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Oral Language Successful Practices

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Oral Language. Successful Practices. Adapted (with permission) from Successful Practices with English Learners: A Focus on Oracy Aida Walqui Director, Teacher Professional Development Program Wested 3 rd Annual Language, Culture, and Education Institute April 5 University of Wisconsin Oshkosh. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Oral Language

Oral LanguageSuccessful Practices

Page 2: Oral Language

Adapted (with permission) from

Successful Practices with English Learners:A Focus on Oracy

Aida WalquiDirector, Teacher Professional Development Program

Wested

3rd Annual Language, Culture, and Education InstituteApril 5

University of Wisconsin Oshkosh

Page 3: Oral Language

Oral Language DevelopmentTheoretical Base

Basil Bernstein (1973-1995) Class, codes, and control.

Restricted codesPremised on shared knowledgeThe familiar, context-rich interactionsEssential for close relationships

Example: “Shut the door!”

Page 4: Oral Language

Basil Bernstein (1973-1995) Class, codes, and control

Elaborated codesnothing is taken for grantedelaboration is indispensable as a tool of schooling

Example: “Shut the door so the cold air doesn’t come in.”

Page 5: Oral Language

• Do schools expect an elaborated code when children speak?

• If do, why?• How can you scaffold oral learning to

teach children to see an elaborated code of speech?

Page 6: Oral Language

Scaffolding Oral Language

Page 7: Oral Language

Choose a picture from a lesson.

Describe the picture

Page 8: Oral Language

Guidelines for the Description

• Where does the scene take place?

• Who is the central character(s) in the picture?

• What does this person look like?(sex, height, face, hair,clothes, approximate age)

• What is this person doing?

• Any other relevant information?

Page 9: Oral Language

Language Modeling

• This scene takes place in…• My picture shows…• The picture I have shows a…• The central character in my picture is…• In my picture you can see a…

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 10: Oral Language

In a Small Group

• Round robin: share the description of your pictures.

• After description is complete, you may ask questions of each other (one per partner)

• Now speculate: Your task is to create a story providing creative glue to link the scenes.

• Give the story a title. Give the characters names, details, etc.

Page 11: Oral Language

Post Card Sample

Page 12: Oral Language
Page 13: Oral Language

Student produced picture related to lesson picture

Page 14: Oral Language

Student Note to Family in the Time Period Being Studied

Dear Mama and Papa,Farming is hard work. Feeding the

animals, milking the cows, and tending the crops is a lot to do.

Love,Miguel

Page 15: Oral Language

Note and Postcard Sample

• Students may write their letters on a postcard.

Page 16: Oral Language

What do we know about reading?

• Teachers who invite students to participate in deep collaborative activities and provide them with choices increase their motivation to read and comprehend text.

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 17: Oral Language

Collaborative Dialogue Writing

• Everybody writes and takes notes.• 2/3 of the ideas come from the text.• 1/3 come from your knowledge of life (including

home culture)..

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 18: Oral Language

Think and Reflect

• Why should all students write?

• Why is copying okay?

• Why is knowledge from life okay to write about?

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 19: Oral Language

Teacher Monitors While Children Write

Page 20: Oral Language
Page 21: Oral Language

Think and Reflect

• Why do all students write down ideas?

• Why is the teacher monitoring?

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 22: Oral Language

Children Share

Page 23: Oral Language
Page 24: Oral Language

Think and Reflect

• Why are the children physically close together during sharing?

• Why are the children arranged to see one another while sharing?

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 25: Oral Language

What do we know about reading?

• To foster reader autonomy, teachers should offer students a range of instructional practices, robust and generative routines, and appropriate language models that can be appropriated over time.

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002

Page 26: Oral Language

Final Think and Reflect

• In spite of all this knowledge, comprehension instruction continues to receive inadequate time and attention in typical classroom instruction.

Wested, Teacher Professional Development, 2002