coal in your
    stocking?
  • Intermediate What did you and Bob get in your
    stockings?
  • Advanced What does that mean? What did you do
    too?

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
17
ELL Tip of the Week Cohesion Using Ellipses
  • Ellipses can be thought of as omissions. Using
    this device requires the reader to assume certain
    information that may not be explicitly written.
  • Some people eat tacos and some dont (eat tacos).
  • He changed his clothes, (he) brushed his teeth,
    and (he) went to bed.
  • In these examples, the words in parentheses are
    omitted from the text and the reader must supply
    them.
  • Students learning English may not recognize the
    omissions and will not always be able to supply
    the missing wordmaking comprehension difficult.
  • ELLs may also not be able to apply the use of
    ellipses in their writing, causing writing that
    sounds repetitive and wordy.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
18
ELL Tip of the Week Cohesion Using Conjunctions
  • We use conjunctions to link and organize ideas in
    text. They also help the reader anticipate and
    interpret what comes next in text. Proficient
    English speakers could easily finish the
    following sentences because of the conjuctions.
  • Although the light was red, the car (kept
    going).
  • The light was green, but the car(stopped).
  • Because the light was red, the car(stopped.)
  • The light was red, so the car(stopped).
  • Watch for students use of and understanding of
    conjunctions. The student who reads The boy was
    hungry, so he got a drink without stopping to
    check the meaning has missed the point as meaning
    hinges on understanding the word so.
  • English learners will benefit from explicit
    instruction concerning how conjunctions trigger
    meaning.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
19
ELL Tip of the Week Language Acquisition
Variables
  • There are many variables that enhance language
    acquisition. Some are part of a students
    personality, age, and attitude. These are a few
    that we can control
  • Attention is given to background knowledge and
    experience.
  • Context and language are real and purposeful
  • Language is comprehensible
  • Students feel free to take risks
  • Interaction is high
  • Active listening
  • High levels of expectations
  • Ill highlight each of these in the next few
    weeks.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
20
ELL Tip of the Week Give Attention to
Background Knowledge and Experience
  • Familiarity breeds understanding. We have all
    heard the extensive research telling us to
    activate students prior knowledge and
    experience. Students connect and apply what they
    already know to new learning when we give them
    plenty of time to discuss and describe their
    previous experiences. Activating prior knowledge
    also allows the teacher to identify and supply
    relevant concepts or language that is missing, to
    know students better, and to validate students
    experience and cultural knowledge which motivates
    them to participate.
  • Language learners with a lot of previous
    experience and content knowledge will typically
    acquire language faster and at higher levels
    because they can transfer known concepts to
    English.
  • When possible, use ELL students as experts on a
    given subject to motivate, include, and learn
    about them. Most of them have something that they
    could talk about foreverif youre unsure about a
    specific student, see me for ideas.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
21
ELL Tip of the Week Make Context and Language
Real and Purposeful
  • Students acquire language when they use it for
    real, authentic purposes. Language learning must
    be relevant, meaningful, and embedded in a
    context that makes sense to students. When
    students are engaged in authentic tasks, they are
    using language to accomplish a specific purpose,
    exchange information, or solve a problem that is
    of interest to themthe focus is on the function
    of language, not the form (grammar) of language.
    These engagements result in both language and
    cognitive development. Here are a few ideas
  • Group problem solving activitieswith a
    motivation to succeed, but be careful about time
    restrictions
  • Teamwork activities
  • Debates
  • Discussions
  • Inquiry and Elimination- Like the Guess Who?
    game
  • Barrier games- partner activities where each
    person has different information with a gap and
    they need to find the information they are
    missing. (could be map games, party invitations,
    silly faces, etc.)

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
22
ELL Tip of the Week Make Language
Comprehensible
  • Comprehensible input is Stephen Krashens key
    phrase. An example of this Ralph could go to
    Mexico and live there for 5 years. Unless he has
    some sort of instruction, or some well-developed
    language acquisition strategies, he will not
    learn Spanish because nothing is comprehensible.
    However, if some of it becomes comprehensible (He
    sees a stop sign that says pare, so he deduces
    that pare means stop), he will slowly learn. On
    the other hand, if he had received some direct
    instruction prior to his trip, he would acquire
    Spanish much more quickly because there would be
    something familiar in most every encounter.
  • Our students do not typically come with previous
    direct instruction in English, so it is up to us
    to make language comprehensible.
  • Use visuals, realia, and manipulatives
  • Use gestures, facial expressions, and body
    language
  • Speak clearly, using authentic natural speech
  • Use shorter, less complex sentences for students
    in the early stages of language development
  • Use intonation, volume, and pauses to aid meaning
  • Contextualize ideas in relevant, real-life ways.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
23
ELL Tip of the Week Encourage students to take
risks
  • Students acquire language when they are engaged
    in meaningful activities and their anxiety level
    is low.
  • Encourage all language use attempts (with
    discretion), and step in with specific language
    supports when needed to ensure comprehension,
    further language development, and success.
  • Although there may be some anxiety, the
    expectation (for both teacher and student) should
    be that students can and will accomplish the task.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
24
ELL Tip of the Week Create high levels of
interaction
  • Highly interactive activities or tasks provide
    experiences that are both cognitively demanding
    and contextually supported.
  • Research confirms that language development is
    supported through interaction and talk.
  • Language must be used to be acquired!
  • Encourage interaction with
  • A variety of English-speaking models
  • Large groups
  • small groups
  • Partners
  • Students should have opportunities throughout the
    day to use language and interact with a variety
    of English speakers for a variety of purposes.
  • The effective language classroom will probably
    not be a quiet one. ?

