Esl Portfolio Final
Esl Portfolio Final
Esl Portfolio Final
Emily Reese
BRIEF BACKGROUND
I currently live in Norfolk, Nebraska and am in
my fourth year teaching at Norfolk Senior High
School.
I currently teach Spanish I, Science Fiction and
Mythology, Shakespeare and English 10. I also
coach Speech.
I graduated in December 2007 from Wayne State
College with a degree in Secondary Education
and endorsements in English and Spanish.
MY PHILOSOPHY
I believe:
All
INFLUENTIAL
RESEARCHERS AND
APPLICATIONS FOR
TEACHING
Lev Vygotsky
Stephen Krashen
Jim Cummins
Lily Wong Fillmore
Deborah Short
J. Michael OMalley & Jane Chamot
Jane Hill
LEV VYGOTSKY
area of development
between the actual
developmental level and
potential developmental
level
Through interaction with
others, the student proceeds
from an actual
developmental level to
potential developmental
STEPHEN KRASHEN
is a subconscious process
Acquisition reflects natural human language learning
Learning is a conscious process
Learning allows for the construction of a monitor
Affective Filter
Inhibitions,
Monitor Hypothesis
The
Input Hypothesis
Input
must be comprehensible
Language learners learn language in a natural order
i +1
"Acquisition requires meaningful interaction in the target language - natural communication in which speakers are concerned not with the form of their utterances but with the messages
they are conveying and understanding."
-Stephen Krashen
STAGES OF LANGUAGE
ACQUISITION
Stage
Characteristics
Time
Teacher Prompts
Frame
Pre-production
The student:
Has minimal comprehension
Does not verbalize
Nods Yes and No
Draws and points
0-6 months
Show me...
Circle the...
Where is...?
Who has...?
Early Production
The student :
Has limited comprehension
Produces one- or two-word responses
Participates using key words and familiar
6 months1 year
Yes/no questions
Either/or questions
One- or two-word answers
Lists
Labels
1-3 years
Why...?
How...?
Explain...
Phrase or short-sentence
phrases
Uses present-tense verbs
Speech
Emergence
Intermediate
Fluency
The student
Has good comprehension
Can produce simple sentences
Makes grammar and pronunciation errors
Frequently misunderstands jokes
answers
SCAFFOLDING
This instructional technique is based
on Vygotskys Zone of Proximal
Development theory and Krashens
Input Hypothesis.
Providing help to students to achieve
what they cannot do independently
Requires a framework or structure that
students can use
Scaffolding should be used until
students can show apply new skills and
strategies independently
Visual Scaffolding
The
Scaffolding Dialogue
Comprehensible
Input
Providing input or using language that is near the
students level of learning is a way to scaffold dialogue
Acquiring correct forms indirectly and modeling
JIM CUMMINS
BICS AND CALP
Basic Interpersonal
Communication Skills (BICS)
Day
academic learning
Listening, Speaking, Writing and
Reading in target language
Proficient in 5-7 years
Cognitively demanding
The
Role of teachers
Teacher as communicator
Teacher as educator
Teacher as evaluator
Teacher as educated human being
Teacher as agent of socialization
Dialects
Building
Background
Comprehensible
Input
SIOP CONT.
Strategies
Interaction
Practice/Application
SIOP CONT.
Lesson
Delivery
Review
Assessment
Three components
A
standards-based
curriculum with grade
level appropriate content
material
Academic language which
focuses on literacy
Instruction on how to use
learning strategies
1. Content Objectives:__________________________________________
How assessed? _____________________________________________
2. Language Objectives:_________________________________________
How assessed?______________________________________________
3. Learning Strategies Objectives: (to be added later in workshop)
Materials: __________________________________________________
PROCEDURES
Preparation: How will I find out what my students already know about this content topic and what
related prior experiences they have had? How will I find out what language skills they already know for this
type of task? What vocabulary needs to be taught?
Presentation: What is the best way to present this content so that students understand the concepts?
What language skills will they use?
Practice: What kinds of activities will help my students apply the new information? What language
skills will they be practicing?
Self-evaluation: What is the best way for my students to assess their own learning of language and
content?
Expansion: How can I connect the topic of this lesson to students own lives, culture, and language?
How does this topic connect to other content areas? How can parents become involved? How can I help students
transfer what they have learned to new situations?
JANE HILL
Lead consultant for McREL
Specializes in bilingual education
Co-authored the book Classroom
Instruction that Works with English
Language Learners
Identified nine categories of strategies
that have a high probability of
enhancing student achievement
Works with the state departments of
education to offer the English Language
Learner Leadership Academy
Average Effect
Average
Number of
Size
% Gain
Studies
1.61
45
31
1.00
34
179
.90
29
21
.77
28
134
27
246
Cooperative Learning
.73
27
122
.61
23
408
.61
23
63
ASSESSMENTS
INFORMAL ASSESSMENTS
Checking for Understanding
Rubrics
Presentations
Think-Pair-Share
Checklists
Response Journals
Visual Representations
Retelling Stories
Dramatization/Role Playing
Portfolios
Page
#
From the
text
My thoughts
EXAMPLES OF FORMAL
ASSESSMENTS
CURRICULUM ADAPTION
FOR ESL STUDENTS
CURRICULUM ADAPTION
FOR ESL STUDENTS IN MY
CLASSROOM
CELEBRATING DIVERSITY
Julia Alvarez Author Study
Writes
All-American Girl
MY ESL ENDORSEMENT
EXPERIENCE
Games
and songs
Readers theater
Group work strategies (numbered heads together)
ESL
PRACTICUM