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R esearch on English Language Development and Implications for Two-Way Programs

R esearch on English Language Development and Implications for Two-Way Programs. Kathryn Lindholm-Leary, Ph.D. Professor, San Jose State University KLindholmLeary@mac.com Rosa G. Molina, M.A. Executive Director, Two-Way CABE twbirosa@aol.com.

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R esearch on English Language Development and Implications for Two-Way Programs

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  1. Research on English Language Development and Implications for Two-Way Programs Kathryn Lindholm-Leary, Ph.D. Professor, San Jose State University KLindholmLeary@mac.com Rosa G. Molina, M.A. Executive Director, Two-Way CABE twbirosa@aol.com TWBI National Conference, San Diego, CA July 2010

  2. Purpose • Research: language competence and second language learning – theory and TWI research • Implementation/Best Practices: implications of research: research-based strategies for promoting English language development and bilingual proficiency

  3. Schematic of Language Competence Embedded in stories or literature, but rarely taught Focus of ELD & ELA

  4. Academic LanguageDefinition “Academic literacy includes the reading, writing, and oral discourse skills necessary to participate in a classroom discussion and in assignments. It may vary from subject area to subject area and requires knowledge of multiple genres of text, purposes of text, and text media. It is influenced by students’ literacies in contexts outside of school and by students’ personal, social, and cultural experiences” (Short & Fitzsimmons, 2007) “It is not possible to ‘do’ science, ‘do’ economics, ’do’ mathematics with only ordinary language.” (Scarcella, 2003)

  5. Socio-Linguistic Competence Cool LOL In hot water You’re full of it! Lend a hand Awesome Monkey see, monkey do! Put your money where your mouth is! What’s UP? That takes the cake Have your cake & eat it too 2 heads are better than 1 Text me Once in a blue moon Money talks! Full of hot air

  6. Research1. How Long Does it Take? • High levels of full proficiency require at least 5-7 yearsof instruction - ELs & high level motivated government staff • Improvement: • beginning to middle levels of proficiency relatively rapid • middle to upper levels of proficiency  much slower

  7. Research 2. How Much Oral Proficiency? • Most second language learners in foreign language instruction do not make it beyond Elementary or Intermediate levels of proficiency • State-wide studies of CELDT data: • Grades 3-6: 42-47% of EL students Intermediate STUCK AT INTERMEDIATE

  8. Research 3. Is More English Better? Time-on-Task  more time spent in instruction in English  more proficiency in English. • Dual language research: More English does not lead to higher redesignation as R-FEP. • Redesignation rates in 90:10 as high as or higher than 50:50. • Synthesis research: ELLs in English-only programs had lowest proficiency in English. • Dual language and synthesis research: more Spanish in instructional day  higher levels of bilingualism, and students who are more bilingual more likely to be redesignated as R-FEP

  9. Listening & Speaking Proficiency – CELDT Grades K-6 Native Spanish Speakers • TWI ELLs make greater growth in listening/speaking and reading/writing than ELLs in English-only programs. By 6th grade, achieve at similar/superior levels. Listening/Speaking Reading/Writing

  10. English Language Proficiency (CELDT TOTAL) Percent R-FEP or Early Advanced/Advanced Grades 4-8 92% 36% 92% • Percent of TWI students fluent in English according to CELDT (RFEP, Early Advanced or Advanced): • grade 5, 92% • grade 6, 92% • grade 7, 90% • grade 8, 100% CELDT Total = listening, speaking, reading, writing

  11. Research in TWI - Correlations Literacy & Language ProficiencyWithin & Across Languages • Correlations between: ELL EP • CST ELA x Aprenda reading = .54*** .71*** • CST ELA x CELDT overall = .40*** • CST ELA x CELDT reading = .51*** • Aprenda reading x Span oral prof = .37*** .57*** • Correlations between: ALL • English reading x Mandarin reading = .58*** • English language proficiency related to English reading; Spanish language proficiency related to Spanish reading • Reading scores in English related to reading scores in Spanish

  12. Taking Stock • These data show – even in a 90:10 program, students can become highly proficient in English • Achievement in Spanish is related to achievement in English • Bilingualism – need to believe in and use knowledge of bilingual research to guide program and curriculum development around language in TWI

  13. ELs in TWI Show Higher Achievement Than ELs in Same School, District & State • By 6th grade, TWI current EL students achieve at higher levels than ELs in English-only mainstream programs. • By 6th grade, TWI current ELs do not reach English-only (EO) students in percent Proficient or Advanced, but they score as high in percent Basic or above. This EL group does not include R-FEPs

  14. R-FEPs in TWI Close Achievement Gap in English with English speakers! • By 6th grade, TWI R-FEP students achieve at higher levels than R-FEPs in English mainstream programs. • By 6th grade, TWI R-FEPs far surpass EOs in percent Proficient or Advanced, and in percent Basic or above. • All R-FEP groups surpass EO averages.

  15. Reading Achievement in English By English Proficiency (CELDT) Level in TWI Level of English proficiency has a significant effect on English reading achievement. Each group scores significantly different from other groups (except Early Adv ≈ Advanced & EP, Advanced ≈ RFEP & EP). RFEP>EP

  16. Reading Achievement in Spanish By English Proficiency Level in TWI Level of English proficiency has a significant effect on Spanish reading achievement. However, only RFEP is significantly higher than some other groups. Beginners above average in Spanish reading.

  17. Level of English Language Proficiencyby Background Characteristics

  18. Implications of Research on ELD • Should my TWI program provide ELD? • What does providing ELD mean in a bilingual (TWI) program? • Got benchmarks? • Should you have an ELD curriculum in a bilingual program? • Grouping during ELD

  19. Implications of Research 1. Should my TWI program provide ELD? • According to Saunders & Goldenberg (2009), in a synthesis of the research on ELD: • Providing ELD instruction is better than not providing it • However, research basis slim and largely based on foreign language learning with college and adult learners • Use a separate, daily block of time for ELD instruction • Research based largely on two large studies of students – one in K, and one in grades 2-3.

