Getting to Academic English: Instructional Practices for
Secondary English Learners
Getting to Academic English: Instructional Practices for
Secondary English Learners
Nancy Frey, Ph.D.PPT at www.fisherandfrey.com Click “Resources”
From Education Week (Oct. 21, 2009)
• “[Researcher Catherine Snow] observed that ‘deep reading’ requires being able to follow a complex line of argument. ‘If you haven’t had a chance to try that out in debate, you don’t have the skills to do it easily when you are reading.”
From Education Week (Oct. 21, 2009)
• “[ELL Learning coach] Katherine Nelson said she’s urging teachers to support structured academic conversations by using ‘sentence starters’ and having students talk to each other in pairs.”
From Education Week (Oct. 21, 2009)
• “[Researcher David Francis] said ‘this is not just an ELL issue. It’s for all students who are academically at risk. Many will benefit from building academic language and background knowledge’ through oral language.”
Instructional Routines from Previous Sessions (pp.147-159)
• Anticipation Guides• Collaborative Posters• Explorers and Settlers• Walking Review • Four Corners• Jigsaw• Novel Ideas Only• Numbered Heads Together• Reciprocal Teaching• Think-Write-Pair-Share
Why Can’t the English Teachers Teach This Stuff?
Reading, writing, speaking, listening, and viewing
• Literacy is utilized in all content areas• Language is specialized in each area• All learning occurs through language• Literacy = Language and Language
= Learning
DisciplinaryLiteracy
Intermediate Literacy
Basic Literacy
Increasing Specialization of Literacy
Shanahan & Shanahan, 2008
Disciplinary Literacy is
Academic Language
What makes literacy hard in the disciplines?
• The goals of reading and writing and the approaches to reading and writing are different depending on the content area.
• The texts are written differently.– Mathematics– Science– History/Social Studies
Math Reading
• Goal: arrive at “truth”• Importance of “close reading” an intensive
consideration of every word in the text • Rereading a major strategy• Heavy emphasis on error detection• Precision of understanding essential • Conclusions subject to public argument
Mathematics Text1.1 Introduction to Linear Equations
A linear equation in n unknowns x1, xx…, xn is an equation of the form
a1x1 + a2x2 +…+ anxn = b,
where a1, a2,…,an, b are given real numbers
For example, with x and y instead of x1 and x2, the linear equation 2x + 3y = 6 describes the line passing through the points (3, 0) and (0, 2).
Similarly, with x, y and z instead of x1, x2 and x3 the linear equation 2x + 3y + 4z = 12 describes the plan passing through the points (6, 0, 0), (0, 4, 0), (0, 0, 3).
A system of m linear equations in n unknowns x1, x2, …, xn is a family of linear equations
Look inside the science text…
• Value on linking findings to other scientific principles
• Transformation of text information to another visual representation
• Marshaling background knowledge
The Antarctic krill is (Euphausia superba) is a species of krill found in the Antarctic waters of the Southern Ocean. Antarctic krill are shrimp-like invertebrates that live in large schools, called swarms, sometimes reaching densities of 10,000-30,000 individual animals per cubic meter. They feed directly on minute phytoplankton, thereby using the primary production energy that the phytoplankton originally derived from the sun in order to sustain their pelagic (open ocean) life cycle. They grow to a length of 6 cm, weigh up to 2 grams, and can live for up to six years. They are a key species in the Antarctic ecosystem and are, in terms of biomass, likely the most successful animal species on the planet.
Science Text
Chart
0
20,000
40,000
60,000
80,000
100,000
120,000
140,000
Site 1 Site 2 Site 3 Site 4
krillphytopl.
History Reading
• History is interpretative• Importance of authors and sourcing in
interpretation• Consideration of bias and perspective
(including one’s own) are essential• Helpful to recognize history as an argument
based on partial evidence (narratives are more than facts)
Looking inside the history text…
• Using corroboration with other sources of knowledge (requiring comparison/contrast)
• Noting the credibility of the arguments (Are they reasonable? Is there a factual basis?
• Looking for the subtext in the author’s message (what does this author mean by these words?)
Multiple Gist Text Set
•Chart of slaves owned by Jackson•Text of Jackson’s inauguration•Bank Veto Speech
The teacher’s role in developing academic language in the PACT
1. Analyze what makes the language
demanding for individuals or groups.
2. Develop scaffolds and supports to
help students understand and apply
academic language.
3. Use strategies to develop their
proficiency in academic language
and provide a rationale for those
strategies.
Tools for Transforming Texts
• In the mind and on paper
• Language frames
• Visual displays
• Notetaking guides
Multiple Text Discussion Web in History
Should explorersrisk lives to
achieve goals?
