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2. Objective. By the end of today's session, participants willunderstand the purpose and design of the SELA classlearn strategies for frontloading the ELA curriculumbecome familiar with the text and support materials analyze and expand lesson plans for teaching SELAas shown by participation in the training activities..
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1. 1 TRAINING
AUGUST 11, 2008
KATHY BELLAH AND DARA MOSHER Strategic English Language Arts
2. 2
3. 3 Agenda Welcome
What is Strategic English Language Arts?
SELA Classroom Video
Accessing Prior Knowledge and Building Background Knowledge
Interactive Strategies
Text and Materials
Lesson Plans
Questions and Answers
4. 4 Reflective Writing Think of 1 or 2 strategies that you use regularly in your English Language Arts classroom.
Write the strategies.
Share your strategies and explain why you believe these strategies work well for English learners or struggling readers.
5. 5 Purpose of SELA To provide support to both English learners and English-only students who are .5-1.9 years below grade level in language arts
To ensure that these students have an extended opportunity for success with the English language arts curriculum
To assist in closing the academic gap between English learners and their English-speaking peers
6. 6 In SELA, teachers provide opportunities for students to
access prior knowledge and/or build background…
build and increase academic vocabulary…
use specific language structures…
interact with others to build language and fluency…
learn and apply specific learning strategies…
so that students will have the knowledge, skills, and language needed to succeed in the English Language Arts.
7. 7 Therefore, in the regular ELA classroom, we expect to see
an increase in academic success
more student participation
a higher level of student confidence
increased student effort
stronger oral language abilities
8. 8 Strategic ELA is frontloading, not remedial instruction
structuring the curriculum to build student success in ELA
pacing the curriculum to preteach concepts for ELA
planning collaboratively with grade-level ELA teachers to ensure consistency of instruction and curriculum between the ELA and the SELA classroom
9. 9 Essential elements of a SELA classroom
10. 10 A SELA classroom in action
As you watch the video, note how the teacher incorporated the elements on the guided note-taking sheet.
Discuss your assigned element with your partner.
Share with the group.
11. 11 Accessing Prior KnowledgeBuilding Background Knowledge Rationale:
Students learn more effectively when they already know something about the content.
Students learn more effectively when concepts in that area are linked to their own particular background and culture.
Students learn new information more effectively when connections are made between the new learning and prior learning in the classroom.
12. 12 Accessing Prior KnowledgeBuilding Background Knowledge Accomplished Strategic ELA teachers…
tie new information and concepts to students’ own background experiences.
make explicit connections between new learning and the material, vocabulary, and concepts previously covered in the class.
13. 13 Accessing Prior KnowledgeBuilding Background Knowledge How do you link concepts to students’ background experiences?
14. 14 Other Suggestions Ask questions that prompt students to think about/talk about prior experiences that relate to upcoming lessons, content, etc. For example,
Has anyone ever gone camping?
Has anyone ever watched a scary movie?
Has anyone ever been out in a lonely place at night? The woods? The desert?
15. 15 Other Suggestions KWL chart
Video or video clip that provides background for content teaching (watching clips from Sword in the Stone before reading King Arthur and Merlin stories)
Brainstorming
Use of visuals or realia to stimulate prior knowledge
16. 16 Accessing Prior KnowledgeBuilding Background Knowledge
How do you explicitly link between past learning and new concepts?
17. 17 Other Suggestions Questioning – Ask a simple question. “Who remembers what we did yesterday?” and solicit responses
Charts – Make a chart of key information being studied and keep the chart as a reference as you move through the story/the unit
Student Journals (e.g., What I learned today)
Lesson Connections – Make explicit statements to connect what the students are going to study today with what they studied yesterday/last month/last trimester. Help students see a continuum of the content concepts and build a bigger picture in their minds.
18. 18 And finally…
19. 19 Interaction
20. 20 Effective Interaction in the Classroom Rationale:
Interactions in the classroom provide English learners and struggling readers additional opportunities to listen, produce, practice and manipulate academic language.
Interactions aid students in the socialization process.
Interactions give students opportunities for mutual academic support .
Interactions promote mastery of academic skills.
Interactions provide the teacher with an opportunity to check for student understanding.
21. 21 Effective Interaction Accomplished Strategic ELA teachers …
Provide frequent opportunities for interactions and/or discussions between teacher/student and among students that encourage elaborated responses and require academic language.
Design flexible grouping configurations that support language and content objectives of the lesson.
Ensure sufficient wait time for student response.
22. 22 Interaction What interactive strategies and opportunities do you provide students in your classroom?
23. 23 Interactive Strategies Reflective Writing
Collaborative work in groups of 2 to 4
Advanced Organizers
Think/Write/Pair Share
Carousel Walk
Jigsaw
Partner Reading
Anticipatory Guide
24. 24 How do I begin?
Teach kids to work together
Set up flexible grouping configurations
Become familiar with several interaction strategies
25. 25 Teach kids to work together Kathy
Divide into groups of 4 – number off
Ask each to write a movie, celebrity and book they like and dislike
From the list – the group must agree on one they like and dislike
With students – start with the familiar – then move to more academic
Kathy
Divide into groups of 4 – number off
Ask each to write a movie, celebrity and book they like and dislike
From the list – the group must agree on one they like and dislike
With students – start with the familiar – then move to more academic
26. 26 Determine roles: Recorder, Reporter, Facilitator and Time Keeper (1 minute)
In your group, fill out the Opinion Chart (4 minutes)
Score your chart (5 points for each correct, complete response)
Practice this strategy using familiar material first!
Instructions for Consensus Chart Kathy
Keep time limit short
Force collaboration and agreement in short timeKathy
Keep time limit short
Force collaboration and agreement in short time
27. 27 Conga Line
28. 28 Beach Ball Comprehension DaraDara
29. 29 Hot Onion
30. 30 Bridging from individual to group work Dara
SchlechtyDara
Schlechty
31. 31 Holt Materials Holt Reading Solutions
Lesson Plans
Reading Skills and Strategies
Holt One Stop Planner
Holt Adapted Reader
Holt PowerNotes
Holt Literature and Language Arts
Universal Access Materials
Interactive Reader
Writing, Listening, and Speaking
32. 32 Plot Chart-Story Form
33. 33 Lesson Plan Guide Instructional Elements of SELA
Pre-Assessment
Prior Knowledge/Building Background Knowledge
Academic Vocabulary/Language Functions/Sentence Frames
Word Work/Content Vocabulary
Reading Strategy Instruction/Independent Reading
Interactions/Collaborative Group Work
Tutorial
Test Taking Strategies
Checking for Understanding
34. 34 Questions and Answers What is the grading policy?
35. 35 Trainings
36. 36 Did we meet our objectives for the day? By the end of today’s session, participants will
understand the purpose and design of the SELA class
learn strategies for frontloading the ELA curriculum
become familiar with the text and support materials
analyze and expand lesson plans for teaching SELA
as shown by participation in the training activities.
AllAll