  20. Implications of Research 1. Should my TWI program provide ELD? • Research in immersion – students do not develop HIGH levels of L2 proficiency, and lack vocabulary breadth & grammatical accuracy • TWI students stuck at Intermediate  Focus on language development is too implicit and not sufficiently explicit • Suggests need for ELD in TWI programs

  21. Implications of Research 2. What does providing ELD mean in a bilingual (TWI) program? • According to Saunders & Goldenberg (2009) • ELD instruction should explicitly teach elements of English (vocabulary, syntax, grammar, conventions) • The ELD block can incorporate reading and writing, but should emphasize listening and speaking • ELD instruction should emphasize academic language as well as conversational language

  22. Implications of Research 2. Providing Language Development in a bilingual (TWI) program • Instruction ensures that learners: • develop both a rich repertoire of formulaic expressionsand a rules-based competence • focus predominantly on meaning • and also focus on form • Instruction needs to be predominantly directed atdeveloping implicit knowledge(unconscious, procedural) of the L2 while not neglecting explicit knowledge (rules learners can state) Adapted from Ellis (2004)

  23. Literacy and Language Development • Cross-linguistic influences - L1 skills and knowledge ELLs use to bootstrap into English literacy (Riches & Genesee) • phonological awareness in L1 phonological awareness in English • knowledge of L1 sounds English decoding & spelling • vocabulary skills in L1 English vocabulary (at least complex vocabulary skills) • L1 grammar comprehension or production of English sentences Emergent or proficient L1 readers  acquire English literacy skills faster

  24. Implications of Research 2. Providing Language Development in a bilingual (TWI) program • To develop high levels of bilingual proficiency, students need: • ELD instruction • SLD instruction • Not a monolingual approach: help students transfer skills across languages

  25. Implications of Research 3. Got Benchmarks? • According to Saunders & Goldenberg (2009): • ELD instruction should be planned and delivered with specific language objectives in mind. • Got benchmarks? scope/sequence for each grade level in ELD and SLD? • How can you plan and deliver language objectives if you don’t know what you expect?

  26. Promoting ELD/SLD ProficiencyStandards & Frameworks • Standards/Frameworks provide a way of organizing instruction around a set of learning objectives related to listening, speaking, reading, writing at different proficiency levels • ELD Standards – Look at these and use for planning • ELA Standards • Side by Side (San Diego County Office of Education) • Blueprint & Sample CST ELA questions & CELDT questions • List of vocabulary items (Marzano, Tennessee, Coxhead) in English & Spanish • High frequency word list/Site word list • National Foreign/World Language Standards (ACTFL, California)

  27. Promoting ELD/SLD/Bilingual ProficiencyLesson Planning Need more detail in both languages & specific language objectives • Content standard(s) to be addressed • Language instruction • Structures/forms--parts of speech, grammar (word problems in math) • Frames/memorized chunks/formulaic language (“Where is the”, “A mi me gusta…”) • Vocabulary--bricks & mortar; high frequency, specialized vocabulary • Anticipatory set/Link to prior knowledge • Links across languages, where possible

  28. Language Objectives Accessible for Students

  29. Implications of Research 4. Do you need an ELD curriculum? • No ELD curriculum used in the schools has a research basis demonstrating its effectiveness, especially in a TWI/dual language program. • ELD curricula are designed for English learners in English mainstream/SEI programs, not for students learning through two languages. • However, helpful since most teachers do not have training in linguistics in English or Spanish. • Use as resource AND ADAPT for TWI

  30. Implications of Research 5. Grouping during ELD • According to Saunders & Goldenberg (2009): • Interactive activities among ELs and between ELs and proficient English speakers can be productive, but they must be carefully planned out • According to Ellis (2004), successful language learning requires: • extensive L2 input • opportunities for L2 output • opportunities to interact in the L2 • Grouping & opportunities for interaction ESSENTIAL for language development!

  31. Implications of Research 5. Grouping during ELD (Saunders & O’Brien, 2006): With increased oral proficiencyin L2, students: • use more of L2  gains in L2 oral proficiency • interact more frequently with speakers of L2  more opportunity to use L2 • use more complex language learning strategies, particularly strategies that enable them to interact with others and monitor their own and others’ language use • display wider range of language skills, including skills associated with academic uses of language (e.g., higher level question forms & definitional skills)

  32. Implications of Research 5. Grouping during Differentiated vs. Whole Class • According to Saunders & Goldenberg (2009): • Group ELs carefully for ELD instruction by language proficiency. • However, they note this is a guideline applicable to ELD but grounded in non-EL research • In TWI, if ELs always grouped for ELD, when do they practice English with EOs and get native speaker role models? Two-way means they learn from each other. • Yet, some differentiated is probably helpful to provide explicit instruction tailored to their level of proficiency. • No research on whether ELs should not be grouped with ELs in SEI or English mainstream. Since ELD in TWI should look different (bilingual approach, transfer), might need to have separate groups for students in TWI and SEI

  33. Conclusions • Saunders & Goldenberg (2009): “In sum, we have a relatively small corpus of research to draw upon to guide the design and delivery of K-12 ELD instruction.” • Second language learners have a bilingual reservoir they can draw on to assist with second (and first) language development and literacy • In TWI and other research, bilingual proficiency – not just English proficiency – associated with higher levels of English language development and higher levels of achievement • Need to design ELD AND SLD for students in bilingual (TWI) programs – taking advantage of and further developing their bilingual reservoir

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