Keeping a blog has been rather exciting.
I never knew how to do one and was actually curious about starting one. Fortunately
this class provided me with the opportunity to start my own blog. I am thinking
of keeping my blog, and changing it into something non educational (sorry L). I am
not sure where it will take me and what type of things I will post, but I am
sure it will continue to be a learning experience. Looking at many different
blogs over the years, I have seen each reflect the individual who created it. I
am particularly drawn to blogs about cooking, arts and crafts, and kids’ stuff.
I am addicted to Pinterest and therefore I follow tons and tons of blogs. Hopefully,
this blogging journey will continue for me because I think it will be something that I will enjoy. Actually I think I will change the name of it to One Day at a Time. Stop by and see what exciting things I will do.
Literacy for the Diverse Learner
Sunday, March 2, 2014
Sunday, February 16, 2014
Blog 9- Support and Challenges in Nonfiction and fiction texts
Nonfiction text
|
Stomp Out Bullying
|
Text Structure
(compare contrast, problem/solution, sequence, etc…)
|
Support- The text is
outlined in a problem/solution format. If students know what the structure
is, it will help them comprehend the text more.
|
Vocabulary
|
Challenge-When using
nonfiction text at the 7th grade level, you can expect for there
to be higher level vocabulary as well. Students who have not had previous
exposure to it can struggle with meaning in the text.
|
Text Features
(pictures, captions, headings, subtitles, side bars, etc…)
|
Challenge- Students who
do not understand the purpose behind text features and can get confused as to
what they are for.
Support- Visual aids
help paint a visual image. Titles and headings can provide a main idea for
the students, so they understand what is happening. Bolded words can provide
definitions and highlight key vocabulary content.
|
Authors Purpose
|
Challenge- This text
gave facts about bullying and what you should do if you see it happening.
This can be confusing to students if they are not familiar with persuasive
techniques. Some students may not understand that the author really wanted them
to stand up to bullies and not just know the facts.
|
Point of View
|
Support-This was
easy as it was a 3rd person. The author was informing about
bullying. One person talking.
|
Content
|
Support- No matter
where you are from, you have seen or heard of bullying in one form or
another. This content can cross cultural barriers.
|
Fiction Text
|
The Lottery- Shirley
Jackson
|
Plot
|
Challenge- This
story can be very hard to follow because nothing is just stated. Students need
to be able to infer a great amount in this story. I think that the biggest part
that they will struggle understanding is that Tessie dies at the end. Also,
that the lottery is bad.
|
Characters
|
Challenge - There
were many characters in this story and it could be hard to remember who the
main character was. Support- Even though there were a lot of different
characters, all of the characters were relatable.
|
Vocabulary
|
Challenge- This
higher level text provided vocabulary that was hard for even English speaking
students. No matter who was reading this, they would more than likely
struggle with the vocabulary. Students can possibly get caught up with the
notion that the lottery is something good because the way it is used today
(win millions).
|
Point of View
|
Support- 3rd
person. You could follow who was talking and when it transferred to another
person. You knew all thoughts.
|
Setting
|
Support- Some of our
ELL students came from villages in Africa, so they were able to understand
the unique dynamics that go on inside of one. Setting stayed the same through
the entire story.
|
Figurative Language
|
Challenge- Many
examples of figurative language are used in this text. Students need to have
background knowledge in order to understand these.
|
Wednesday, February 5, 2014
Blog 8 : Sheltered Instruction for Reading
Before
|
·
Explicitly describe lesson of the day
·
Instructions provided verbally and written
·
Goes over goal for the day and tells what they should do by the end of
the day.
·
Reviews reading strategies
·
Teacher writes students responses on board.
·
Preview key vocabulary and writes on board and gives context for the
vocabulary.
·
Pictures are being provided to the students on the vocabulary.
·
Goes over each vocab word and shows the pictures/synonyms/short stories
about the words/integrates native language
·
Preview story-looking at pictures/ summarizing story/ give the big idea
and main concepts of the chapter so the students can make connections.
·
Make predictions on title or illustration
·
Group work
·
Connect the book to students background
|
During
|
·
Set expectations (verbally and written)
·
Ask for clarification for students to explain.
·
Read slowing articulating each word.
·
Explicitly teach strategies.
·
Scaffold- remind/question
·
Allow wait time
·
Point out connections for student if they cannot make their own
·
Allow students to explain their connections to the text and possibly
give examples (sing the song)
|
After
|
·
Review key vocabulary/ reading strategies/ learning objectives
·
Give time to interact with the text
·
Shelter the view
·
Provide opportunities for clarification, hands on activities and group
work.
