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Transcript of El instruction clil
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English English LanguageLanguage InstructionInstruction for for CLILCLIL
Lleida 2010
Is there any instructional method to teach content through English as a foreign language?
Different Approaches to an Instructional Model
Manuel F. Lara [email protected]
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English Language Instruction for CLIL
Building Academic English Competence
…. teachers need more practical awareness of the language that is what I call the lifeblood of learning in all classes.
(Jeff Zwiers, 2008, p. XV)
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02/05/23
Three concepts we have to work on:
1.CLIL2.Instruction in English
3.Academic English Competence (Academic Literacy Competence in
English)
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To teach academic subjects through a Foreign
Language - English
The main goal in our context:The main goal in our context:
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What kind of Instruction can we use in order to
instruct Content through a Foreign Language?
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Sheltered InstructionThree aspects we have to take into account
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A means for making grade-level academic
content (e.g., science, social studies, math)
more accessible (understandable and comprehensible) for CLIL students.
S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 1S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 1
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S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 2S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 2
A means for promoting students’ English languageDevelopment (ELD) and
literacy.
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S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 3S.I. - Sheltered Instruction 3A means for providing support to
students while performing the required tasks in English.
Explicit instruction of learning strategies.
Scaffolding
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ScaffoldingScaffolding
Scaffolding is one of the main characteristics of Shetered
Instruction
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What is Scaffolding?What is Scaffolding?
Scaffolding is an instructional technique whereby the teacher
models the desired learning strategy or task, then gradually shifts responsibility to the students.
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What is its purpose?What is its purpose?
Scaffolding essentially means doing some of the work for the student who isn't quite ready to accomplish a task independently. Like the supports that construction workers use on
buildings, scaffolding is intended to be temporary. It is there to aid the completion of a
task and it is eventually removed.
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02/05/23
Sheltered Instruction cannot work just on Content or just
on Language.
Language & Content have to go together.
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M.A.K. Halliday (1993) says:
You can neither teach content without language nor teach
language without content. Both, Language & Content go together.
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Language is not a domain of human knowledge (except in the special
context of linguistics, where it becomes an object of scientific study); language is the essential condition of knowing,
the process by which experience becomes knowledge. (Halliday, 1993,
p.94)
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Teachers should be aware of the power of language in the
development of what students learn. “Learning language” and “learning
through language” are simultaneous. (Halliday, 1993)
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Language is a system which relates what is being talked about (content) and the means used to talk about it (expression). Linguistic
content is inseparable from linguistic expression. In subject matter learning we
overlook the role of language as a medium of learning and in language learning we overlook the fact that content is being communicated.
Mohan (1986)
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Two types of Sheltered Instruction
1. S.I. focused on Language: Language teaching through
Content2. S.I. Focused on Content: Content
teaching through Language
Language & Content should go toguether.
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Let's have a look to some instructional models, sheltered
instruction models.
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02/05/23 Building Bridges: New Competences in the EFL Classroom
20
English Language Development English Language Development (ELD)(ELD)
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ELD – English Language ELD – English Language DevelomentDeveloment
English Language Development (ELD) is an instructional model designed to systematically develop the English language proficiency of
English learners. ELD instruction emphasizes the development of all four language skills: listening,
speaking, reading and writing. ELD is defined as instruction to develop knowledge of English language skills and
content-area vocabulary (academic English) through the medium of academic content and
subject matter.
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Strategies for Teaching English Language Learners(A veteran teacher helps understand current research
and put theory into practice)
By Andrea J. Spillett
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02/05/23 Building Bridges: New Competences in the EFL Classroom
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Systematic ELD
A Focused Approach for English Learner Instruction
A coherent approach for developing proficiency in English is essential to any plan for increasing the academic achievement of English learners. This must include explicit language support for
literacy and content instruction taught in English, as well as a plan for providing instruction in English as its own subject of
study.