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
25
ELL Tip of the Week Teach Students to Actively
Listen
  • The Chinese character for listen is composed of
    four parts
  • Ears to hear the words, tone, and language
  • Eyes to see meaning through expression and
    gestures
  • Undivided attention to give respect to the
    speaker
  • Heart to give oneself to understanding
  • To truly hear, students must give their undivided
    attention and listen with their ears, eyes, and
    heart.
  • Use barrier activities to promote active
    listening and authentic language. Place a divider
    between 2 students. Each student has a set of
    identical materials (picture cards,
    manipulatives, sequencing cards,). One arranges
    the items and then describes the arrangement for
    the other to replicate. Both negotiate meaning
    until they are confident that they have the same
    arrangement. They then compare.
  • All proficiency level students should engage in
    active listening by watching, following, and
    approximating the actions and language around
    them.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
26
ELL Tip of the Week Maintain High Levels of
Expectations
  • Students will acquire language when the teacher
    and the students clearly identify the expectation
    of success. Students are encouraged, supported,
    and required to use language and engage in
    learning at increasingly higher levels.
  • Continually challenge students while supporting
    and expanding their approximations. Gently but
    insistently, require all students to engage,
    making it clear that each student will succeed.

Walter, T. (2004). Teaching English language
learners The how-to handbook. White Plaines,
NY Longman.
27
ELL Tip of the Week Teach Students to Summarize
  • Summarizing is a higher level thinking skill, but
    is helpful for ELL students. Here is one explicit
    method (keep, delete, substitute) to teach
    students to summarize with accommodations for the
    lowest language levels.
  • Keep important information
  • Delete trivial material that is unnecessary to
    understanding
  • Delete redundant material
  • Substitute general terms for more specific terms
    (e.g., use fish for rainbow trout, salmon, and
    halibut)
  • Select a topic sentence or invent one if it is
    missing
  • For preproduction use gestures for keep, delete,
    and substitute. Keep- hug yourself
    delete-pretend to throw something away
    substitute- with both fists in front of you,
    exchange the right for the left, and move the
    left behind your back.
  • Early Production students will need extra work on
    the substitute rule. Model how to substitute
    generic terms for more specific terms. For
    example, you can let these students know that
    Mercury, Venus, and Mars can be replaced with the
    word planets.

Hill, J.D. and Flynn, K.M. (2006). Classroom
instruction that works with English language
learners. Alexandria, VA ASCD.
28
ELL Tip of the Week Optimal Conditions for
Second Language Acquisition
  • An interactive classroom is essential if students
    are to achieve their potential at school.
    Students need many opportunities to use spoken
    language and to interact with native speakers of
    the new language. They need to experiment with
    new language terms and have the opportunity to
    develop ways of putting together their ideas and
    trying them out.
  • The Magic Seven
  • Low Anxiety Environment.
  • Comprehensible Input.
  • Communication Focus.
  • Contextual Language.
  • Error Acceptance.
  • Respect for Language Acquisition Stages.
  • Teacher as Facilitator.

http//www.celt.sunysb.edu/ell/tips.php
29
ELL Tip of the WeekTurn and Talk
  • Instead of asking students to raise their hands
    if they know an answer, have each student turn
    and talk with a neighbor.
  • Each student takes a turn responding to the
    question with a partner.
  • Students then can share what their partners told
    them
  • Works from Kindergarten through high school.
  • Gives ELLs more opportunities to practice using
    English than when you call on one student at a
    time.
  • ELLs often need extra time to translate your
    question into their language, formulate a
    response, then put the response in English. By
    that time, you are three questions ahead.
  • Maximizes ELL students time speaking in English.
  • Provides ELL students the time to formulate a
    response in the relatively safe environment of
    talking with one other student, not the whole
    class.
  • Provides ELLs with positive language
    modelsnative speaking peers.