·
Connect to BK, ask questions and visualize on sticky notes
|
Reflection
|
All of these activities are great.
Many of these strategies can be used for ALL of your students. I use these
activities when I teach my special education students. I really like how they
made a point to explain that we need to use kid friendly explanations for the
higher level skills that they need to be able to do.
|
Wednesday, January 29, 2014
Blog 7- ELL Running Record
I performed a running record for two students who are
English Language Learners. One is a Spanish speaking and the other is from Nepal
and speaks Nepalese. Both are in the 7th grade. I used the Burns Roe
Informal Reading Inventory and ended up using grade level 5 for the Spanish speaking
student, and grade 1 for the student from Sudan based off of how long they have
been in the country and their level of English proficiency.
The first student, whose primary language is Spanish, has
been in the states since birth, but Spanish is the primary language spoken at
home. She did a good job on her passage
and read 125 out of 131 words. She missed words that were in the higher level
vocabulary range: demolished, wrecked, radiators. Two of the other words she
missed were sigh words: to and our.
For the word demolished, she tried to sound out the
beginning of the word, looked at me and then skipped the word. I would say that
meaning interfered with her being able to understand the word. If she looked
around at the context clues, she could have inferred what the word was based
off of her background knowledge and the beginning sound.
Wrecked was pronounced /wreck-ed/. She made the word two syllables.
This shows that the student is unfamiliar with the sounds that –ed makes. She
needs to be taught all the sounds of –ed and when each sound takes place.
As far as the sight, I believe that she was going too fast
and just overlooked the words and said them incorrectly. She said the words
correct when she saw them in other parts of the passage.
The other student from Nepal has been in the states for less
than one year. The family are refugees
from Nepal, and her parents died shortly after coming here. Currently she is in
foster care, and has not consistently gone to school based on the fact that she
has been transitioning from one home to another.
I gave this student the first grade passage and immediately
it became clear that she had no idea what was being presented to her. It
appears she has had very little instruction on reading English. This student
only knew the words I and the. She had no other knowledge of the words. I didn’t even make this students continue
reading because the look that appeared on her face explained how she felt.
After this testing I went and spoke to the ELL teacher at our school. The teacher is only at school in the mornings
for 50 minutes and then leaves to go to other schools. I asked if this student
was receiving any phonics or phonemic awareness and she informed me no because
of all the different levels of ELL students that are in the class. I hate to
think that this student is not receiving the type of services that she needs. She
needs to have direct systematic instruction in phonics and PA. It is such a shame.
Wednesday, January 22, 2014
Blog 6 Learning vs. Acquisition
Learning (L) vs. Acquisition
(A)
|
Activity – Students
|
Explanation
|
L
|
Look up words in dictionary to write definitions
|
Teachers want students to have an understanding of
unknown words before reading a text. Sometimes this consists of giving words
and finding the definitions in a dictionary (28)
|
A
|
Make a Venn diagram to compare two stories
|
The goal of this is to help students develop higher
levels of reading proficiency (28)
|
L
|
Practice sounding out words
|
Student in the learning view apply their phonics
skills to sound out new words.
|
L
|
Read in round-robin fashion
|
“Another practice consistent with a word
recognition view is to have to have students read aloud on a regular basis…”
(28)
|
L
|
Correct peers when they make a mistake during
reading
|
During the round-robin reading, teachers and
students correct peers or provide peers with unknown words (28)
|
L
|
Identify words on a big book page that start with
the same sound
|
Students use their phonics knowledge to find words
with the same sounds (25)
|
L
|
Group cards with classmates’ names by criterion on
such as first or last latter
|
This goes along with the alphabetic principle that
students would need to know in the learning view.
|
A
|
Write rhyming poetry and then discuss different
spellings for the same sound
|
Teachers help students discover the different
spelling patterns.
|
L
|
Ask the teacher how to spell any work you don’t know
|
If the teacher gives the student the spelling, it is
the belief that it helps the student learn that word.
|
A
|
Read a language experience story they have created
with the teacher
|
Teachers help create an authentic writing
experience for children and then they help them express themselves (29)
|
A
|
Work in pairs to arrange words from a familiar chant
into sentences
|
Giving students familiar words lets them practice
developing the skills needed to create a message (29).
|
L
|
Divide words into syllables
|
Students learn to break words into their parts to identify
them. They also follow phonics rules (25)
|
L
|
On a worksheet, draw a line from each word to the
picture that starts with the same sound
|
Students use their phonics knowledge to find words
with the same sounds (25)
|
L
|
Make alphabet books on different topics
|
Teachers want to students to practice skills with
repeated exercises (34)
|
Learning (L) vs. Acquisition
(A)
|
Teachers
|
Explanation
|
L
|
Preteaches vocabulary
|
Teachers want students to have an understanding of
unknown words before reading a text.