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CBI - Content Based InstructionCBI - Content Based Instruction
Content based instruction (CBI) is a teaching method that emphasizes learning about something rather than learning about language.
Nevertheless, CBI is an effective method of combining language and
content learning.
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CBI is "...the integration of particular content with language teaching aims...the concurrent teaching of academic subject
matter and second language skills" (Brinton et al., 1989, p. 2).CBI approaches "...view the target language largely as the
vehicle through which subject matter content is learned rather than as the immediate object of study" (Brinton et al., 1989, p.
5).CBI is aimed at 'the development of use-oriented second and
foreign language skills' and is 'distinguished by the concurrent learning of a specific content and related language use skills'
(Wesche, 1993).CBI is "...an approach to language instruction that integrates the presentation of topics or tasks from subject matter classes
(e.g., math, social studies) within the context of teaching a second or foreign language" (Crandall & Tucker, 1990, p. 187).
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Content Based Instruction in EFL Contexts
Stephen Daviessdavies@ miyazaki-mic.ac.jp
Miyazaki International College (Miyazaki, Japan)
The Internet TESL Journal, Vol. IX, No. 2, February 2003
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02/05/23 Building Bridges: New Competences in the EFL Classroom
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The SIOP ModelThe SIOP Model
The Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP) Its main goal is to make content material
more comprehensible to English Language Learners. The model was developed by
JanaEchevarria, Mary Ellen Vogt and Deborah J.
Short.The SIOP Model includes the following
eight components:
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Lesson Preparation
* Clearly defined content objectives for students * Clearly defined language objectives for students
* Content concepts appropriate for age and educational background
* Supplementary materials used to a high degree, making the lesson clear and meaningful (e.g., graphs,
models, visuals) * Adaptation of content (e.g., text, assignment) to all
levels of student proficiency * Meaningful activities that integrate lesson concepts
(e.g., surveys, letter writing, simulations, constructing models) with language practice opportunities for
reading, writing, listening, and/or speaking
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Building Background
1. Concepts should be directly linked to students’ background experience. This experience can be
personal, cultural or academic.
2. Links should be explicitly made between past learning and new concepts.
3. Key vocabulary is emphasized. New vocabulary is presented in context. The number of
vocabulary items is limited.
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Comprehensible Input
1. Use speech that is appropriate for students' language proficiency.
2. Make the explanation of the task clear using step-by-step manner with visuals.
3. Use of a variety of techniques to make content concepts clear. Teachers need to focus attention selectively on the most important information.
Introduce new learning in context. Help students learn strategies such as predicting, summarizing.
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Strategies
1. Provide ample opportunities for students to use learning strategies. Learning strategies should be taught through
explicit instruction. You want students to develop independence in self-monitoring.
2. Consistent use of scaffolding techniques throughout the lesson. Introduce a new concept using a lot of
scaffolding and decrease support as time goes on. Restate a student's response or use think-alouds
3. Use of a variety of question types, including those that promote higher level thinking skills.
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Interaction
Provide students with:
1. frequent opportunities for interactions about lesson concepts which encourage higher level thinking skills.
2. grouping which supports language and content objectives. Cooperative groups, buddies, pairs, large and
small groups
3. ample wait time for responses
4. opportunities for clarification in native language, if possible.
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Practice and Application
Lessons should include:
1. hands-on materials or manipulatives for student practice.
2. activities for students to apply content and language knowledge in the classroom.
3. activities that integrate all language skills :listening, speaking, reading and writing.
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Lesson Delivery
1. Content and Language objectives supported by lesson delivery.
3. Students engaged 90% to 100% of the period.
4. Pacing of the lesson appropriate to students’ ability level.
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Review and Assessment
* Comprehensive review of key vocabulary * Comprehensive review of key content concepts
* Regular feedback to students on their output * Assessment of student comprehension and
learning of all lesson objectives (e.g., spot checking, group response) throughout the lesson
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The SIOP Model follows Krashen's idea that second language acquisition is enhanced by comprehensible
input (Krashen, 1982; 1985), which is a key pedagogical technique in content-based instruction; however, comprehensible input alone is not enough—students need form-focused content instruction
(an explicit focus on relevant and contextually appropriate language forms to support content
learning) (Swain, 1985)
The SIOP Institute.
