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Why do we need standards for world language learning?. Students, parents, administrators, and language teachers need to know what “learning another language” means in U.S. schools. If we are to align our efforts to increase language proficiency, we need common goals and terminology.
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Why do we need standards for world language learning? • Students, parents, administrators, and language teachers need to know what “learning another language” means in U.S. schools. • If we are to align our efforts to increase language proficiency, we need common goals and terminology. • If language learning is a journey, we need a map to show us the way.
What are the different types of standards? Content Standards • Whatshould students know and be able to do? Performance Standards • How can students show they are achieving the content standards? Proficiency Standards • How wellare students achieving – how can we measure progress? Program Standards • When? Where? Who? – the elements of program design State Standards: Connecting a National Vision to Local Implementation (PDF) by Paul Sandrock, ACTFL
What are the National Standards for Foreign Language Learning? A brief history… • 1993 – work on national foreign language content standards began • 1996 – generic standards published • 1999 – language-specific standards published for: Chinese, Classical Languages, French, German, Italian, Japanese, Portuguese, Russian, and Spanish • 2006 – added language: Arabic Standards for Foreign Language Learning in the 21st Centuryhttp://www.actfl.org/i4a/pages/index.cfm?pageid=3324
Communication Communicate in Languages Other Than English • Interpersonal Mode • Interpretative Mode • Presentational Mode
Cultures Gain Knowledge and Understanding of Other Cultures PERSPECTIVES(Meanings, attitudes, values, ideas) o PRACTICES(Patterns of social interactions) PRODUCTS(Books, tools, foods, laws, music, games)
Connections Connect with Other Disciplines and Acquire Information • Further knowledge of other disciplines • Recognize distinctive viewpoints
Comparisons Develop Insight into the Nature of Language and Culture • Compare language studied to their own • Compare culture studied and their own
Communities Participate in Multilingual Communities at Home & Around the World • Use the language within and beyond school • Use language for personal enjoyment and enrichment
Instructional Strategies • Speak in the target language (keep English to a minimum) • Use “real” objects to convey meaning • Teach vocabulary in context • Try paired and small-group activities • Focus on communication, not just perfect grammar from New Jersey World Language Standards, p. 60
Learning Strategies Show students how to: • Organize in advance by previewing, skimming, or reading for the gist • Reflect on what they’ve learned • Summarize • Ask for clarification or explanation from Standards for Foreign Language Learning p. 34
Communications Strategies • Circumlocution • Guessing intelligently • Deriving meaning from context • Understanding, interpreting, and producing gestures • Asking for and providing clarification • Making inferences, predictions, and generalizations • Drawing conclusions from Standards for Foreign Language Learning p. 34