EDLI635 Theory and Practice of Literacy Instruction
Wednesday, December 14, 2016
Thursday, December 1, 2016
ELL Case Study
Sarah
Kovalenko
EDLI 635
Dr. Hsu
ELL Case
Study
Dena
is an adorable third grader at Gan Yeladim Bais Yaakov in Jerusalem. She is an
Israeli, yet her parents are originally from the States, and moved to Israel
before Dena was born. She grew up among Israelis and all her friends and
teachers speak Hebrew, so Hebrew is her first language. However, it is very
important to her parents that she speak English correctly and fluently.
Therefore, they sent her to this specific school, since they cater to such
girls; they have the proper staff, programs and tools to help girls like Dena
learn the English language.
Dena
is a quick and motivated learner. Over the past few years at Gan Yeladim, she
picked up the skills to decode words, read with average fluency, and write age
appropriate words. She can read a text given to her with minimal mistakes and
she can write words and sentences correctly. However, Dena has great difficulty
when it comes to comprehension. She reads, but cannot fully understand what she
is reading. She understands some details, yet she misses important parts of the
text because of her inability to comprehend the reading. She cannot identify
the main components of the text, such as the storyline or main idea. After
reading a story, she is unable to answer literal or evaluative questions.
Because
of her comprehension issues, Dena has little interest in reading. She is not
motivated to keep reading. She views reading as boring, since it is just a
jumble of words that mean little to her. She needs the proper assistance so
that she can build her comprehension skills. She must want to read so that she
can get the practice she needs. She’s a good reader, and once her comprehension
skills are strengthened, she will become a great reader.
Dena
also has some difficulty with spelling. She is used to Hebrew, where words are
spelled pretty much the way they sound. In English, the pronunciation of a word
can be entirely different from the way it sounds, so she finds this new and
challenging. For example, she often misreads words with the ‘gh’ since the ‘gh’
combination may be one of several sounds. When she hears a word that is a
homophone, such as “through”/” threw”, she has trouble writing the correct
spelling of the word.
A
great benefit that Dena has is tremendous support from her parents and family.
Since her English education is extremely important to them, they have a
positive attitude toward her learning. Therefore, Dena displays a similar attitude;
she strives to do well. Her parents are eager to assist her with any homework
or assignment that she needs to do. They encourage her to practice and to
excel. This factor plays a crucial role in Dena’s learning experience.
Fortunately, I was able to interact
with Dena one on one. This gave me clear insight about her strong points, her
needs and struggles, and her progress. For a reading activity, I had Dena read
an excerpt from the book James and the Giant Peach, by Roald Dahl. She had an
easy time reading the story. She pronounced the words correctly, and read with
decent fluency and expression. However, she had trouble decoding many of the
words. After she read to me, I asked her to retell the story and this was
difficult for her. She stated some correct details, but she missed the main
idea of the story. She did not know the sequence of events that occurred, and
she could not tell me who the main character was, or what the setting was. I
did a running record and concluded that her phonics level was high, while her
comprehension level was low.
I noticed that in class, when the
teacher is presenting material, or reading a book, she seems to be following
along pretty well. I think that when she listens, rather than reads, it is
easier for her to understand the language. She picks up cues that help her
understand, such as the teacher pointing, her expressions, or pictures in a
storybook. She is able to get the gist of what is going on even though she does
not understand all the words. The teacher speaks clearly, with expression, and
with visual aids to help students like Dena understand what she is saying.
I
did a social studies worksheet with Dena, focusing on the differences in
language, tradition, and foods of different groups living in the community. It
was a worksheet that had lots of pictures based on what they learnt about
aspects of different cultures. It required a little reading and writing, and
mostly drawing. Dena did very well with this activity since she was able to
understand everything by looking at pictures or reading simple, and few words.
This gave her a chance to express her understanding of the lesson.
I
had Dena read from her science textbook, about the parts of a flower. Although
I helped her with some difficult words, she read fairly well. When she came
across a word that she had trouble with, like “filament”, she sounded it out slowly,
which is a great method. However, when I
asked her questions about what she read, she did not know. She had no idea what
the functions of the parts were. I think that she finds textbook reading especially
difficult since it is heavy reading. There is a lot of information in each
paragraph. Also, the paragraphs and words are condensed which is overwhelming. owever
I did some math practice with Dena in
her math book. The class was learning multiplication, and Dena was good at the
computations. We did some pages that had just number computations, and she had
no problem doing the examples. Then we did word problems and Dena had a harder
time with that. She couldn’t quite comprehend what the question was asking. She
needed help with words like “twice as many”, “altogether”, or “in total”. Once
we went through the word problem together and wrote it down in numbers, she was
ok.
Dena’s spelling is not on a very high
level. When she writes, the reader can usually comprehend what she wrote, since
she writes words the way they sound. The teacher introduces one spelling word
at the end of each day. She writes it on an index card and hangs it up on a
wall in the classroom. Throughout the days, whenever any of the spelling words
come up, she practices it with them. She also reviews any rules of spelling that
the word follows, and gives other examples. For example, when she teaches the
word “photograph”, she teaches about the “ph” sound, and tells them words like “laugh”,
and “paragraph”. Dena constantly refers back to these words, as they are
commonly used words.