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S.D.A.I.E. - Specially Designed S.D.A.I.E. - Specially Designed Academic Instruction In EnglishAcademic Instruction In English
S.D.A.I.E. or Sheltered English as it often still referred to in various parts of the United States
was originally established as an accepted transitional step for students learning English as their second language. It allows them to move
forward with academic courses such as mathematics and science while at the same time
learning English through the contextual clues provided by the course of study.
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European
CLIL
Can CLIL be consider a real Instructional Model?
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What is CLIL?What is CLIL?
C - ContentL – Language (FL)I - IntegratedL – LearningT - Teaching
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The main question:
How can we integrate ...
Content: Academic ContentLanguage: Academic English
In learning and teaching academic subjects?
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A CLIL lesson is not a language lesson neither is it a subject lesson transmitted in a foreign language. According to the 4Cs curriculum (Coyle 1999), a
successful CLIL lesson should combine elements of the following:
Content - Progression in knowledge, skills and understanding related to specific elements of a
defined curriculumCommunication - Using language to learn whilst
learning to use languageCognition - Developing thinking skills which link
concept formation (abstract and concrete), understanding and language
Culture - Exposure to alternative perspectives and shared understandings, which deepen awareness of
otherness and self.
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02/05/23
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David MarshDavid MarshEvery Teacher is a Language TeacherPrácticas en Educación Bilingüe/Plurilingüe nº1
CLIL is one key which is available to those teachers who want to embrace change, and it is here on our doorstep now. In CLIL every teacher is indeed a language teacher; Some teachers teach language, and others alternative subjects, but they each use an integrated approach which ensures that content, language, and thinking skills objectives are interwoven into the teaching and learning process. This is the core success of language across the curriculum.
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Lorenza Lara and D.W. Moore (2009) consider a priority helping
teachers connect language, literacy, and content during subject matter
instruction. Teachers must integrate literacy instruction into the content
domains.
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We still treat language learning as separate from acquiring discipline-based knowledge.
By envisioning an integrated approach to instruction, we will benefit all students. In fact, explicitly attending to the linguistic features of
content-area instruction has the potential to benefit any student whose "home language," is
markedly different from standard academic English.
Lara L. & Moore, D.W. (2009)
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Teachers are either fully qualified language teachers or fully qualified
content subject teachers.So the language/content subject balance
mentioned above is very difficult to achieve through
one person, except by providing appropriate in-service training by team
teaching.
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What model of instruction can we use in order to enhance Academic
Literacy in our students?
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How can Language & Content be balanced?
By means of
ACADEMIC LITERACY INSTRUCTION
(ALI)
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What's Academic Language?Academic language is the language used in instruction, textbooks and exams. Academic
language differs in structure and vocabulary from language used in daily social interactions.
BICS & CALPCummins, J. (1979)
Academic language is the set of words, grammar, and organizational strategies used to describe complex
ideas, higher-order thinking processes, and abstract concepts.
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Why is academic language so important?
• Students who master academic language are more likely to:
- be successful in academic and professional settings
• Students who do not learn academic language may:
– struggle academically – be at a higher risk of dropping out of school
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Literacy is broadly viewed as more than just an individual's ability to read. Literacy is an individual's ability to read, write, speak in English, compute, and solve problems at levels of proficiency necessary to function at school, on
the job, in the family, and in society.
The concept of literacy has evolved from the ability of an individual to read and/or write to include multiple
activities (reading, writing, listening, speaking, viewing, symbolizing, etc.) with multiple associated texts (print,
digital, video, symbolic, images, diagrams, graphs, conversations, etc.).