http//schoolcenter.nsd.org/education/components/l
inks/links.php?sectiondetailid41823sc_id1133879
146
30
ELL Tip of the Week Exit Slips
  • At the end of a lesson, tell students that in
    order to leave, or move on, they need to give you
    an Exit Slip or Ticket Out. This is intended to
    demonstrate what a student understands about the
    lesson. Prompts for the Exit Slips should
    reflect the content objective you shared with
    students at the beginning of the lesson. Exit
    Slips can be a half sheet of paper, post-it note,
    or piece of scratch paper. The emphasis is NOT
    on grammar or conventions, but on the content.
  • One thing I learned about ________.
  • One thing I still wonder about ________.
  • Give me 5 (or 3) ______ about_______.
  • A sample test question (and answer) about the
    topic of study.
  • A drawing or illustration demonstrating their
    understanding (math, science).
  • A prediction of what the class will learn
    tomorrow about this topic.
  • Why is this important for ELL students?
  • English language learners work hard to make sense
    of what is going on and what is important.
    Reviewing the objective/s is crucial because it
    provides closure and allows ELL students to
    remember what is important. It also provides you
    with a sense of what students understand and what
    gaps may persist in their learning.

http//schoolcenter.nsd.org/education/components/l
inks/links.php?sectiondetailid41823sc_id1133879
146
31
ELL Tip of the Week Check for Comprehension
  • When giving directions, do not ask, Do you
    understand? Instead, be specific
  • Tell your partner What are we supposed to do
    first? Then what?
  • What do you do if you get stuck?
  • What does this mean?
  • How are you going to do this?
  • Where do you write the answer?
  • What are you supposed to write?
  • ELL students struggle to articulate where their
    comprehension broke down or what specifically
    they didnt get. Asking students to explain the
    directions allows you to see where the
    comprehension broke down and how to provide
    clarification. Further, this gives students
    practice using procedural language and explaining
    academic tasks orally which will gradually
    increase academic language proficiency.

http//schoolcenter.nsd.org/education/components/l
inks/links.php?sectiondetailid41823sc_id1133879
146
32
ELL Tip of the Week Quick Write
  • Before having students brainstorm ideas orally,
    give them two minutes to write or draw their
    thoughts first.
  • For example Write or draw everything you know
    about community. (bullets, web, single words, and
    pictures are all acceptable).
  • While they are writing, circulate the room to see
    what types of ideas students have. You may also
    check ELL students individually to ensure they
    have at least one ideaor prompt them to get one
    or two.
  • ELL students can struggle with whole group
    brainstorms for several reasons.
  • Pacing- brainstorms move too quickly to allow
    students to translate ideas in their head.
  • Content-related vocabulary can be inaccessible to
    ELLs.
  • Students whose hands shoot up quickly can
    discourage ELLs from participating.
  • Instead, a Quick Write allows students to gather
    their thoughts and have something to share. You
    can also pre-teach vocabulary for those students
    as you roam the room offering ideas. This also
    provides you with an informal pre-assessment
    about what the students know independently before
    instruction or group brainstorming.

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ELL Tip of the Week Vocabulary Technique
  • To teach key vocabulary words, try this five-step
    process
  • Teacher defines the word
  • Teacher draws a picture to represent the word
  • Student writes definition in own words
  • Student draws a picture to represent the word
  • After instruction, student revisits picture to
    refine, add, change.
  • This is a research-based vocabulary technique
    effective with ALL students from Classroom
    Instruction that Works, by Robert Marzano, et.al.
    It is especially helpful for English learners to
    draw a representation of a word and to provide a
    written definition. When students draw a picture
    for a word without a written definition, the
    student may forget how the drawing was supposed
    to represent the word, making it difficult to
    recall the meaning of the word at another time.
  • Younger and/or less proficient students may copy
    the teachers definition and/or picture. This is
    fine at first. One benefit to drawing a picture
    for a word is to be able to explain what the
    drawing means and how it represents the word.
    Even if a student copies the teachers picture,
    if s/he can explain how it represents the word,
    the student will gain a deeper understanding of
    the word and be more likely to remember its
    meaning.

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ELL Tip of the WeekUse Cognates
  • Most of the academic English students need to be
    successful in the classroom comes from Latin or
    Greek. Spend 10 minutes a day (once a week, every
    other day) and select a Latin root to share with
    students. Introduce the cognate and what it
    means. Invite ELL students who speak a related
    language (e.g., Spanish) to share words from
    their language that have that root.
  • Once you have shared the root, have students
    generate as many words in English with that root
    in 2 minutes. Generate a class list and post it
    as under the Latin root on a Word Wall. Continue
    to add to the list as you discover more words.
  • Some examples of Latin roots include
  • aqua water ject to throw, to lie
  • terra Earth vert to turn
  • ignis fire mit, mis to send
  • port to carry mort to die
  • form to shape script, scrib to write
  • tract to pull junct to join
  • rupt to break cide to kill
  • spect, spec to see, to watch press to force,
    squeeze
  • struct, stru to build spire, spir to breathe
  • dic, dict to tell, to say grad, gress to
    step
  • flec, flex to bend cept, capt take, receive
  • cred to believe fact, fac to make, to do
  • pels, puls to drive, push

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