Ell Observations
Ell Observations
Ell Observations
he understood what was going on when the teacher assistant was not
in the room. He was also sent out of the classroom for 30 minutes a
day to meet with a speech teacher so he could work on using the
English language. Rodney was subject to the ESL pullout method as
well as the collaborative model. Some accommodations I used were I
talked slowly to make sure he understood what I was saying. I pointed
out each word as I was reading the word problems and then put the
words he did not know on a flash card. I had Rodney read allowed
each word problem and helped him with pronunciation. Also Rodney
and I collaborated on how to do some problems and what the right
answer was. I connected his culture to the standards by telling him
math is the same in his native language as it is in English. Rodney was
a stage 4 English language learner.
A lot of instructional strategies that I learned in this class were
used applied while tutoring Rodney in just a short 30 minutes. I
modeled exactly what I was expecting Rodney to do and that is
something I learned that from SEI. I had Rodney try it once on his own
and then we worked together to solve the problem. This came from
SIOP. The way I taught and reinforced new vocabulary was by using
flash cards. I provided Rodney a background on the topic of word
problems and gave hi a little refresher on how to do it. I watched
Rodney work and tried to find what parts he struggled with so I could
help him learn how to do it. I also did a duet reading with him because
we would read allowed the word problems together. I learned these
strategies from the readings and videos. Overall, these strategies
seemed to work very well. I feel that I was effective in helping him
with math problems and making sure he understood what I was saying
and doing. Some strategies I should have used and will use next time
is to provide him with some motivation to get the correct answer. Also
I will try and make the lesson more fun, I will try and involve some
movement in my lesson so Rodney will not get bored and it will be
easier to assess him. I should have also assessed him before the
lesson to see what he knows and then assess him after the lesson to
see what he learned.
During my 10 hours of observations I learned a lot not only about
Rodney and how ELL learn, but also how to teach a class. I felt very
grateful that Mrs. Forkey gave me the opportunity to not only sit in her
class and observe, but also how helpful she was with everything. I
observed an eager young boy who was hungry to learn. His face would
light up every time he got an answer right and was able to put a sticker
on a monitoring board. He was very observant, during individual work
he would look around to see what his peers were doing and then follow
their example. Rodney was able to speak pretty well for not knowing
the English language for that long. When he was ask a question it was
obvious that he knew in his head what he wanted to ask but
sometimes would have trouble getting the words out. Mrs. Forkey was