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RTi for English Language learners. Patty Cornelius, M.Ed. ESL Liaison, Lakota Local Schools . Objectives . You will be able to… Define RtI and its role in the education of English language learners (ELLs) Evaluate the effectiveness of core instruction in meeting the needs of ELLs
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RTifor English Language learners Patty Cornelius, M.Ed. ESL Liaison, Lakota Local Schools
Objectives • You will be able to… • Define RtI and its role in the education of English language learners (ELLs) • Evaluate the effectiveness of core instruction in meeting the needs of ELLs • Define and discuss progress monitoring issues for ELLs • Indentify effective practices for ELLs who require more intensive interventions
What is RTI? • Response To Intervention (RTI) integrates assessment and intervention within a multi-level prevention system to maximize student achievement and reduce behavior problems. With RTI, schools identify students at risk for poor learning outcomes, monitor student progress, provide evidence-based interventions and adjust the intensity and nature of those interventions depending on a student’s responsiveness, and identify students with learning disabilities or other disabilities http://www.rti4success.org
Why focus on ELLs? • Achievement outcomes for ELLs in general are dismal • On the 2007 National Assessment of Education Progress (NAEP), the average reading score for ELLs was188 points out of a possible 500 (compared to 224 for non-ELL fourth graders) • This is a 36 point achievement gap! • 26 point gap between Hispanic and white students • 28 point gap between African American and white students • 33 point achievement gap between disabled and non-disabled students Source: Movit, Peytrykowska, and Woodruff, 2010
Factors that Contribute to the Gap • Ineffective or poorly trained teachers • 56% of teachers in the U.S. have at least one ELL in their class, but only 20% are certified to teach ELLs • Lack of access to appropriate instructional and assessment materials • Instructional and assessment materials often not normed for ELLs • Failure by schools and teachers to implement culturally responsive practices • Approximately 60% of ELLs are in English only classes with little differentiation for language and culture backgrounds Source: Movit, Peytrykowska, and Woodruff, 2010
Considerations for ELLs • Language proficiency • Academic English • Background knowledge • Formal education history • Culture
The Role of Culture Activity • Read the comments about English language learners that are often heard in schools throughout the country. • How might you respond? • Write an “elevator speech” (1 minute) with a response • Role play your response with a person sitting near you
Tier 1: The Core • ELLs need to be included in the core! • Language development should supplementnot supplant • Historically, ELLs have often been pulled out of Tier 1 core instruction and have not been exposed to contentstandards in the same manner and at the same level as their English speaking peers. • Language development is a Tier 1 responsibility! • Core instruction must be differentiated so that it is comprehensible for all language levels
Effective Core Practices for ELLs • Systematic Attention to Language Development • Content and language objectives made clear • Focuses on developing the content specific language • Explicit and intentional vocabulary development • Intentional goal of each lesson • Allow students to interact with words through games, dialogue, and other activities (Marzano) • Vocabulary should be posted and reviewed often Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Effective Core Practices for ELLs (cont’d) • Build on students’ background knowledge and experiences • Helps makes links between schema and text • Students understand more of the content when they have the appropriate background knowledge • Use techniques that make the lesson more comprehensible • Visual clues, gestures, modeling, demonstrations, graphic organizers • Scaffold instruction Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Effective Core Practices for ELLs (cont’d) • Create opportunities for practice and application of content and language knowledge • Provide differentiated materials for different levels • Provide time for oral language practice • Sentence frames, sentence starters • Hands-on, engaging materials • Guided practice (I do, we do, you do) • Activities that appropriately measure students’ content knowledge regardless of language proficiency Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Effective Core Practices for ELLs (cont’d) • Repeat, Repeat, and Repeat • “Say it, show it, repeat it” • Exposure to information in a variety of ways • Technology, audio taped text, oral presentations • Assess often and reteach if necessary • Formal and informal assessments • Assessment must drive instruction! Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Other Important Aspects of the Core • Culturally relevant texts available in the classroom • Learning materials are inclusive and avoid stereo-types • Higher level thinking skills are utilized • Cooperative learning groups with clear expectations • Opportunity for interaction with native English speakers • What else?