|
A
|
Does a shared reading with a big book
|
Teachers from this view read with and to students
(31).
|
L
|
Makes sure that students read only books that fit
their level
|
Since teachers are teaching how to sound out and
recode words, students must read books at their level, otherwise they would
not be able identify words (24).
|
L
|
Have students segment words in to phonemes
|
When students can apply phonics rules, they will in
turn be able to pronounce the word and then add it to their vocabulary (27).
|
A
|
Writes words that students dictate for a story and
has students help with spelling of words
|
This view argues that when students write something
that is for others to read, they want to write something that follows
conventions.
|
A/L
|
Asks students to look around the rooms and find
words starting with a certain letter
|
Teachers from both views teach spelling to an
extent. For the acquisition view, students get to choose words that they know
from their background knowledge that match the same sound, and for the
learning view students will apply their phonics skills to help decide on
words.
|
L
|
Uses decodable text
|
Since teachers are teaching how to sound out and
recode words, they need books that they can decode.
|
A
|
Sets aside time for SSR each day
|
Students need to read silently in order to reach
the level of metacognition.
|
L/A
|
Teaches Latin and Green roots
|
The learning view explicitly teaches these, while
the acquisition view sees it as a part of a system to help them understand
words.
|
A
|
Has students meet in literature circles
|
In the acquisition group, teachers like to have
students work in collaborative groups.
|
L
|
Conducts phonics drills
|
“Students do drills and exercises to practice
language” (33)
|
A
|
Chooses predictable texts
|
To help make language comprehensible, teachers use
books with predictable patterns (34)
|
A
|
Teaches students different comprehension strategies
|
To help make language comprehensible, the teacher
might teach students techniques such as using “gestures, pictures, and real
things or reading a book with a predictable pattern and clear pictures of key
words” (34).
|
A
|
Does a picture walk of a new book
|
Teachers want students to be able to communicate
even if they have not yet acquired the words/linguistic resources to do so
(34)
|
L
|
Used a variety of worksheets to teach different
skills
|
Teachers in this group want students to have practice
with language with multiple exercises to reinforce the learning (34)
|
Wednesday, January 15, 2014
Blog Entry #5 - 2 Books to teach to ELL
Two beautiful books are listed below. For each book I outlined some possible problem areas/concerns that English Language Learners may happen upon. There are also some recommendations to help the students access the text.
The Magically Mysterious Adventures of Noelle the Bulldog
By: Gloria Estefan
- Figurative language- "...came bounding together like a well-oiled machine."
- To teach this a teacher can talk about what a well-oiled machine is, show pictures of one and talk about how something can move like a machine even if it is not one.
- Vocabulary words- distinguishing, beamed, mysterious, disappointed, joyous, delight, bounding.
- Teachers should pre-teach vocabulary- this should include student drawing pictures, naming similes/antonyms, using the word in a sentence and adding the word to a vocabulary bank.
- Complex sentence structure-"She wasn't that pretty, quite far from the best, with her brown brindle body and white-spotted chest."
- break the sentence into natural chunks for the student. Make sure they understand the meaning of punctuation.
- Transition words- Then , but , since.
- When teaching transition word, the teacher should give the students sentences from the book that has these words on them. The student can then move and manipulate the sentence to move them where they belong and sequence them correctly.
The Hello, Goodbye Window
By: Norton Juster and Chris Raschka
- Background Knowledge- Grandparents are called Nanna and Poppy.
- To help students gain background knowledge, teachers can facilitate a KWL chart. Teachers can also link information with the students background knowledge from their own knowledge.
- Story basis/fig language- The window looks like regular window, but it is not (It really is).
- This again links with building the students background knowledge. The teacher can create a window for the students and then they can act out what the little girl is doing. They can talk about imagination and how it plays a role into what this little girl is doing.
- Vocabulary-harmonica, reflections.
- The teacher can actually bring in these items. She can being in the musical instrument and then she can bring in a mirror and talk about the words. Students can touch and listen to the harmonica and then look at themselves in the mirror and see their reflection.
- Figurative language-"It works just like a mirror except it's not in the bathroom, and it looks like we're outside looking in."
- The teacher can show he mirror she brought in and talk about the reflection that is seen in it and then she can take the students to look in a window and again talk about the reflection in it. Students can then compare the two and notice their similarities between them.
Douglas, E. (n.d.). Making reading passages comprehensible for English language learners. Making reading passages comprehensible for English language learners. Retrieved January 15, 2014, from http://www.learnnc.org/lp/pages/811
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