English Language Learners & Education: How to Create Success in the Classroom DeCapua‚ A.‚ & Marshall‚ H. (2010). Students with limited or interrupted formal education in US classrooms. Urban Review‚ 42‚ 159-173. This article addresses the challenges of learning in the US for a particular English Language Learner (ELL) group known as SLIFE (students with limited or interrupted formal education)‚ who share the characteristics of having little to no English language proficiency‚ native language
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SOURCE OF AGE DIFFERENCES There are three proposal focuces in Source of Age Differences: 1. Biological Factors 2. Cognitive Factors 3. Affective Factors 4. Differences in The Language Environment • BIOLOGICAL FACTORS It tells about development of Cerebral Dominance. There are 3 specialization of function in the right and left sides of the brains; a. Lateralization begins in childhood and is completed at puberty. It means that the child
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conversations: (a) express apologies (b) talk about oneself (c) introduce family members and friends 1.3.1 Able to listen to and demonstrate understanding of oral texts by: (b) giving True/ False replies. Objectives: By the end of the lesson‚ pupils will be able to Talk about people and themselves Activities: 1. Teacher asks Wh-Question about the picture. Talk about thr English Teachers in the school and asks about their names and where they are from.(textbook pg 1-2)
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the years went on it only got worse. I could never pass any exams‚ but every once in blue moon I would get a C or a B. It always made me feel stupid. I knew most of the material but I would always blank out. According to Diana Peters Mayer‚ some students blank out on tests because of their nerves‚ feel defeated‚ give up‚ and begin to underachieve (82). I know this describes me because there have been times I have just put my name on a test and turned it back into the teacher blank. I talked to my
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Learning creatively: the effectiveness of using theater pedagogy for immigrant ELLs Introduction Having the experience of being an actress in a drama‚ I myself appreciate the power of acting the role out in thinking in the shoes of the character with empathy‚ thus better understanding the character in the specific story settings; on the other hand‚ given the authentic practicing environment‚ I could rehearse the lines again and again until they became perfect to act. Meanwhile‚ just as Gina Tiffany
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I have been contemplating the application of ELL strategies in the area of high school‚ particularly in regards to the College and Career Readiness Standards. Mostly we have been focusing on Head start‚ pre-school‚ kindergarten‚ and elementary ELL students. However‚ if these student do not reach proficiency by fifth or sixth grade then many fall behind and possibly drop out because the English language transfers from a social English to a more academic level of English. For a portion of my field
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Activities 1. Prayer 2. Checking of attendance 3. Setting of Standards 4. Motivation • Let’s sing: “Stop” 5. Gospel Reading a. Genesis 2:7 • Why did God gave us (heart‚ head‚ eyes‚ ears‚ nose‚ mouth‚ hands‚ feet) B. Development of the Lesson 1. Linking • We can do many things because God made us special. 2. Reading of the Poem • Let’s read a poem about what a child like you can do. We are smart‚ we are bright We can read‚ we can write. We can spell‚ we can tell‚ We can dance we
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Denise Smalley Unit Lesson Plans: My Five Senses - Kindergarten EDU 352 Foundations of Educational Technology Instructor Judy DonovonMay 26‚ 2014 “In a technology-rich classroom‚ students don ’t "learn" technology. Technology merely provides the tools to be used for authentic learning. It is a means‚ not an end” (Schrum‚ n.d.). For an effective and efficient classroom‚ teachers should include technology that meets the ISTE standards while teaching to meet the CCSS standards. When developing
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simply teach knowledge their students and instead aims to arm students with the knowledge‚ skills‚ understanding and attitudes that will prepare students for life-long learning. The constructivist theories developed by Piaget and Vygotsky have impacted on the way that teachers teach and this has changed the approach of teaching to place a greater importance on the teacher instead to act as a facilitator of learning in an open‚ constructivist environment and providing students with the tools to challenge
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advocate for ESL students and their parents ’ "cultural" rights‚ teachers‚ of course‚ also want them to be able to function in the mainstream. It will be important for me as a teacher to help my parents of English language learners to fit into American society and it will be important for me to integrate the student ’s culture into the class (Banks‚ J. and Banks‚ C.‚ 2003). This starts with me the teacher being familiar with the specific family to work effectively with those ELL parents. When
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