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State Standards, National Standards and ELL Instruction

Site: Literacy Solutions On-Demand Courses
Course: Applied Linguistics No. ELL-ED-138 (Non-Facilitated)
Book: State Standards, National Standards and ELL Instruction
Printed by: Guest user
Date: Saturday, April 19, 2025, 4:50 AM

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1. ESOL and the FSS

Application of Florida State Standards for English Language Learners
The National Governors Association Center for Best Practices and the Council of Chief State School Officers strongly believe that all students should be held to the same high expectations outlined in the
Common Core State Standards and the Florida State Standards. This includes students who are English language learners (ELLs).


These students may require additional time, appropriate instructional support, and aligned assessments as they acquire both English language proficiency and content area knowledge. ELLs are a heterogeneous group with differences in ethnic background, first language, socioeconomic status, quality of prior schooling, and levels of English language proficiency. Effectively educating these students requires diagnosing each student instructionally, adjusting instruction accordingly, and closely monitoring student progress. For example, ELLs who are literate in a first language that shares cognates with English can apply first-language vocabulary knowledge when reading in English; likewise ELLs with high levels of schooling can often bring to bear conceptual knowledge developed in their first language when reading in English. However, ELLs with limited or interrupted schooling will need to acquire background knowledge prerequisite to educational tasks at hand. Additionally, the development of native like proficiency in English takes many years and will not be achieved by all ELLs especially if they start schooling in the US in the later grades. Teachers should recognize that it is possible to achieve the standards for reading and literature, writing & research, language development and speaking & listening without manifesting native-like control of conventions and vocabulary.

English Language Arts
The FSS for English language arts (ELA) articulate rigorous grade-level expectations in the areas of speaking, listening, reading, and writing to prepare all students to be college and career ready, including English language learners. Second-language learners also will benefit from instruction about how to negotiate situations outside of those settings so they are able to participate on equal footing with native speakers in all aspects of social, economic, and civic endeavors.

ELLs bring with them many resources that enhance their education and can serve as resources for schools and society. Many ELLs have first language and literacy knowledge and skills that boost their acquisition of language and literacy in a second language; additionally, they bring an array of talents and cultural practices and perspectives that enrich our schools and society. Teachers must build on this enormous reservoir of talent and provide those students who need it with additional time and appropriate instructional support. This includes language proficiency standards that teachers can use in conjunction with the ELA standards to assist ELLs in becoming proficient and literate in English. To help ELLs meet high academic standards in language arts it is essential that they have access to:

  • Teachers and personnel at the school and district levels who are well prepared and qualified to support ELLs while taking advantage of the many strengths and skills they bring to the classroom;
  • Literacy-rich school environments where students are immersed in a variety of language experiences;
  • Instruction that develops foundational skills in English and enables ELLs to participate fully in grade-level coursework;
  • Coursework that prepares ELLs for post-secondary education or the workplace, yet is made comprehensible for students learning content in a second language (through specific pedagogical techniques and additional resources);
  • Opportunities for classroom discourse and interaction that are well-designed to enable ELLs to develop communicative strengths in language arts;
  • Ongoing assessment and feedback to guide learning;
  • Speakers of English who know the language well enough to provide ELLs with models and support.

Mathematics
ELLs are capable of participating in mathematical discussions as they learn English. Mathematics instruction for ELL students should draw on multiple resources and modes available in classrooms such as objects, drawings, inscriptions, and gestures—as well as home languages and mathematical experiences outside of school. Mathematics instruction for ELLs should address mathematical discourse and academic language. This instruction involves much more than vocabulary lessons. Language is a resource for learning mathematics; it is not only a tool for communicating, but also a tool for thinking and reasoning mathematically. All languages and language varieties (e.g., different dialects, home or everyday ways of talking, vernacular, slang) provide resources for mathematical thinking, reasoning, and  communicating.

Regular and active participation in the classroom through not only reading and listening but also discussing, explaining, writing, representing, and presenting—is critical to the success of ELLs in mathematics. Research has shown that ELLs can produce explanations, presentations, etc. and participate in classroom discussions as they are learning English. ELLs, like English-speaking students, require regular access to teaching practices that are most effective for improving student achievement. Mathematical tasks should be kept at high cognitive demand; teachers and students should attend explicitly to concepts; and students should wrestle with important mathematics.

Overall, research suggests that:

  • Language switching can be swift, highly automatic, and facilitate rather than inhibit solving word problems in the second language, as long as the student’s language proficiency is sufficient for understanding the text of the word problem;
  • Instruction should ensure that students understand the text of word problems before they attempt to solve them;
  • Instruction should include a focus on “mathematical discourse” and “academic language” because these are important for ELLs. Although it is critical that students who are learning English have opportunities to communicate mathematically, this is not primarily a matter of learning vocabulary. Students learn to participate in mathematical reasoning, not by learning vocabulary, but by making conjectures, presenting explanations, and/or constructing arguments.
  • While vocabulary instruction is important, it is not sufficient for supporting mathematical communication. Furthermore, vocabulary drill and practice are not the most effective instructional practices for learning vocabulary.