YESText 1 Evidence
Text 2 Evidence
Text 3 Evidence
NOText 1 Evidence
Text 2 Evidence
Text 3 Evidence
Our View
Elements:Arctic Krill
Properties:invertebrate
Lays eggs
4 Stages to developmentlarvae, juveniles, gravid females, and other adults
Eat phytoplankton
Lay eggs
ProcessesEggs are laid at surface of water and drop
Hatched eggs rise to surface
Larvae are at surface
Krill reach adulthood (2-3 years)
Key Details6,000-10,000 eggs laid
Eggs hatch at about 2,000-3,000 meters
Larvae develop, nourished by yolk
Develop more legs, eyes, grow by molting, Eat algae under ice
Juveniles move inland of adults
Different stages kept separate!
AnalogiesLike a snake sheds its skin as it grows, so does the krill.
Krill eat algae the same way a lawnmower takes in grass
Illustrations:(Chart of different seasons and changes in the krill as it goes through the life cycle.)
Guided Notetaking in Science
What tools or techniques do you
use to embed discipline-specific literacy routines?
Novel Ideas Only
Writing to Explain One’s
Thinking
Writing to Summarize
• Given a word and conditions about the placement of the word, write a sentence
• Forces attention to grammar and word meaning
• Use student examples for editing
Generative SentencesGenerative Sentences
“Volcanoes” in the 4th Position
“Volcanoes” in the 4th Position
Try these . . .
Word Position Length
cell 3rd > 6
Try these . . .
Word Position Length
cell 3rd > 6
Because 1st < 10
Try these . . .
Word Position Length
cell 3rd > 6
Because 1st < 10
Constitution last = 10
Expanding a Generative Sentence
Basic Writing Frame
• Although I already knew that ________, I have learned some new facts about _____. For example, I learned that _______. I also learned that ______. Another fact I learned _______. However the most interesting thing I learned was______ .
Making a claimI think that_________, because ________________. Although I agree that ______________, I still think that _________. She says ______, and I agree, because _________.
Supporting/critiquing a claimHer idea that __________ is supported by _______________, ___________, and
_______. For example, ________________ shows that ________________. They say that ___________ , but _______, _____, and ____ say differently.
Introducing and addressing a counterargumentOf course, you might disagree and say that _________________. Some might say _________, but I would say that _____________. While it is true that __________, that does not always mean that _________.
Stating a conclusion or summing up an argumentIn conclusion, I believe ____________________.In sum: _____________ is shown by _____________ and ______________. For these reasons, _______________ should be ________________.
Source: Glencoe Literature, 2009. Used with permission of Glencoe/McGraw-Hill.
To create using content knowledge
• Role Audience Format Topic
• Perspective taking is the focus
RAFT Writing
RAFT in Writing - “Said” is Dead
•R - Writer•A - “said,” “nice,” “thing,” &
“like”•F - Eulogy•T - Burying overused
words
R - Your digestive system
A - Chocolate
F - Love letter
T - Why I need you
RAFT in Science
RAFT in History
R - Marco Polo
A - Potential recruits
F - Recruiting poster
T - See the Silk Road!
R - Isosceles triangle
A - your three angles
F - instant messages
T - our unequal relationship
R - Isosceles triangle
A - your three angles
F - instant messages
T - our unequal relationship
RAFT in Geometry
R - lab mouse
A - scientist
F - protest letter
T - set me free!
RAFT in Science
RAFT in English
R - Brutus
A - Caesar
F - Letter of advice
T - Please step down as emperor
The Gettysburg Address
R: person attending Gettysburg dedication
A: family member
F: Letter
T: Lincoln’s message
RAFT in Social Studies
R - Colonists R - King George
A - King George A - Colonists
F - protest letter F - rebuttal
T - Taxation without T - You are
representation is British citizens!
tyranny!
RAFT Writing in American History
Role: Benjamin Banneker
Audience: Thomas Jefferson
Format: Formal letter of protest
Topic: If “all men are created equal,” why do you own slaves?
Jefferson’s reply to Banneker
Silent Write and Share
• Write down one way you could use writing to learn in your classroom.
• Exchange it with another person.
• Read their idea and extend their idea.
• Return papers to one another.
Students assess themselves to see their own progress.
Alphabet Vocabulary ChartA-B C-D E-F G-H
I-J K-L M-N O-P
Q-R S-T U-V-W X-Y-Z
Alphabet Vocabulary ChartA-B C-D
crater
E-F G-H
I-J K-L
lava
M-N
magma
O-P
Q-R S-T U-V-W
volcano
X-Y-Z
Alphabet Vocabulary ChartA-B
ash
C-D
crater
cinder cone
E-F
flow
G-H
I-J K-L
lava
M-N
magma
magnitude
O-P
Q-R
Rim of Fire
S-T
shield volcano
tremor
U-V-W
volcano
vent
volcanologist
X-Y-Z
Alphabet Vocabulary ChartA-B
ash
active
balsat
C-D
crater
cinder cone
caldera
E-F
flow
eruption
extrusion
G-H
geothermal
harmonic tremor
I-J
intrusion
K-L
lava
lahar
M-N
magma
magnitude
mantle
O-P
obsidian
pahoehoe
pillow lava
Q-R
Rim of Fire
S-T
shield volcano
tremor
U-V-W
volcano
vent
volcanologist
X-Y-Z
xenoliths