According to the SOLOM ratings, Dena
is in Phase 2, with a 15 as her score. Her comprehension skills are below average.
Her fluency and vocabulary skills are not too high, and her pronunciation and
grammar skills are better.
I watched how she interacted with the teacher,
and I saw that her comprehension skills are low. Then I watched her in a social
setting, when speaking with her peers, since she is more relaxed when speaking
to peers rather than when speaking to her teacher in class. I found that she
showed more signs of increased comprehension when around her friends. She shows
better fluency and vocabulary skills when around her friends too. Her peers
have an easy time understanding her. Dena’s English is well enough to speak to
peers on her level.
Reflection:
Dena’s
reading is passable for her age and grade level. She makes a few mistakes in
pronunciation and grammar, but it does not interfere with the listeners
understanding. Over the time that I observed her, I saw her develop in areas of
reading such as in recognizing vowels and consonants and identifying sentence
structures. The area in reading where Dena needs to improve the most is in her
reading comprehension. After reading a passage, Dena finds it hard to retell
what went on. She may confuse characters, events, and places. Mostly, she
doesn’t understand when imagery and personification is used, since she takes
things at face value. Idioms, similes, and metaphors mix her up too. She has
shown some improvement in this area as well, though. She has learned to
identify major events and put them in order by asking herself “what happened
first?” and so on.
Dena is below
average in her reading and writing, but with steady help and learning of new
techniques, she is showing improvement and is able to keep up with the class.
When it comes to academic language, Dena is behind. She gets confused with new
words, technical details, and grammar. It’s hard to engage Dena in literacy
tasks. Since she feels that it’s too hard to learn, she has no motivation to
work. When she is assigned a task, she will attempt to procrastinate before she
starts. Then, she does the work listlessly and carelessly. While she may be
able to do better work, her lack of motivation severely undermines it.
According to
both the SOLOM rubric and the LEP/ELL rubric show that Dena is lacking in
reading skills. Primarily, she needs the most help with comprehension. They
show that she is below average in reading comprehension skills but in general
her reading skills are promoted by her good fluency. Dena has a good
imagination and loves to write, but sometimes teachers and peers find it hard
to understand what she is trying to portray because of her weak spelling and
grammar. She uses inventive spelling which means that she writes based on what
the word sounds like. Her punctuation and sentence structures also hinder her
writings.
Tone and
sentence structure impede Dena’s oral and writing skills. When she interacts
with her peers, she may phrase sentences in the wrong way, making a statement,
a question and vice versa. When writing, her punctuation is wrong and she tends
to write run on. She will pack her many different ideas into one sentence,
leaving it to the reader to differentiate.
There is one
specific and helpful transfer skill that Dena uses. When she is confronted with
a long and challenging word when reading, we expected her just to give up,
since that is what she tends to do when challenged. However, upon observing
her, I realized that Dena uses techniques that we try to ingrain in our
students, too. She knows what sound each letter makes. She will sound out each
letter until it forms a comprehensible word. I noticed her do this when reading
in her native language of Hebrew, too.
Dena is more
animated and shows more progress when interacting with her friends. She is less
guarded and is more likely to try new words. This may be that since she is in
an informal setting, she feels more relaxed and comfortable. She is quite
popular with her peers, due to her good looks and charming disposition. This
confidence allows her to stretch her boundaries and try new things that she may
not in class. This helps her with her writing skill since we noticed that she
incorporated words that she learned from her friends into her assignments and
worksheets.
Dena has a
wonderful grasp of phonics. Her phonetic skills are the key aid to her
relatively fluent reading. She applies different techniques to her phonics
skills such as sounding out letters and syllables to help her read. She has
good word recognition skill and many words that she reads are ones that she
knows from being “sight words” or from being ones that she’s encountered a lot
of times from her readings. Dena’s comprehension is what makes her lag the most.
However, she has learned to implement strategies such as rephrasing paragraphs
in Hebrew, and writing down short points of key ideas and events. These have
helped her progress nicely in this area.
Dena has
shown a clear preference to narratives as opposed to content area texts. She
has an active imagination and needs a lot of stimulation. If she labels
something as “boring” in her mind, she is highly unlikely to want to do
something with it. That’s why it’s important for her to develop a love for reading
and this for her, is through narratives, preferably ones that she can relate to
and are not too difficult for her to read on her own. Content area texts are
too monotonous for her and she phases out in middle and daydreams.