Research has demonstrated that vocabulary learning occurs most successfully through instructional environments that are language-rich, actively involve students in using language, require that students both understand spoken or written words and also express that understanding orally and in writing, and require students to use words in multiple ways over extended periods of time. To develop written and oral communication skills, students need to participate in negotiating meaning for mathematical situations and in mathematical practices that require output from students.

2. Scaffolding Vocabulary

Students should have access to a glossary that includes words key to understanding the text as well as words that appear frequently in the text. During close reading, for each boldfaced word in the text, they find the word in their glossary and rewrite it. Later, they complete a glossary—drawing a picture or writing a word or phrase to help them remember the new word. If they are a second language speaker, they indicate if the word is a cognate.

Examples of content/academic words: instinct, humanity, survival, skill, competition, flourished, rules, obey, strategies, enjoyable, accomplishments, responsibility, performance, challenging, value, exercise (verb), process, stimulate, imagination, curiosity, creativity, development, solve, recognize, antidepressants, chemicals, and cognitive. The following words appear in the Coxhead Academic Word List: revolutionized, psychology, author, team, individual, ultimate, academy, physical, monitor, attitude, process, creativity, research, odds, chemical, seek, process, context, mutual, network, cooperation, gender, ethnicity, isolated, positive, professional, found, utilization, integration, commission, automatically, designed, and created.

VOCABULARY CHART

Word /

Translation

Rewrite the Word

English Definition

Example From Text

Picture or Phrase

Is It a Cognate?

instinct

instinto

 

natural behavior or way of acting that is not learned

Some scientists claim play is a natural instinct—just like sleep.

 

 

humanity

humanidad

 

human beings; people

That might explain why sports are likely to be as old as humanity.

 

 

Additional Scaffolds for ELLs: Reading for Key Ideas and Details

In this first close reading, students answer questions about the key ideas and details in the text. During this reading, students use their glossary to help with word meanings. For each section, the teacher introduces the guiding question(s). Students then work with a partner to answer the supplementary questions. After answering each question, students should put the answer into their own words. The teacher reviews the answers with the class. The teacher discusses the guiding question(s) with the class, and the students respond to the guiding question(s) in writing. Students with lower levels of English proficiency can be given sentence frames with more or less framing. Below is an example of a highly scaffolded answer frame for the guiding question. After students answer the guiding question, they should work with a partner to put the answer into their own words.

WORD BANK

 Words and phrases to complete supplementary questions would be inserted here.

GUIDING QUESTION: Why are sports not just a game?

LESSON TEXT EXCERPT Text from page 11 would be inserted here.

Include here the text on p. 11.

SUPPLEMENTARY QUESTIONS:

Paragraph 1. Why do we play sports? What do some scientists claim? Why might sports be “as old as humanity”?

We play sports because they are __________. Sports may be “as old as humanity” because play may be a ___________ ____________.

Paragraph 2. What evidence is there that sports began as a form of survival?

Prehistoric man ______________ .

What kinds of sports did the Egyptians play?

Egyptians _________ .

How did the Greeks “revolutionize” sports?

Greeks held the __________ .

When did modern sports “come into play”?

In the ___________, modern sports “come into play”?

Where did they come into play?

Modern sports came into play in ________.

Paragraph 3. Why are organized sports considered “serious” play?

Organized sports are considered “serious” play because __________________.

P3. (This is covered through the background passage.)

P4. Play exercises our bodies and our minds. Name some ways that play exercises our minds (see below).

RESPONSE TO GUIDING QUESTION(S):

Why are sports more than a game?

Paragraph .. Play exercises our bodies and our minds. What do we learn to do from sports?

Through sports, we learn to ____________.

What do sports stimulate?

Sports stimulate our _________________.

Sports are important to healthy brain development. Why?

We use _______ during sports to _____________. We use ___________when we follow directions. We use math to _________________________.

Sports also make us feel better. How do they do this?

Sports raise our ____________, act as _____________, and _________our mood.

 Additional Scaffolds for ELLs: Introduce Opinion and Evidence Graphic Organizer

ELLs would benefit from a definition of the words opinion and evidence; They also would benefit from modeling from the text at hand for examples of an opinion and evidence. Now that ELLs have had an opportunity to grasp the meaning of the passage, they need considerably less scaffolding for this activity.

Example: Some people have the opinion that (or claim that) sports began as a form of survival. The evidence they provide is that many of the sports played today require the participants to jump, run, and/or climb. For prehistoric men, these were things they had to do to survive.