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National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Date post: 01-Jul-2015
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Presentation from 2012 National Migrant Conference in Portland OR, on how to create and implement a Newcomer program.
27
Migrant Education Newcomer Academy
Transcript
Page 1: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Migrant Education Newcomer Academy

Page 2: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Mark Rangel – Director of MENA and Coordinator of Federal Programs

Abdinasser Ahmed –Migrant Education Graduation

Advocate

Carolyn Klimper – Middle School & MENA ELL Instructor

Karen Liston– High School & MENA ELL Instructor

Page 3: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

The story of Morgan County’s diversity is in the emerging change. Lutheran Family Services (LFS) began to recognize the relocation of East African refugees in the Fort Morgan (county seat) area in 2007. In the summer of 2010, LFS estimated that 1,000-1,200 East African refugees were living the in the Fort Morgan area. Fort Morgan’s total population is approximately 12,000. At last report, these refugees include people from the Congo, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Rwanda, Somali and Sudan. The majority, approximately 90+%, are from Somalia. The Morgan County School District RE-3 student population of 3,000 students is 51% Hispanic. There are 23 birth countries represented other than the United States and 11 first languages. Approximately 33% of the school district’s student population is affiliated with an English as a Second Language program.

Page 4: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Newcomer students are recent immigrants who have little or no English proficiency and who may have had limited formal education in their native countries.

Page 5: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Recent demographic changes◦ ELLs

30% of secondary students are ELLs (NEP and LEP) Pressure on existing ESL service delivery Newcomer language development needs are distinct

◦ Refugee students—recent increase Pressure on entire instructional system—skill levels

extremely diverse

◦ Migrant students—funding source Serving 230 migrant students District-wide 45% at Middle School and High School levels

Page 6: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

District designated as Priority Graduation district

Need alternatives for non-traditional students◦ Over-age, under-credited students

Would allow FMHS to focus on instructional rigor— The MENA will focus attention to differentiation and “catch up” strategies when the “clock is ticking”

Page 7: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Establish a bridge between newcomer needs and existing language support system

Develop English language skills Help newcomers acculturate to U. S. schools Make newcomers aware of educational

expectations and opportunities Create connections to existing community

resources

Page 8: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Identified placement criteria Selection assessments Identified transition criteria and strategies Determine support services such as

translation services (Community Navigator)

Establish parent/family connections (MEGA’s)

Provide professional development

Page 9: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Must match student needs with District resources

◦ Use of migrant funds◦ Potential for other grants

Program structure-half day programming Off campus site Secured curriculum materials and tools Provide extended time for learning

◦ Integration within regular school, extracurricular activities, etc. Ex. Reading to elementary students

Page 10: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Age of student Number of credits previously earned Academic skill level Language proficiency Recommendation from ELL teacher and

school counselor Use of Pathways Power point flow chart

Page 11: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

◦ The MENA is located in a building connected to our BOCES.

◦ OneMorgan County (Immigrant Integration Services )has an office within the MENA.

◦ All furniture was donated by CBOCES◦ Computers are re-purposed from the school

district.

Page 12: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

The program is designed to serve middle school and high school students who are non-English proficient (NEP) and have no formal education or very limited formal education. Length in program will be individualized. The main determination will be the student’s native language literacy level when entering the program.

Page 13: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Provide “intake” process Assess individual student needs Provide direct instructional services and

supplemental instruction to support successful transitions◦ Intense language development◦ Academic skill development◦ Social/cultural readiness

Migrant Literacy Net (LEARN Consortium)

Inside & Edge Curriculum A+ Courseware

Page 14: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Social/cultural readiness - Positive Behavioral Support Model using district produced student expectations from middle school and high school.

Community Integration Skills – Lessons provided in Collaboration with OneMorgan County.

Facilitate transitions◦ Develop a graduation/completion pathway and

ICAP Based on time available and student skill level

◦ Established criteria for transition into FMMS or FMHS

Page 15: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

LEARN Consortium –Migrant Literacy Net

Page 16: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

What have been the successes?

What are the challenges?

What have you enjoyed the most?

Page 17: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Teachers come to the students to provide instruction. RTI process has allowed students to be transition in and out of the

MENA during the middle of a quarter or semester due to student need or exited out of MENA because of increased proficiency levels in language development.

Due to student need we added two students from Baker 5-6 Elementary school.◦ These students start at Baker, come to MENA then finish their

day at the middle school. We had a high school student who arrived from Mexico with a

week and a half left in the 1st semester. There was no opportunity to receive credit at the high school; therefore, we had the student attend MENA to focus on Language development until the beginning of 2nd Semester.

Page 18: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Dolores Del Campo– High School students Mohamed I. – East African H.S. students

(Somali and Swahili speaking families) Araceli F. –H.S. Junior students (Spanish

Speaking Families) Abdinasser A. – 8th grade students at M.S.

Page 19: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

PCIC meets monthly to provide information and training from the school district and community agencies to parents.

We use our bilingual MEGAS for translation for parents.

Parents provide ideas for presentations

Page 20: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Summary of Program: Designed to serve Out Of School Youth (OSY) Migrant students and At-risk high school migrant students in language development, workforce readiness development, GED Preparation, and academic support.

Service Delivery and Program design: The program will begin March 1st 2012 and will conclude on June 28th 2012.

Schedule: Abdinasser Ahmed- Thursday 4:00PM – 6:00PM

Saturday 12:00PM – 2:00PMSunday 12:00PM – 2:00PM

Dolores DelCampo- Monday 4:00PM -6:00PMTuesday 3:30PM – 5:00PMSaturday 9:30AM – 12:00PM

Page 21: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Summer Migrant Learning Labs◦ June 4th –June 28th Monday MENA and Pioneer Elementary◦ 8:30-11:30 & 12:30-3:30

Advancing Refugee Academic Readiness Summer Program ◦ June 4th and finish July 26th 2012 (with a day off for 4th of July).◦ Pioneer Elementary School 8:30AM -11:30AM daily◦ Funded through Lutheran Family Services

Page 22: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

◦ Entrance Criteria – school referrals, pre-assessment of English language proficiency (CELA PLACE Test), transcripts of formal educational experiences.

◦ Exit Criteria – Formative and Summative Assessments (Inside/Edge Curriculum, LEARN Consortium assessments, A+ courseware assessments, CELA PRO state assessment, CSAP Assessment) These assessments as well as instructor observations and recommendations will provide a body of evidence to determine each student’s completion of services.

Page 23: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

◦ OMC- Community Integration for students and Parents

◦ Workforce Center – Job readiness skill development

◦ SARA Inc. – relationships ◦ CSU Extension Program – Hands on Science

lessons in robotics◦ Doctoral Students from UNC and DU- Group

counseling◦ Colorado Heights University – community

presentations and campus visit◦ Cargil Meat Solutions – donation of SMART Board

system $4000

Page 24: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Establishing a newcomer program is a very complicated process

Requires flexible planning and strong commitment from district leadership

Will involve a great deal of collaboration and problem solving in the context of a budget crisis

Page 25: National conference newcomer program overview -mena
Page 26: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

Mark Rangel – [email protected]://markrangel.weebly.comhttp://menamorganre3.weebly.comhttp://markrangel.wordpress.comOffice: 970-370-6144

[email protected]@[email protected]

Page 27: National conference newcomer program overview -mena

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