Strategies to
help Dena’s oral language is having her learn with her peers. She shows a clear
preference to interacting with her friends as opposed to one on one where she
clams up. She needs to be in a group setting in order for her to express
herself more and to be able to learn and absorb. For her phonics skills, Dena
can implement strategies such as having flashcards with letters and practicing
their sounds. Simple words,
rhymes, and short sentences on flashcards can also help. For word recognition,
a word wall and a word a day will help her learn commonly used words and how to
use them in her oral language and when reading and writing. Overall
comprehension can be improved with strategies that we have taught her such as
drawing pictures to portray ideas in the story, rephrasing and paraphrasing,
sequence charts, and jotting down short points.
The most
important thing that I have learned from this experience and one that I will
implement for my future students, is catering to the student’s whole character.
Instead of just looking at the child, and saying “she needs help with grammar”
or “his problem is comprehension”, look at the child and try to find what he or
she is good at and play on that. If we nitpick on the negative, we are just
airing out their dirty laundry as opposed to showing them how great they are.
Children need to know that we respect them for who they are and we love them no
matter what. By using their strengths to help their weaknesses we are showing
that they can become something great by using their talents.
Sunday, November 20, 2016
Week 11: Assignment #2
A great literacy strategy for a teacher to implement in the classroom is read alouds. Students improve comprehension and literacy, as well as build many foundational skills. They get to see the teacher model fluent and expressive reading. They also enrich their vocabulary and grammar when hearing the teacher read to them.
Teachers should read to students and ask questions while reading. Teachers can stop at certain points of the book and ask the students what they think will happen next, why did this event happen...This engages the students and provides great opportunity to improve their comprehension skills.
http://www.examiner.com/ article/asking-questions- while-reading-out-loud- improves-literacy-new-study- reveals
I found a great lesson plan for first graders where the teacher reads The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein aloud to the class and turns the reading into a lesson.
http://curry.virginia.edu/reading-projects/projects/garf/First%20Read-alouds/The%20Giving%20Tree.doc
Teachers should read to students and ask questions while reading. Teachers can stop at certain points of the book and ask the students what they think will happen next, why did this event happen...This engages the students and provides great opportunity to improve their comprehension skills.
http://www.examiner.com/
Ask Students Questions While Reading Aloud to Improve Literacy
The University of Virginia's School of Education conducted a study and found that when teachers read aloud to students and asked questions during the reading process, students showed improved reading comprehension and literacy skills. The study also found that students' literacy improved when they were asked questions and actively engaged with the text, rather than just looking at the pictures while teachers were reading aloud.I found a great lesson plan for first graders where the teacher reads The Giving Tree by Shel Silverstein aloud to the class and turns the reading into a lesson.
http://curry.virginia.edu/reading-projects/projects/garf/First%20Read-alouds/The%20Giving%20Tree.doc
Thursday, November 17, 2016
Wednesday, November 9, 2016
Week 9: Lesson on Comprehension
Candidate’s Name: Sarah Kovalenko
Grade Level: 2
Title of the lesson: Comprehension
Length of the lesson: 40 minutes
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Central focus of the lesson (The central focus should align with the
CCSS/content standards and support students to develop an essential literacy
strategy and requisite skills for comprehending or composing texts in
meaningful contexts)
Read a text and comprehend it fully.
Use different strategies and methods to help comprehend.
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Knowledge of students to inform
teaching (prior knowledge/prerequisite skills and personal/cultural/community
assets)
Students can read age appropriate
texts. Now they will focus on comprehending what they are reading, analyzing
the text and answering questions.
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Common Core State Standards (List
the number and text of the standard. If only a portion of a standard is being
addressed, then only list the relevant part[s].)
Ask and answer such questions as who, what, where,
when, why, and how to demonstrate understanding of key details in
a text.
Recount stories, including fables and folktales from
diverse cultures, and determine their central message, lesson, or moral.
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Support literacy development
through language (academic language)
Students will analyze a text, make
inferences and draw conclusions.
Read and write.
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Learning objectives
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Formal and informal assessment
(including type[s] of assessment and what is being assessed)
Informally, ask questions
throughout reading to make sure that they understand the text. Also, check on
them during the group discussions and assess.
Formally, take a look at the
drawings and the letters that they wrote to the author.
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Instructional procedure:
Instructional strategies and learning tasks (including what you and the
students will be doing) that support diverse student needs.
Read the book Chrysanthemum, by
Kevin Henkes, aloud to the class. Ask questions about the story while
reading.
After each page, have the students
draw a picture to demonstrate their understanding of what occurred in that
segment.
In groups, have the students share
ideas and facilitate a discussion in which they discuss how they think the
story would continue. (How would the character change? What might he/she do
next? Why?) Then have the groups present their ideas to the class.
Next, have the students work in
pairs to write a letter to the author explaining what they liked about the
book, and what their favorite part was.
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Instructional resources and
materials used to engage students in learning.
Book: Chrysanthemum, by Kevin Henkes
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Reflection
This lesson has many entry points-
drawing, reading, writing, working with others.. This allows for each child
to learn effectively.
I would put more emphasis and
focus on teaching vocabulary. I might stop while reading to explain difficult
words. This would definitely help ELLs and struggling readers, who need more
practice and attention.
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Dr. Hui-Yin Hsu Spring 2014
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