Top Banner
Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) https://www.wevideo.com/hub/#media/ci/2 29638099
31

Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Dec 17, 2015

Download

Documents

Aron Wells
Welcome message from author
This document is posted to help you gain knowledge. Please leave a comment to let me know what you think about it! Share it to your friends and learn new things together.
Transcript
Page 1: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Long Term English Learnersaka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5”

Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher)

https://www.wevideo.com/hub/#media/ci/229638099

Page 2: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

SDUHSD LTELs

● Who are they?o https://www.wevideo.com/hub/#media/ci/229638099

● How many?● Collaboration with our Feeder Elementary

Schools● Monitoring System for all ELs● Academic Support Classes for LTELs at

SDUHSD

Page 3: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

LTEL Definition According to AB 2193

● EL who is enrolled in any of grades 6-12● has been enrolled in schools in the US for more than six

years● has remained at the same English language proficiency

level for two or more consecutive years as determined by the CELDT

● Scores far below basic or below basic on the ELA standards-based test

Page 4: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

SDUHSD EL Population

● 2014-15o 539 Studentso 21 different languages

● Who are our EL students: largest language breakdownso Spanish 59%o Mandarin 10%o Korean 9%o Japanese and Farsi 3%

Page 5: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

SDUHSD LTEL Population

● 56% of ELs are LTELso About 300 students

● 45% of LTELs are also SPED● The majority of LTELs (85%) are Spanish

speaking

Page 6: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Collaboration with Feeder Elementary Districts

● Great Relationship● Assistant Superintendents meet 4-5 times

per year to discuss EL related issues● SDUHSD has provided LTEL data to feeder

elementary districts with breakdown of LTELs attending SDUHSD by elementary school

Page 7: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Monitoring Document

Page 8: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Monitoring Document-Page 2

Page 9: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

TPHS EL population (Newcomers and LTELs)

● 2014-15 about 150 EL students● 18 different languages● Who Are Our Students? largest language breakdowns

32% Spanish (Mexico, Spain, Chile)19% Mandarin

15% Korean 6% Japanese 6% Farsi

Page 10: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

TPHS EL Population Trends

2009-10 141 EL students2010-11 139 EL students2011-12 141 EL students2012-13 114 EL students2013-14 150 EL students2014-15 151 EL students

Page 11: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

What is a long term English learner?

“These long‐term ELs have been schooled in the U.S. for six or more years but have not made sufficient linguistic and academic progress to meet redesignation criteria and exit English learner status. Fluent in social/conversational English but challenged by literacy tasks, and particularly disciplinary literacy tasks, these students find it difficult to engage meaningfully in increasingly rigorous coursework.” (California Department of Education)

Page 12: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

TPHS Long Term English Learners

44 LTELs (30% of total EL population)(In California, about 59% of ELLs are LTELs.

Among TP LTELs…..26 are also Special Education

students (59%)

Page 13: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Language Breakdown of TP LTELs

30 Spanish speakers (68%)4 Korean speakers

(9%)3 Japanese speakers

(6%)2 Farsi speakers

(4%)1 Russian (2%)1 Turkish (2%)1 Filipino (2%)

1 Mandarin (2%) 1 Khmer (2%)

Page 14: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Characteristics of Long Term English Learners (LTELs)

Page 15: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Struggle Academically

● Academic achievement in language, communication, and math that is 2-3 years below grade level

● Limited attainment of all subject matter that depends on English literacy skills

● Gaps in academic knowledge as a result of weak English language skills

Unique to LTELs

Page 16: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Evidence: Final 2nd Semester Grades of TP LTELs (2014)

LTELs with Ds: 25 (55%)LTELs with Fs: 17 (38%)LTELs with multiple Ds and Fs: 16 (36%)LTELs with more than 1 F: 7 (15%)

Page 17: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Language Issues Unique to LTELs

● High functioning oral skills in social situations both in English and home language

● Weak academic language● Gaps in reading and writing skills

Page 18: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Evidence: Low reading skills

Among 8 LTELs who were in the Academic Literacy class, only 3 were reading at gradelevel. The others are reading 4-5 grade levels below grade level.

