1 / 31

Evidence-based English Literacy Instruction for English Learners in Elementary and Middle Schools

Evidence-based English Literacy Instruction for English Learners in Elementary and Middle Schools . Erin Chaparro , Ph.D. echaparr@uoregon.edu @ EBISSErin on Twitter. What is the Oregon K-12 Literacy Framework?. The Oregon K-12 Literacy Framework.

devika
Download Presentation

Evidence-based English Literacy Instruction for English Learners in Elementary and Middle Schools

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Evidence-based English Literacy Instruction for English Learners in Elementary and Middle Schools Erin Chaparro, Ph.D. echaparr@uoregon.edu @EBISSErin on Twitter

  2. What is the Oregon K-12 Literacy Framework?

  3. The Oregon K-12 Literacy Framework …is a blueprint…adopted by the State Board…for what schools in Oregon can do to help students develop the essential skill of reading.

  4. The Literacy Framework is aligned to recent and current Oregon initiatives that improve reading.

  5. Objectives of the Framework http://oregonliteracypd.uoregon.edu/

  6. The primary question… Is the system of instruction and support in our district/school meeting the needs of all of the students?

  7. Six Components of the Framework One Chapter for Each Component

  8. Ies Practice Guide: 4 Recommendations

  9. Overview of IES PG Recommendations

  10. Overview of IES PG Recommendations

  11. Overview of IES PG Recommendations

  12. Overview of IES PG Recommendations

  13. Defining Academic Language • Academic language is: • Language used in academic settings and for academic purposes to help students acquire and use knowledge (Anstrom, et al., 2010) • Words and syntactic structures that students are likely to encounter in textbooks and tests, but not in everyday, spoken English (Strategic Education Research Partnership, 2010) • “The language used in the learning of academic subject matter in a formal schooling context; aspects of language strongly associated with literacy and academic achievement, including specific academic terms or technical language and speech registers related to each field of study.”(TESOL, 2003)

  14. Academic Vocabulary in the OLF & CCSS • The CCSS for English Language Arts & Literacy place an explicit emphasis on the role of academic vocabulary. • Students are expected to be able to: • Determine the meaning of general academicand domain-specific wordsand phrases in a text relevant to a topic or subject area in that grade • Determine or clarify the meaning of unknown and multiple-meaning words and phrases based on reading and content relevant for that grade (including the use and knowledge of affixes, root words, and word meanings)

  15. Defining Academic Language • Academic language: • Cannot be defined dichotomously (i.e., a student has mastered it or has not) but exists on a continuum, with informal, casual conversation at one extreme and the formal, technical presentation of ideas at the other extreme Formal Casual, Informal …and the lions they, um, live in the deserts of Africa and have to walk long ways to find food. There’s not much water either. They’re hot a lot. Lions, also known as “kings of the jungle” inhabit the large, arid, deserts of Africa. Due to the sweltering temperatures and minimal water supply they often have to traverse long distances to find prey to hunt and water to drink

  16. Different Types of Knowledge Needed to Foster Academic Language • Academic language requires knowledge in the following areas: • Understanding of the phonological features of English • Lexical knowledge (e.g., vocabulary, word formation rules) • Grammatical competence • Discourse • Cognition • Discourse • Cognition - (Scarcella 2003)

  17. Academic Language in CCSS • Knowledge of Language • Discourse • Cognition • Writing, Speaking, Listening, Reading

  18. Language Progressive Skills, by Grade

  19. Alignment between OLF, IES, & CCSS

  20. “Peer-assisted learning is not, however, a substitute for teacher-led instruction. It is an evidence-based approach intended to replace some of the independent seat-work or round-robin type reading that students do . . . ” (p. 29). Peer-Assisted Learning Institute of Education Sciences Elementary Grade English Learners Practice Guide (2007)

  21. “Once students have learned peer-assisted instructional routines, such as how to respond to errors, the format can be used in a number of different content areas across grade levels” (p. 30). Apply PALS to Content-Area Instruction Institute of Education Sciences Elementary Grade English Learners Practice Guide (2007)

  22. Don’t wait to offer instructional support! • “There is no evidence to support the position that early reading problems experienced by English learners will resolve themselves once oral language skills in English are established” (p. 12). Institute of Education Sciences Elementary Grade English Learners Practice Guide (2007)

  23. Academic & Everyday Language • Vocabulary instruction for English learners should also emphasize the acquisition of meanings of everyday words that native speakers know and that are not necessarily part of the academic curriculum.

  24. “In the Panel’s view, error correction needs to be focused on the instructional target of the lesson. If the instructional focus . . . . is on word forms such a success, successful, and succeed, teachers should ignore other errors” (p. 27). Instructional Modulation

  25. The Oregon K-12 Literacy Framework: A Web Tour Search For “Oregon Literacy” to locate the ODE website

  26. Resources:http://www.ode.state.or.us/search/page/?id=2568http://oregonliteracypd.uoregon.edu/http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/PracticeGuide.aspx?sid=6Resources:http://www.ode.state.or.us/search/page/?id=2568http://oregonliteracypd.uoregon.edu/http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/http://ies.ed.gov/ncee/wwc/PracticeGuide.aspx?sid=6 Thank you! • echaparr@uoregon.edu • Twitter @EBISSErin

More Related