Six Principles for Teaching English Language Learners in All Classrooms
- Ellen McIntyre - North Carolina State University, USA
- Diane W. Kyle - University of Louisville, KY
- Cheng-Ting Chen - University of Louisville, KY
- Jayne Kraemer - Middle School Teacher
- Johanna Parr - Kindergarten Teacher
September 2008 | 168 pages | Corwin
Schools are not able to provide specialized classrooms for all English learners, especially when several languages besides English are spoken by ELLs. While the ELL population continues to grow, most teachers are monolingual and have little or no training on how to teach these students. This book uses a model that was designed around the five CREDE (Center for Research on Education, Diversity, and Excellence) standards for effective pedagogy: (1) joint productive activity; (2) language learning; (3) contextualization; (4) rigorous curriculum; and (5) instruction conversations. These five standards correspond to the authors' first five principles. The sixth principle --engaging families of english language learners --has also been found to have a positive impact on students' academic success. The book includes an array of powerful examples taken from a diverse range of K - 12 settings. The examples provide clear illustrations of teaching strategies that support the authors' principles. K - 12 teachers will discover that while these principles are particularly effective when applied to English Learners, they will ultimately be of benefit to all learners.
1. Introduction
2. Six Principles for Teaching English Language Learners: The Instructional Model
3. Joint Productive Activity (JPA) and English Language Learners
4. Contextualization and English Language Learners: Making Learning Meaningful
5. Language and Literacy for ELLs
6. Engaging Students With Rigorous Curriculum: High Expectations for English Language Students
7. Instructional Conversation (IC)
8. Engaging Families of English Language Learners
9. Conclusion
References
Index
"A highly accessible and practical resource for applying sociocultural theory to both pedagogy and parent involvement. It begins with theory, but then provides excellent examples of how the principles might be meaningfully applied in real classrooms."
University of Southern California