k-12 immersion articulation project
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K-12 Immersion Articulation Project. Third Project Report October 11, 2010 For Seattle International Schools Immersion and World Language Teachers Michele Anciaux Aoki, Ph.D. World Languages Program Supervisor Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction [email protected]. - PowerPoint PPT PresentationTRANSCRIPT
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 1
K-12 Immersion Articulation Project
Third Project Report
October 11, 2010 For Seattle International Schools Immersion and World Language Teachers
Michele Anciaux Aoki, Ph.D. World Languages Program Supervisor
Office of Superintendent of Public [email protected]
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 2
Background & Project Description
Seattle Public Schools contracted with the Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction in March, 2010 to have the OSPI World Languages Program Supervisor provide technical assistance to the district in planning the articulation of its dual immersion programs through K-12 schools.
• Develop models and guidelines for articulating dual language immersion programs as well as a curriculum framework and model lessons.
• Develop online modules for immersion students.(This deliverable was dependent on State FLAP grant, which did not get funded.)
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 3
Immersion Models Reviewed• Seattle interviews:
– John Stanford International School– Concord International School– Beacon Hill International School– Hamilton International Middle School– Denny International Middle School– Chief Sealth International High School
• Vancouver, WA • Culver City, CA (Japanese)• Portland, OR
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 4
Reports to Seattle Schools
• April 29, 2010 to Seattle International Schools Principals
• August 20, 2010 to Seattle International Schools Principals
• October 11, 2010 to Seattle International Schools Immersion and World Language Teachers
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Impressions Shared inApril 29, 2010
Report
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Similar Aspirations
• All elementary immersion programs seem to have similar aspirations for middle and high:– Students should have challenging language
classes that move them forward in developing proficiency
– Students should continue to learn content (including culture) through the language
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Challenges in Transition
• All elementary immersion programs seem to be facing similar challenges when they transition into middle school and high school:– Insufficient cohort size (to justify special classes or
programs)– Unclear vision for articulation (What are the language
goals? Are there goals?)– Uncertainty about the impact of the assignment plan and
schools being designated as neighborhood vs. all-city draw
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 8
Issues of Language Proficiency
• Incomplete information about language proficiency of immersion students vs. non-immersion world language students
• Do immersion students really belong in a Level II or Level III high school language class?
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Models
• Multiple models, local control– Each school seems to be making individual
decisions about which content areas to teach in immersion, how much time to spend, how the model transitions over time
– Not clear that there is much sharing of resources (curriculum materials, homework)
– No common plan for assessment of students’ language proficiency
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 10
Definitions
• Varied terminology – Partial immersion, dual immersion,
two-way immersion, etc.– Is it worth standardizing, as Utah has,
on “dual immersion programs”?
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Ideas for moving ahead
• Content– Create curriculum maps for Spanish
Immersion, Japanese Immersion, Chinese Immersion
– Look for commonalities (and differences), as well as gaps
– Ensure that all content areas are adequately covered (in both languages, over time)
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 12
Ideas (cont.)
• Academic Literacy– Ensure that academic literacy is developed
in both languages– Consider how to meet the special needs of
ELL children who are learning English as a 2nd language and the target language as a 3rd language
– Ensure that non-English dominant students are learning English adequately
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 13
Impressions Shared inAugust 20, 2010
Report
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 14
Hamilton – Key Points• Offer 1 world language period/day for
immersion students• Focus on textbook heavily influenced by
high school expectations of students• Focus on grammar knowledge vs.