What's Literacy?
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Teaching Disciplinary Literacy toAdolescents: Rethinking Content-Area Literacy
Timothy Shanahan & Cynthia ShanahanUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
Harvard Educational Review Vol. 78 No. 1 Spring 2008
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Academic LiteracyAcademic Literacy is the ability to use reading and
writing as tools for learning subject matter.
[Reading] is essential in every content subject, such as history, geography, arithmetic, science, and
literature. In fact, rapid progress in these subjects depends in a large degree on the ability of pupils to read independently and intelligently. It follows that good teaching must provide for the improvement
and refinement of the reading attitudes, habits, and skills that are needed in all school activities
involving reading.(W. S. Gray, 1925, 1-2)
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Balanced Literacy
The Balanced Literacy approach is characterized by explicit skill instruction and the use of authentic texts. Through various modalities, the teacher
implements a well-planned comprehensive literacy program that reflects a gradual release of control, whereby centricity and responsibility is
gradually shifted from the teacher to the students. Assessment-based planning is at the core of this
model.
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Academic literacy builds students' academic content knowledge and their reading, writing, and thinking skills at
the same time.
Teachers must integrate literacy instruction into the content domains.
Literacy & Content
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Literacy instruction that centers on reading and writing to learn content focuses on goal-centered reading, content comprehension, and application
of content knowledge. Literacy activities provide students with practice as
they develop proficiencies necessary to make meaning with content-area texts. These activities help students read print materials, learn important content vocabulary, and write about what they are
learning.
Academic Literacy Instruction
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Reading & Writing are the core features of literacy
Teachers should include regular and explicit instruction in reading and writing to
support students' content learning and literacy development.
Academic Literacy Instruction (continue)
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Development of academic literacy is complex –need to use students’ everyday literacy
practices to explicitly teach them to navigate across texts & contexts
Instruction should explicitly focus on strategies/practices for critically reading
across texts
Instruction should take up students’ sociocultural knowledge to help make sense
of academic texts
Academic Literacy Instruction (continue)
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By infusing literacy instruction with content instruction, content-area teachers support
students in gaining necessary literacy proficiencies while deepening content learning.
Furthermore, teachers are responsible for literacy instruction that also promotes content-area
learning.
Draper argues that content-area literacy instruction should promote mastery of the intellectual discourse within a particular discipline.
Academic Literacy Instruction & content-area learning
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Most of the Learning Strategies will refer to Reading & Writing as the centre of
Academic Literacy
CLIL students will have problems at comprehension
We'll have to implement sheltered instruction strategies.
What's sheltered instruction?
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Predicting and inferring.Self-questioning.
Monitoring and clarifying.Evaluating and determining
importance.Summarizing and synthesizing.
Thinking strategies proficient readers use:
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The following skills have been identified as critical to comprehension…
1.Activating prior knowledge and making connections
2.Predicting and inferring3.Visualizing
4.Determining the important ideas5.Summarizing and synthesizing
6.Questioning: generating and answering7.Monitoring and clarifying
Key Comprehension Strategies
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SQP2RSSQP2RSSurvey: Explore the text before reading
Question: Generate questions that we will be able to answer after we read
Predict: Predict 3 things we will learn while reading
Read: Take notes while readingRespond: Answer your questions and develop new
onesSummarize: In 2-3 sentences summarize the
readingVogt, M.E. (2002). SQP2RS: Increasing students’ understandings of expository
text through cognitive and metacognitive strategy application. Paper presented at 52nd Annual Meeting of the National Reading Conference.text
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02/05/23
Let's see now some projects, websites, institutions &
organizations working on Academic Literacy
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LICI (Language in Content Instruction, 229850-CP-1-2006-1-FI-LINGUA-L2PP)
is a 3-year Lingua 2 project, part of the Socrates programme, carried out between
the years 2006 and 2009.
