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mleung

English Language Learners and the Five Essential Components of Reading Instruction | Re... - 1 views

  • Considerations when instructing ELLs in vocabulary Vocabulary development is one of the greatest challenges to reading instruction for ELLs, because in order to read fluently and comprehend what is written, students need to use not just phonics, but context. It is possible for students to read completely phonetically and not comprehend what they have read because they do not have the vocabulary. Therefore, vocabulary needs to be taught explicitly and be a part of the daily curriculum in addition to learning to read. This can be done through class time devoted strictly to English as a Second Language (ESL) or English Language Development (ELD). Scientific research on vocabulary development demonstrates that children learn the majority of their vocabulary indirectly in the following three ways:
  • Through conversations, mostly with adults; Listening to adults read to them; and Reading extensively on their own (CIERA, 2001). This finding has serious consequences for ELLs, whose parents and other adults in their lives are often not fluent in English. It is therefore extremely important for educators of ELLs to know and incorporate the ways that students learn vocabulary directly, including: explicitly teaching vocabulary words before students read a text, how to use dictionaries, how to use prefixes and suffixes to decipher word meanings, and how to use context clues (CIERA, 2001).
  • In the discussion of literacy development for ELLs, it is useful to consider a theory that distinguishes the language proficiency needed for everyday, face-to-face communication (BICS, for Basic Interpersonal Communicative Skills) from the proficiency needed to comprehend and manipulate language in the decontextualized educational setting (CALP, for Cognitive Academic Language Proficiency) (Cummins, 1992). The BICS/CALP distinction highlights the fact that some aspects of language proficiency are considerably more relevant for students' cognitive and academic progress than are the surface manifestations commonly focused on by educators. Additionally, in terms of vocabulary development, it highlights the fact that an ELL student may have the vocabulary to hold a conversation about weekend activities, but might not have the vocabulary to comprehend a science or social studies text.
mleung

Free English Language Online Tools - Learn, Teach or Research English - 0 views

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    Online software tools for English language learners, teachers, journalists, writers, students. This software could be used in teaching, learning, linguistics research and more! Train your English language skills. ESL and EFL tools. Readability Test and Improve - Calculates and prints various readability tests. Finds sentences which you should consider revising to improve text's readability. Learn English Text - Provides tooltips with synonyms and dictionary links for difficult words. Vocabulary Builder - Generate vocabulary lists for any English language text. New Words English Dictionary - Create custom vocabularies and dictionaries (for teachers and students). Dictionary - Explains to you meaning of the words. Learn English words. Reference and lexicon. In Simple English - Allows you to find words in English text which are not considered simple or basic or they aren't in the word list you choose. Useful when one should write simple English texts. Filtered Word Frequencies - Allows you to find uncommon words in any English text or web page.
Julee Dredske

Houghton Mifflin Math: Grade K - 1 views

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    Vocabulary Cards
mleung

Word Sift - 3 views

shared by mleung on 19 Jan 12 - Cached
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    Visualize text
Julee Dredske

Webinar Archive: Turning the Tide: Strategies for Closing the English Learner Achieveme... - 1 views

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    Turning the Tide:  Strategies for Closing the English Learner Achievement Gap.  If you only have 2 minutes, watch 40:30 to 42:00.
mleung

Language of Math Task Templates - 0 views

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    "Language of Math" Task Templates are language-focused activities that can be used by teachers to design and write their own language-focused activities. These "Language of Math" tasks were designed to support students in learning to read and understand word problems, communicate about mathematics, and build disciplinary and academic vocabulary, and develop practices in mathematics.
mleung

Wordnik - 2 views

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