communicative skills• Inclusion of heritage speakers in
Spanish immersion is going well
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Denny – Key Points• Offer Spanish program for heritage
speakers: double block Spanish L.A. and Social Studies (in Spanish)– Will expand with Concord students• Offer Spanish and Chinese in 6th grade
(1 qtr Exploratory), then 7th & 8th grade • Hope to have Chinese immersion• Offer Somali and Arabic on weekends
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Chief Sealth – Key Points• Offer Projecto Saber for heritage
speakers• Offer IB program in Spanish and
Japanese, now expanding to Chinese– Ab initio: 2-year course, begin in 11th grade– SL: 4 years of high school language– HL: step above SL (for some students)
• IB Learner Profile could match immersion students well
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Meetings/Workshops• Meeting with Paula Patrick in Fairfax
County Public Schools on District-wide K-12 World Language Articulation(7/7)
• Workshop with Mimi Met on Sustaining Dual Language Models (8/2)
• Workshop with Kyle Ennis on Language Proficiency Assessment (8/4)
• Workshop with Michael Bacon on K-12 Articulation (planned for 8/23)
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Lessons from Fairfax County• Plan articulation to middle and high school
before opening elementary language program
• Provide district assessments (formative and summative) & professional development
• Transition from elementary to middle school with math/science unit first
• Immersion students do well on AP exams
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Wisdom from Mimi Met• To Develop Immersion Student Proficiency:
1. Set targets2. Describe end-of-year outcomes3. Determine functions, forms, and vocabulary4. Integrate into content
• Targets (partial immersion) - All Skills– By end of 2nd grade: Novice Mid to High– By end of 5th grade: Intermediate Low to Mid– By end of 8th grade: Intermediate Mid to High– By end of 12th grade: Advanced Low to Mid
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Assessment Options & Credits• ELLOPA/SOPA – grades K-5• NOELLA – grades 1-6• STAMP – grades 7-10• AP/IB Exams – grades 9-12 (when appropriate)
• ACTFL OPI (or OPIc) and WPT – grade 12• LinguaFolio – K-12• Offer 8th graders Credit for Proficiency for
high school credits (and placement)
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Professional Development• Immersion “Boot Camp” for all language
teachers• Immersion “Intro” in all schools (for
staff and families)• Proficiency Assessment training for all
language teachers:– CAL ELLOPA/SOPA/COPE– NOELLA and STAMP Rating Course
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To think about…
• Could IB be the high school continuation for all immersion students?
• What role could online learning play?• What about CTE credits (for translation /
interpreting courses)?• How could we “globalize” the language
courses?
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Draft K-12 Immersion Guidelines
September 2, 2010
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Topics Covered in the Guidelines
• Terminology: Dual Language Programs and Immersion Continuation
• Developing Immersion Student Proficiency
• Curriculum Mapping• Assessment Plan
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Suggested Terminology
• Dual Immersion– Two-Way (Beacon, Concord Spanish)– One-Way (Denny Spanish)– Mixed (John Stanford Spanish, Japanese; Beacon
Chinese)
• Immersion Continuation– Middle and High School– Reflects the experience of the cohort of students rather
than the structure of the program
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What do you think about What do you think about terminology?terminology?
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Developing Proficiency
1. Set targets2. Describe end-of-year outcomes3. Determine functions, forms, and
vocabulary4. Integrate into content
-- Dr. Mimi Met 8/2/2010, Seattle
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1. Set Targets
What do you think the What do you think the proficiency targets proficiency targets
should be?should be?
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2. Describe end-of-year outcomes
Can we use LinguaFolio Can we use LinguaFolio CanDo statements as a CanDo statements as a
guide?guide?
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3. Determine functions, forms, and vocabulary
Can we use Portland’s Can we use Portland’s Functions, Forms and Functions, Forms and
Vocabulary as a guide?Vocabulary as a guide?
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4. Integrate into content
Can we use Donna Can we use Donna Clementi’s Curriculum Clementi’s Curriculum
Map Template for Map Template for Seattle Public Schools?Seattle Public Schools?
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Curriculum Mapping
Can we use Curriculum Can we use Curriculum Mapping to ensure Mapping to ensure coherence across coherence across
languages, schools, languages, schools, and levels?and levels?
Washington State Office of Superintendent of Public Instruction (OSPI) 33
Assessment Plan• Summative Assessment Options
– Oral Proficiency Interviews• ELLOPA, SOPA, COPE (from CAL)
– Online Assessments (Reading, Writing, Speaking, Listening)
• NOELLA (grades 3-6) & STAMP (7-16)• Formative Assessment Options
– ClassPak (from Avant Assessment)– LinguaFolio Online (from CASLS)
• Self-Assessment & Goal Setting– LinguaFolio and LinguaFolio Online
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Backwards Design• What do we want students to be able to
DO with the language?– What are the proficiency targets?
• How will we know they can do it?– What are the performance assessments?
• How do we plan instruction in order for them to meet the targets?– What content and activities do we need to
plan in class?
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Deliverables by the End of Today…
1. Consensus on Terminology2. Consensus on Proficiency Targets3. Consensus on Assessment Plan4. Draft Curriculum Map(s) for Elementary
Dual Immersion5. Draft Curriculum Map(s) for Middle –
High School Immersion Continuation6. Next Steps…