The project is coordinated by Heini-Marja Järvinen from University of Turku,
Finland.
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The aim of the LICI project and its products is the language of learning and instruction in a CLIL environment. The leading principle of the LICI project is that by enhancing language in content
teaching, the dual focus of learning both language and content is realized optimally.
The theoretical basis for linking content with language is found in general and content-specific
thinking skills and strategies.
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WIDA is a consortium of states dedicated to the design and implementation of high standards and equitable educational
opportunities for English language learners.
WIDA educational products and services fall into three main categories: standards and assessments, professional
development for educators, and research.
WIDA ConsortiumWisconsin Center for Educational Research (WCER)
University of Wisconsin-Madison
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CORI – Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction
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Concept-Oriented Reading Instruction (CORI) was developed
by Dr. John Guthrie and some classroom teachers and graduate
students at the University of Maryland in 1993.
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The objective of CORI in the classroom is to increase the amount of engaged reading.
Engaged reading refers to reading strategically (using background knowledge, questioning,
organizing graphically, summarizing, and other strategies), with motivational goals of learning
from text, interacting with other students to learn, experiencing hands-on activities, and gaining conceptual understanding of science through
reading.
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The ADDIE model is a generic and simplified instructional systems design (ISD) model. ADDIE is short for Analyze, Design, Develop, Implement, and
Evaluate.
Idaho State University College of EducationScience, Math, & Technology Education
A. W. Strickland, Ph.D.
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In the analyze phase, the instructional problem is clarified, the goals and
objectives are established, and the learning environment and
learner characteristics are identified.
Analyze
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The design phase is where the intructional strategies are
designed and media choices are made.
Design
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Develop
In the develop phase, materials are produced according to decisions made during the
design phase.
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Implement
The implement phase includes the testing of prototypes (with
targeted audience), putting the product in full production, and training learners and instructors
on how to use the product.
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Evaluate
The evaluation phase consists of two parts: formative and summative.
Formative evaluation is present in each stage.
Summative evaluation consists of tests for criterion-related referenced items and
providing opportunities for feedback from the users.
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Literacy Matters offers you "the best of the best on the Web"—web sites containing background
information, research-based instructional strategies, lesson plans, sample activities, guidelines, book lists, and resources to strengthen your students' literacy skills, and thus, strengthen their content
learning.
Literacy Matters is housed at Education Development Center, Inc. (EDC) located in Newton
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Academic Success depends on learning to read well.
Learning to read well depends onrich language knowledge.
Explicit English language instructionhelps ensure English learners gain the
knowledge they need to beacademically successful.
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The National Institute for Literacy, a federal agency, provides leadership on literacy issues, including the
improvement of reading instruction for children, youth, and adults.
Since its creation in 1991, the National Institute for Literacy has served as a catalyst for improving opportunities for adults, youth, and children to
thrive in a progressively literate world.
The National Institute for Literacy, 1775 I Street, NW, Suite 730,Washington, DC 20006, Phone: (202) 233-2025; Fax: (202) 233-2050; Website: http://www.nifl.gov. For publications contact EDPUBS at 1-877-
433-7827
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SIM overriding goal has been to develop an integrated model to address many of the needs of
diverse learners.Center for Research on Learning – The University of Kansas
SIM - Strategic Instruction Model
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02/05/23 Building Bridges: New Competences in the EFL Classroom
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SIM - Strategic Instruction Model (continue)
For 25 years, they have conducted research designed to develop ways to help students meet the demands of life, not just in school but after they leave school as well. Their goal has been to develop an integrated model to address many of the needs of diverse learners.
The Strategic Instruction Model®, or SIM®, has evolved. In essence, SIM is about promoting effective teaching and learning of critical content in schools. SIM strives to help teachers make decisions about what is of greatest importance, what we can teach students to help them to learn, and how to teach them well.
They advocate trying to teach a little less content, but teaching it better.
