Title: INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION DISORDERS IN MULTICULTURAL
1- INTRODUCTION TO COMMUNICATION DISORDERS IN
MULTICULTURAL - POPULATIONS
2This semester, I will have some youtube videos
for you to demonstrate assessment and treatment
techniques
- Go to youtube and type in
- Celeste Roseberry
- This will get you to my youtube channel
3How many of you.
- Speak another language?
- Were born outside the U.S.?
- Spent more than a few weeks in a country outside
the U.S.?
4My own story
- I was born in southern CA
- When I was 6, my family went to the Philippines
where my parents served as Baptist missionaries
for 10 years - For several years in elementary school, I was the
only White child - I went to boarding school for grades 5 and 7-12
- We came back to the U.S. when I was a 17-year old
college freshman
5Google earth
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8- My parents and sisters and I spoke Standard
American English at home - We spoke Odionganon with our friends in the
barrio of Odiongan - Church services were preached in Hiligaynon
- I learned Tagalog formally in school
- Studied German in high school and college
- Learned Spanish later
9I have been blessed to visit
- Philippines (lived there ages 6-17 years)
- Guam
- Taiwan London Italy
- Hawaii Austria Fiji
- Japan Germany Australia
- Hong Kong Switzerland China
- Mexico France
- Canada Luxembourg
- Athens Venice
- New Zealand
10Now I work part time in San Juan Unified School
District at Grand Oaks Elementary School
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17DEMOGRAPHICS (statistics on this slide not on
test) (www.census.gov) 2019
- In January 2019, the United States is expected to
experience approximately one birth every 8
seconds and one death every 11 seconds.
Meanwhile, net international migration is
expected to add one person to the U.S. population
every 33 seconds. The combination of births,
deaths and net international migration will
increase the U.S. population by one person every
17 seconds.
18I. DEMOGRAPHICS (s not on test)
- By 2055, the U.S. will not have a single racial
or ethnic majority. Much of this change has been
(and will be) driven by immigration. Nearly 59
million immigrants have arrived in the U.S. in
the past 50 years, mostly from Latin America and
Asia. Today, a near-record 14 of the countrys
population is foreign born compared with just 5
in 1965. Over the next five decades, the majority
of U.S. population growth is projected to be
linked to new Asian and Hispanic immigration.
19(new slide not on examjust for fun) NBC
News10 most diverse cities
- 1.Gaithersburg, Maryland
- Jersey City, New Jersey
- Oakland, California
- Silver Spring, Maryland
- Germantown, Maryland
- New York, New York
- San Jose, California
- Frederick, Maryland
- Anaheim, California
- 10. Sacramento, California
20California Dept. of Educationin our public
schools (this slide not on test)
Language Percent
Spanish 83.5
Vietnamese 2.2
Mandarin (Putonghua) 1.5
Filipino (Pilipino or Tagalog) 1.3
Arabic 1.3
Cantonese 1.2
Korean 0.8
Hmong 0.8
Punjabi 0.7
Russian 0.6
21Calif. Dept. of Education cont.
- A total of 2,664,921 students speak a language
other than English in their homes. This number
represents about 42.8 percent of the state's
public school enrollment - For the exam, please know that close to half of
our public school students in California speak a
language other than English at home
22- In the U.S., by 2025, one in every four
school-aged children will be an ELL
23In my own district, San Juan Unified, in 2019
(this slide not on exam)
- The fastest-growing groups are speakers of Arabic
and Farsi from the Middle East
24As of January, 2019, 6 most common languages in
my district (not on exam)
- 1. Arabic
- 2. Farsi
- 3. Pashto
- 4. Dari
- 5. Russian
- 6. Ukrainian
25- ? states promoting bilingualism by offering
special recognition for high school graduates who
demonstrate fluency in other langs - In 11/16, Calif. repealed Proposition 227, which
almost eliminated bilingual education from
schools
26II. CHALLENGES FOR OUR PROFESSION
- 1. ? ELLs in U.S. schools, but not enough
bilingual, bicultural professionals to serve them - 2. Socioeconomic differences
- 3. Helping ELLs with lang impairments achieve
Common Core State Standards - 4. Keeping up with tech advances that can help
these students learn faster and better
27In just one week in my job in the public schools,
I assessed students from these backgrounds
- African American
- Vietnamese
- Chinese
- Spanish
- Hindi
- Punjabi
- Ibo
28III. LEGAL CONSIDERATIONS
- IDEA 1997 and 2004 states that
- Testing procedures and materials must not be
discriminatory - Assessment instruments must measure a students
ability in the area tested, not English
proficiency
29ASHA under the current administration in
Washington D.C.
