chapter 8 - preparing the way: teaching els in the …...classroom teachers typically lack training...
TRANSCRIPT
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Cindy Lovell, Ph.D.Chapter 8 - Preparing the Way: Teaching
ELs in the K-12 Classroom (3rd ed. )Kendall Hunt Publishing Co.
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① Perceptions and misperceptions about gifted students
② Perceptions and misperceptions about ELs
③ The underrepresentation of ELs in gifted programs
④ Identifying gifted ELs
⑤ Serving gifted ELs in the mainstream classroom
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� I.Q. is relevant.• Should students with an I.Q. of 70 receive special
education?• Should students with an I.Q. of 130 receive special
education?• Both scores are 2 standard deviations from the norm of
100.
�All children are not gifted.
�All children possess an area of strength; this is not the same as giftedness.
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�ELs DO want to learn English!�Teachers often focus on mistakes made by
ELs rather than their strengths.
�Teachers should:• Focus on strengths• Probe for elaboration• Model correct language (English)
�Equal treatment is not necessarily fair treatment.
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�Culture matters. It includes life experiences and circumstances (e.g., SES).
�Multilingual students are advantaged over monolingual students.
�Many teachers have predisposed negative attitudes toward ELs.
�Many states now require EL training in pre-service teacher programs.
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�Causes for under-representation include:• Inadequate identification procedures• Insufficient teacher training• Reluctance by families of ELs to advocate for
identification�ELs might not take standardized
achievement tests or I.Q. tests.�Classroom teachers are the single most
important factor in the identification process.
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�Classroom teachers typically lack training and/or experience in identifying gifted students.
�Many teachers hold low expectations for ELs, which prevents them from considering ELs as potentially gifted.
�Some teachers believe ELs should fully master English before moving to a gifted classroom.
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�Parents of ELs are often reluctant to advocate for their children to be screened for gifted for the following reasons:• Parents may lack sufficient English skills to
confidently advocate for their children.• Parents may be intimidated by the school as an
authority figure, especially if they are undocumented.
• Parents may be reluctant to have their children labeled (even as gifted).
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�Teacher checklists�Alternative assessments�Nonverbal instruments
• Naglieri Nonverbal Ability Test (NNAT)• Form 6 of the Cognitive Abilities Test (CogAT)• Raven Standard Progressive Matrices (Raven)
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Non-EL Gifted Traits
High level/critical thinking
High verbal /vocabulary
Quick mastery of subject matter
Ability to go above/beyond/in-depth
Unique approaches/perspective
Questioning/curious
Standardized test scores
Teacher’s intuition
Creative/imaginative
EL Gifted Traits
Ability to go above/beyond/in-depth
High level/critical thinking
Ability to learn English quickly
Similar/same traits as non-EL gifted
Quick mastery of subject matter
High verbal/vocabulary
Questioning/curious
Artistic
Perfectionist/high standards
*as reported by classroom teachers
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�High ability in math�Use of hands-on and manipulatives to
explain understanding�Creative/imaginative�Use of drama and role play to explain
understanding�Problem-solving ability
*as reported by classroom teachers
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�Classroom teacher is (typically) first to notice gifted traits and nominate a child for screening.
�Great care should be taken in how this is explained to families and especially to students.
� Identification should be presented as a tool to determine appropriate level of challenge. (Avoid label of “gifted” at this stage.)
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�Gifted identification can take up to a year.
�Avoid common pitfalls of keeping gifted students busy (e.g., “Help your neighbor.”)
�Differentiate�Match curriculum to the academic
readiness of the child.
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�Focus on mastery of content objectives (e.g., Avoid busy work. Do not expect gifted students to ‘show their work’ in math. For many, complex problems are merely ‘mental math.’)
�Alternative assessments/options nurture imagination and creativity, characteristics of giftedness.
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�YO-YO approach provides options and encourages personal accountability.
�Allow/encourage students to suggest their own options to demonstrate mastery of content objectives.
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� Authentic language (vernacular, slang, idioms)
� Creating pictures, illustrations, posters, visual representations, etc.
� Demonstrations� Games (creating new
games or using existing games)
� Graphic organizers, concept maps (with illustrations)
� Hands-on activities, manipulatives
� Interaction to promote discussion and elaborate on ideas
� Music, poetry, rhyme
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� Personal, meaningful, and relevant content (justifies “why” they should feel engaged)
� Realia, primary documents
� Role playing, dramatization, pantomime
� Technologies, software, computer-generated presentations
� Use of pictures and illustrations
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Mark Twain Following the Equator, 1897