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Speak English? ¿Habla Español? Dual-Language Model for Higher Educati AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR ADULT AND CONTINUING EDUCATION 54th National Conference Pittsburgh, 2005 Dr. Carmen L. Lamboy Prof. Natalia Ruiz Prof. Luis Zayas Dr. Luis Burgos a G. Mendez University System
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2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español? A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Jan 17, 2017

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Page 1: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Speak English? ¿Habla Español? A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

AMERICAN ASSOCIATION FOR ADULT AND CONTINUING EDUCATION 54th National Conference Pittsburgh, 2005

Dr. Carmen L. LamboyProf. Natalia RuizProf. Luis ZayasDr. Luis BurgosAna G. Mendez University System

Page 2: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Objectives• Analyze the need for Accelerated Dual Language

education• Discuss the characteristics of the Accelerated Dual

Language model• Share the experience of the implementation of the

Accelerated Dual Language model• Present services and opportunities to establish

Accelerated Dual Language programs

Page 3: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Who we areAna G. Méndez University System

School for Professional StudiesAccelerated Learning Program

Dual Language Accelerated Learning

Page 4: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

The Need for Accelerated Dual Language Education

Page 5: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

• 58% increase in the Latino population in the United States (1990-2000)– Largest and fastest growing minority group– 20% of the US population will be Latino by 2020

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?

US Bureau of the Census, 2000

Page 6: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?• Purchasing power of Latinos has reached

$700,000 million (US Hispanic Chamber of Commerce)

• Globalization and international trade– Free trade agreements between the United

States and Latin America (México, Chile, Central America, Dominican Republic)

Page 7: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?

• Educated bilingual professionals have more and better employment opportunities– Florida study indicates that they make an

average of $7,000 more annually

Creating Florida's Multilingual, Global Workforce, 2000UF, UM & FLDOE

Page 8: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?

• Latinos represent 15% of the US population-–Only 10% of university students

US Bureau of the Census, 2000

Page 9: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?

• Latino adults have significantly lower university level attainment.

46.4

60.3

10.6

28.1

0

10

20

30

40

50

60

70

High School,Some College

Bachelors orHigher

LatinosNon- Latino

US Bureau of the Census, 2000

Page 10: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?• Latino mastery of the English language

affects access to higher education– 18% of US population speak a language other

than English at home• 60% of them speak Spanish

– 85% of Latinos speak Spanish at home– 14 million Latinos report that they do not

speak English “very well” (49%)US Bureau of the Census, 2000

Page 11: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?• Financing higher education becomes an

access issue for Latino adults– Lower income forces adults to work full time– Those who study must do so part time

• 51% of Latinos are part time university students compared to 45% of non-Latinos*

*Institute for Higher Education Policy, 2005

Page 12: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why is Accelerated Dual Language Education Important?• Conclusion

– In order to increase access of Latino adults to higher education we need alternative programs that will allow for:

• Enhancing English skills• Flexible scheduling to combine work, study and

personal responsibilities

Page 13: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Characteristics of the Accelerated Dual Language Model

Page 14: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Accelerated

Basic Characteristics

Page 15: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Accelerated vs Traditional

Traditional3 Sessions

1st Semester

16 1616

2nd Semester Summer

Aug AugMayMayJanDec

Weeks Weeks Weeks

Accelerated9 Sessions

5 55 555 55 5

Weeks Weeks Weeks

Aug Dec Jan May May Aug

Classes meet once a week for 4 hours

Page 16: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Accelerated•9 enrollment opportunities

•Students concentrate on two classes at a time

•Students can take up to 18 credits per semester

•Scheduling flexibility during the semester

Traditional•3 enrollment opportunities

•Students must work with 6 courses at once

•18 credits requires daily attendance

•Cannot stop-out during the semester

Accelerated vs Traditional

Page 17: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Modules - Study Guides

• All registered students have access to their class module

• The module serves as a study guide which allows facilitators and students to plan and make better use of their time

• Include course objectives, expectations, activities and assignments

Page 18: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Recognition of Prior Learning No time limitation on transfer of

credits Except courses with high technology or

psychomotor skills

Recognition of studies in foreign countries (credits and degrees)

Credit for Prior Learning Credit by exam Portfolios

Page 19: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Dual Language

Theoretical Background

Page 20: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Bilingualism

Additive Bilingualism

Subtractive Bilingualism

Dual LanguageImmersion

Transitional

1st Model 2nd Model

Bilingual Alternatives

Page 21: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Why Dual Language and not Transitional?