Page 19: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Non-Engagement

● Habits of non-engagement, learned passivity, and invisibility at school

Unique to LTELs

Page 20: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Academic Future

● Want to go to college but are not being prepared or know what the expectations are

● Have become discouraged learners, tuned out, and ready to drop out

Unique to LTELs

Page 21: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

LTELs do not meet redesignation criteria

SDUHSD Reclassification Criteria:

1. Overall CELDT score of Early Advanced or Advanced (4 or 5) and sub scores no lower than Early Advanced on all subtests.

2. Score of 340 (High-Basic) or higher on the California Standards Test in English Language Arts

3. Grades of C or better in all academic classes. CAHSEE scores for seniors and on track for graduation.

4. Teacher and counselor recommendation5. Parent Consent/Agreement

Page 22: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

2013-14 TP redesignation data

Page 23: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

How do English Learner students become LTELs?

Page 24: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

How do ELs become LTELs

● History of inconsistent programs● Elementary school curricula and

materials were not designed to meet ELL needs

● No language development program

Page 25: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

How do ELs become LTELs

● Partial access to curriculum● Weak language development

program● Socially segregated and linguistically

isolated

Page 26: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

Recommendations to support LTELs in your classes (District-offered Advanced SDAIE trainings can help)

Activating Prior Knowledge Increasing student interest

Oral Language Development!!!

Explicit academic oral language instruction supports reading and writing learning(August & Shanahan, 2006;Calkins,2001)

Attention to Vocabulary!!! LTELs rely on basic, non-academic words in their language usage

Active Read Alouds Allows teachers to model reading approaches and scaffold for comprehension

Teacher Collaboration Collaborative planning aligns curricula and fosters metalinguistic awareness and skills transfer across languages

Page 27: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

How is TPHS using the research to support

our LTELs?..● “LTEL” English 9 class taught by English 9/ELD

teacher● Academic Literacy class: students are

concurrently enrolled in Academic Literacy with Joanne Serrano

● Placement in Academic Literacy: previous English grades, teacher recommendation and Lexile (reading) levels, CELDT scores

Page 28: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

How is TPHS using the research to support our LTELs?

period 4: READ 180 (curriculum designed to bring students reading levels closer to grade level)

ORperiod 6: English 3D (curriculum designed for LTELs to develop academic reading, writing, and oral language skills)● study skills and homework help with university tutors is

built into the Academic Literacy class

Page 29: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

CLOZE ACTIVITY1.Research has shown that students need to use a word at least ___ times before we can say they have mastered it. (Stahl, 2005) 2.Unless students know ____% of the words they are reading, comprehension will be stifled.” (Samuels, 2002 as quoted in L. Calderon, Teaching Reading to English Language Learners, Grades 6-12, 2007.)3.Pre-schoolers from families living in poverty are exposed to _____ different words an hour. (Hart and Risley, 1995)4.Pre-schoolers from professional families are typically exposed to _____different words an hour. (Hart and Risley, 1995)

A) 600 B) 95 C) 2150 D) 12

12

95

600

2150

Page 30: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

● ALL ELLs, but especially LTELs, will excel when you provide opportunities for them to develop ORAL LANGUAGE SKILLS! Get them talking!

● CCSS assume that ALL students can meet the expectations, but ELLs rely on dedicated, knowledgeable, SDAIE trained teachers to SCAFFOLD the curriculum and ENGAGE them in learning.

If you can only take away TWO things from

our presentation, PLEASE remember:

Page 31: Long Term English Learners aka “Lifers” or “Generation 1.5” Manuel Zapata (EL Director), Staci Ortiz-Davis (ToSA), & Joanne Serrano (EL Lead Teacher) .

For More Information:

Olsen, Laurie. “Reparable Harm: Achieving Success for Long Term ELLs.” Californians Together. 2009

Olsen, Laurie. “Secondary School Courses Designed to Address the Language Needs and Academic Gaps of Long Term English Learners.” Californians Together. 2012