- Discussions about abolishing the U.S. Department
of Education - Increase tax dollars for private schools and
voucher programs, diverting away from public
schools - Potentially affects SLP jobs in the public
schools and services to public school children
30ASHAunder the current administration
- It is possible that the new administration will
withdraw all the new regulations pertaining to
the Every Student Succeeds Act, which was
finalized and signed by President Obama in Dec.,
2015 - This could dramatically reduce services to
students with disabilities in public schools
31ASHAother impacts
- Health care changes may dramatically reduce
insurance, especially for those in poverty - Patients with neurological impairments, who need
our services, may be deprived of intervention
32IV. DEVELOPING CULTURAL COMPETENCE
- View all students as individuals dont
stereotype! - Describe cultural tendencies
- Look at cultural variables that influence behavior
33V. VARIABLES INFLUENCING INDIV IDUAL BEHAVIOR
- 1. Educational level
- 2. Country of birth
- 3. Length of residence
- 4. Language(s) spoken
- 5. Urban vs. rural background
- 6. Gender
- 7. Age
- 8. Socioeconomic status
- 9. Religious beliefs and their impact
- 10. Peers, neighborhood
- 11. Generational membership
34VI. INCREASING CULTURAL COMPETENCE
- Team up with members of the community
- Read!!
- Be aware of your own values and beliefs
- Ask students to share with you
- Learn some basic vocab in other langs
- Attend churches, festivals, gatherings of other
cultures
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36We can conduct ethnographic interviews
- SLP asks broad, open-ended questions to find out
more (e.g. Tell me about how Filipinos view
communication disorders.)
37Terry, P., Connor, C., Thomas-Tate, S., Love,
M. Examining relationships among dialect
variation, literacy skills, and school context in
first grade. Journal of Speech, Language, and
Hearing Research, 53, 126-145.
- Meta-analysis of research--widely varying
achievement among children in American schools - When children enter school (kindergarten),
achievement gaps are observable even before they
start learning to read
38- The most salient ch characteristics that predict
academic success are SES and race - Low-SES, non-White ch tend to lag behind White,
middle-SES ch
39According to Education Week (these s not on
exam)
- Nationwide, only 12 of students with limited
English scored at or above proficient in
mathematics in 4th grade compared with 42 of
students not classified as ELLs. The gap was much
wider in 8th grade math, where 5 of ELLs were
proficient or above proficient in math, compared
with 35 of non-ELLs.
40- On a national reading test, in 8th grade, only 3
of ELLs scored at or above proficiency, compared
with 34 of non-ELLs (not on exam)
41Meet Shilo
42Opportunities in our department
- Continue to donate books to Love Talk Read (as of
January 2019, 201,000 books collected and
donatedthank you!!) - Donated locally and overseas Samoa, Ecuador,
Philippines, El Salvador, Mexico, Dominican
Republic, Nepal, United Kingdom, Kosrae (Pacific
Islands), Thailand, Vietnam, Cambodia, Cuba,
Guatemala, Argentina, Canada, Kenya, South Africa
43Go to Facebook and type in Love Talk Read
- You can like the page ?
- If you make a large donation, I will post your
own name and picture!
44You can tutor through Reading Partners
- www.readingpartners.com
- You spend one hour a week with an at-risk student
- 26 hours of 11 work with an adult can boost a
childs reading scores by a whole year
45In this class, we will emphasize
- Social justice and equal opportunities for
everyone, regardless of race, SES, or primary
language
Be woke!!