• Dual language characteristics complements Adult Learning Principles – curriculum is content based – effective language learning is tied to real-life

goals– includes experiential or hands-on activities– spirit of collaboration and peer interaction

Page 22: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Our ModelDual Language Discipline Based

Immersion Program

Page 23: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Our Mission - Our Model

Fluency•Social•Personal

ProfessionalProficiency

Use of both languages and both cultures for professional proficiency.

L2L1

Page 24: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Definition• A Dual Language

Professional is one who demonstrates professional competencies, confidently, in their field of study in Spanish and English.

Page 25: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Confidently

Page 26: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Conceptual Interpersonal Communication

Professional Competencies

SKILLS

Language

Page 27: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Conceptual Skills #1 Generate ideas

A DLP will generate ideas in order to solve problems

effectively

After analyzing two classroom situations- one in

English and one in Spanish- the students will

develop strategies and action plans in the corresponding language

MA ESOL – Generate Ideas

Page 28: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Five Basic Elements

Page 29: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

1. Development of both languages through coursework

• Undergraduate requirements of 12 credits both languages

• Four-level language development sequence:

– Immersion (Non-credit): little or no language skills

– Developmental (Credit, not required): language skills not at college level

– First year (Credit, required): first year college requirement

– Second year (Credit, required): reading and writing skills needed by the dual language professional

Page 30: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

English:Accuplacer (College Board): selection of items

targeted to model’s language curriculum

2. Placement testing - Computerized testing for immediate grading and data collection

Page 31: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

2. Spanish: SUAGM Placement test for native speakers S-CAPE for Spanish as a Second Language Speakers

Page 32: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

3. Use of both languages in all content courses

• Strictly follow 50/50 formula

• Modules– Specify language to be used in each workshop,

assignments and evaluations

– General information in both languages

– Workshops in the language that will be used in that workshop

Page 33: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

3. Use of both languages in all content courses

• Faculty MUST use Monolingual Delivery

• “Sheltered environment” for students– May ask questions in language of choice but will

get answers in workshop language

– Assignments and evaluations MUST be in the language specified

Page 34: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

4. Computerized language lab for skill development

• Open lab for language and basic skills development

• Faculty may arrange to bring their classes

• Exercises developed in-house complemented by other software

Page 35: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

5. Bilingual faculty and staff• Staff speaks, reads and writes both languages

• All faculty is bilingual, including those teaching language courses

• Faculty and staff model a dual language professional and provide “sheltered environment”

• Continuous Professional Development

Page 36: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

The Orlando Experience

Activities, Accomplishments and Lessons Learned

Page 37: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Metro Orlando University Center(MOUC)

• Accelerated Dual Language studies for adults– Associate Degrees (2)– Bachelor Degrees (12)– Masters Degrees(5)

• Enrollment growth – 152 - Academic year 2003– 642 – Academic year 2005

Page 38: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Metro Orlando University Center(MOUC)

• Faculty– 121 Certified bilingual facilitators– 80 certified as Module Preparation Specialists– Professional Development 2003-2005:

• 52 sessions• 1167 attendees

• +301 bilingual modules

Page 39: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

32 Graduates – June 200532 Graduates – June 2005

Page 40: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

DO NOT REINVENT THE WHEEL OR GO AT IT ALONE: PARTNER!

• With other institutions and community• Pool resources and experiences• Learn from others who have been successful

Page 41: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

What is AGMUS Ventures?

WHO ARE WE?WHAT DO WE DO?

Page 42: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

What is AGMUS Ventures?• Joint venture of Ana G. Méndez University System

(Puerto Rico) and Regis University (Colorado)• AGMUS Ventures created to develop educational

services and products with four key characteristics:– Accelerated– Bilingual– Adult focused– Targeted to Latino markets: Latino-US and Latin America

Page 43: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Services and products

• Develop new sites for implementation of dual language education model

• Provide administrative services for institutions wanting to develop this model at their sites

• Offer licensing and consulting agreements for model implementation: feasibility studies, marketing, staff and faculty development, others

• Develop materials needed for implementation of the model

Page 44: 2005 AAACE Speak English? ¿Habla Español?   A Dual-Language Model for Higher Education

Contact InfoCarmen Lamboy, [email protected]

Luis Zayas, [email protected] Burgos, [email protected]

Metro Orlando University Center(407) 207-3363

5601 S. Semoran Blvd.Orlando, FL 32822