Before moving to Tier 2, Closely examine Tier 1 • Before we examine what is wrong with the student, we must examine what is wrong with the instruction! • When ELLs are struggling, we need to first consider the possibility that they are not receiving adequate instruction before we assume they are not responding due to a deficit of some kind (Harry & Klinger, 2005)
Parents as Resources • Provide base experiences from which language acquisition can grow • Ensure that instruction is culturally responsive • Support child’s acquisition of language and literacy • Talk with child in both languages, read to them, assist with homework • Provide information such as: • Strengths and learning needs • Health, developmental milestones, educational history of children • Family’s use of language and/or cultural background • Strategies already used at home to help the child learn Source: Movit, Peytrykowska, and Woodruff, 2010
Progress Monitoring for ELLs • Establish a baseline • Set a goal and determine realistic rate of growth • Assess frequently to monitor growth • Use multiple assessments • Use valid, and reliable assessments • Select assessments that are normed for ELL populations or that are available in multiple languages
Progress Monitoring Issues for ELLs (cont’d) • Assessing reading proficiency can be difficult • There is a huge difference between learning the process of reading vs. learning vocabulary for what you are reading! • Teachers need to know if students can read in their native language • Assessments only in English provide no information about possible early literacy skills that have been developed in a child’s first language
Progress Monitoring Issues for ELLs (cont’d) • Knowing a child’s instructional reading level is crucial, yet our usual battery of reading assessments may not yield reliable results for ELLs • Blindly using results from a reading inventory without an understanding of second language acquisition might suggest the student has a serious reading problem when they don’t • If the student has no problems reading in the native language, they will most likely not have problems reading in English • If the student has a reading problem in their first language, they very well may have difficulty in reading English
Turn and Talk • How might you gather information about a student’s reading ability in his or her native language?
When ELLs Need More… • Interventions should be: • Purposeful • Intentional • Explicit
Targeted Tier 2 Interventions for ELLs • What? • Target key skills that are will impact overall academic achievement • Reading: phonological awareness, phonics, fluency, vocabulary, comprehension, reading strategies • Math: number sense, computation, problem-solving, algebraic foundations • Writing: handwriting, spelling, conventions, writing process Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Targeted Tier 2 Interventions for ELLs • How? • Small groups • Specific content AND language objectives • Content and materials appropriate for students • Explicit and intensive teaching of skills • Immediate and corrective feedback Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Key Questions to Consider in Tier 2 for ELLs • How much L1 support with be provided? • Who will provide the intervention? (It’s not always the ESL teacher!) • How will the teachers collaborate? • How often, how frequently? • What assessments will measure both language and academic progress? • How can we communicate progress to parents? Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Tier 3 • Intensive • Individual • Different materials and methods than before • Additional time each day (before, during, or after school) • Progress monitoring occurs every week • Can be provided by teachers other than the ESL teacher • Parents involved and have input • Assistance may be push in or pull out Adapted from RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
When to Evaluate Further • “A multidisciplinary team needs to evaluate the quality of instruction the student has received, the results of the instruction, and the status of language proficiency at each tier BEFORE a referral a special education assessment.” RTI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook, Pearson Education, Inc., 2010
Jigsaw Activity • Gather into groups of four • Your group will be assigned a section of the article “Response to Intervention and English Learners” • Each group member will take on one of the roles to discuss and present the section of the article you have read • Be ready to share your learning with the group
RTI/ESL Acronyms and Important Terms • RtI teams need to understand the terms that are specific to ELLs • Using a common language in a building and district is important to the success of RtI • Refer to the document ESL Acronyms and Terms for RtI Teams
References/Resources • Echevarria, J., & Vogt, M. (2010). RtI for English Language Learners Participant Workbook. New Jersey; Pearson Education. • Harry, B., & Klinger, J.K. (2005). Why are so many minority students in special education? Understanding race and disability in schools. New York; Teachers College Press. • Movit, M., Petrykowska, I., & Woodruff. D. (2010). Using school leadership teams to meet the needs of English language learners. National Center on Response to Intervention.
Contact Information Patty Cornelius Lakota Local Schools patricia.cornelius@lakotaonline.com (513) 200-6834 cell (513) 777-2258 office