Understanding Language:A Discussion
Photo: Courtesy Jeff Johnson
Kenji HakutaStanford University
A Nation at Risk (1983)… call for standards.
No Child Left Behind
No Child Left Behind:Three important pieces for ELLs
Sec. 1111(a)(3)(ix)(III) the inclusion of limited English proficient students, who shall be assessed in a valid and reliable manner and provided reasonable accommodations on assessments administered … including, to the extent practicable, assessments in the language and form most likely to yield accurate data…
Sec. 1111(a)(3)(xiii) enable results to be disaggregated within each State, local educational agency, and school by…English proficiency status.
Sec 3113(b)(2) standards and objectives for raising the level of English proficiency that are derived from the four recognized domains of speaking, listening, reading, and writing, and that are aligned with achievement of the challenging State academic content and student academic achievement standards described in section 1111(b)(1).
Common Core State Standards
National Geographic: George Steinmetz
Old Paradigm
Content Language
Mos
tly v
ocab
ular
y,Gr
amm
ar
New Paradigm
DiscourseText (complex text)
ExplanationArgumentation
PurposeTypical structure of text
Sentence structuresΔVocabulary
practices
LanguageContent
New Paradigm
Content
Discourse
Text (complex text)
Explanation
ArgumentationPurpose
Typical structure of text
Sentence structures
ΔVocabularypractices
Discourse
Text (co
mplex text)
Explanati
on
Argumentati
on
Purpose
Typica
l structu
re of text
Sentence
structu
res
ΔVocabulary
practices
DiscourseText (complex text)
ExplanationArgumentation
PurposeTypical structure of
textSentence structures
ΔVocabularypractices
Math
Language Arts
Science
From a conceptualization of
Language acquisition as an individual process
Language as structures or functions
Language acquisition as implying the linear and progressive building of forms and structures aimed at accuracy, fluency, and complexity
Individual ideas or texts as the center of instruction
To Understanding Language acquisition as a social process of apprenticeship that takes place in social contexts
Language as action, subsuming structure and function (Ellis, N. & Larsen-Freeman, D., 2010; van Lier & Walqui, 2012)
Non linear and complex developmental process aimed at communication and comprehension
Attention to ideas in their interrelatedness, and teaching units as a cluster of lessons centered on texts that are interconnected by purpose and/or theme
Use of simplified texts
Use of activities that pre-teach the content, or simply “help students get through texts”
Identifying discrete structural features of language
Traditional grammar as a starting point for students to know language
Objectives stated as dichotomies (such as “content objectives” and “language objectives”)
Use of complex texts for all students
Activities that scaffold students’ development and their autonomy, so that the knowledge gained will assist them in generating new understandings on their own in the future
Exploration of how language is purposeful and patterned to do its particular rhetorical work
Multimodal grammar as necessary to support students’ understanding of the visual, spatial, gestural, audio and linguistic meanings of texts
Objectives revolving around ways of communicating, doing, and being using language for different audiences and purposes
Principles to Guide Resource Development (Understanding Language - Draft)
• Principle 1: Instruction leverages ELLs’ home language(s) and culture(s).
• Principle 2: Instruction is designed to foster the dynamic interplay between discipline-specific language development and disciplinary knowledge and competencies.
• Principle 3: Instruction is standards-aligned and grade level appropriate and builds communicative competence.
• Principle 4: Instruction addresses the needs of students with various levels of English proficiency and with a variety of prior school experiences.
• Principle 5: Instruction provides the necessary support to ensure that ELLs comprehend the range of language used in the classroom.
• Principle 6: Diagnostic and formative assessment are used to identify students’ knowledge and academic language competencies to guide instructional practice.
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National Dialogue and Engagement
• Papers, webinars: ell.stanford.edu• Instructional exemplars in ELA, Math, Science• District Engagement through exemplars• Leadership development through on-line content
(we would like to figure out a collaboration with you!)
• Policy development with assessment consortia (PARCC/SBAC and WIDA/ELPA21) and national organizations.