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CLIC - Content Literacy Information CLIC - Content Literacy Information ConsortiumConsortium
The Content Literacy Information Consortium (CLIC) is an organized set of web links of special interest to teachers and researchers interested in issues defined by "learning to read to learn." The web sites cataloged in CLIC will provide every
teacher with ideas and strategies for adopting the instructional moves that empower their students
to become independent, actualized learners. Web page created by Thomas Estes and Kathie Burgess, University of
Virginia.
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02/05/23
This website is a resource for teachers who want to use the CALLA approach, or do research on CALLA The site is maintained by Jill Robbins, who works with Anna Uhl Chamot on developing CALLA
materials and workshops.
The Cognitive Academic Language Learning Approach CALLA is designed for limited English proficient students who are being
prepared to participate in mainstream content-area instruction. CALLA provides transitional instruction for upper elementary and secondary students at intermediate and advanced ESL levels. This approach
furthers academic language development in English through content-area instruction in science, mathematics, and social studies. In
CALLA, students are taught to use learning strategies derived from a cognitive model of learning to assist their comprehension and
retention of both language skills and concepts in the content areas.
CALLA was developed by Anna Uhl Chamot and J. Michael O'Malley
CALLA CALLA The Cognitive Academic Language Learning The Cognitive Academic Language Learning
ApproachApproach
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VOCAL: Vocabulary and Academic Language
This online site was developed to share research-based best practices for teaching and learning
academic language and vocabulary.
Educators have become aware of the need to boost student learning in the areas of academic
language and vocabulary.Board of Education, San Diego County
GetVOCALGetVOCAL2007 Board of Education, San Diego County.
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Students need to increase their ability to comprehend text, to write and speak more
academically, and to apply these skills across the curriculum.
While this is especially critical for CLIL students, all learners need to improve in
these areas.
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ELD Strategies - Best Practices and ELD Strategies - Best Practices and Resources for Teachers of English Resources for Teachers of English
LearnersLearners
ELDStrategies.com, a comprehensive web resource for teachers of English learners. ELDStrategies.com will highlight effective English Language Development (ELD) strategies and instructional practices, as well as recommended teaching resources for educating
second language learners.
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Project GLADProject GLAD
Guided Language Acquisition Design
Project GLAD (Guided Language Acquisition Design) is an effective instructional model for teaching English language development (ELD) and literacy.
GLAD is a strandards-based ELD instructional model that promotes high levels of academic language and achievement for students at all levels of English proficiency.
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Middle School Literacy Develoment Using
Academic Language
Word Generation
The program is strategically designed to create a coherent school-wide effort that gives students the sustained exposure to academic language
they need for success in school.
Word Generation
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SHELTERED INSTRUCTION & ACADEMIC LANGUAGE
CLIL LESSON PLANNING: SHELTERED INSTRUCTION & ACADEMIC LANGUAGE
Bilingual Education Platform - BEP
PLATAFORMA DE EDUCACIÓN BILINGÜE
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ReferenceReference
Chamot, A.U. & O'Malley, J.M., (1994). The CALLA Handbook: Implementing the Cognitive Academic Language Approach, Pearson Education, Longman
COYLE, D., 1999. Theory and Planning for Effective Classrooms: Supporting students in content and language integrated learning contexts: planning for effective classrooms. In: Learning through a foreign language: models, methods and outcomes. Centre for Information on Language Teaching & Research, London, UK, pp. 46-62
Cummins, J. (1979) Cognitive/academic language proficiency, linguistic interdependence, the optimum age question and some other matters. Working Papers on Bilingualism, No. 19, 121-129.
Echevarria, J, Vogt, M & Short, D, (2008). Making Content Comprehensible for English Learners: The SIOP Model, Pearson, U.S.Gray, W. S. (1925). Reading activities in school and in social life. In G. M. Whipple (Ed.), The Twenty-Fourth Yearbook of the National
Society for the Study of Education: Part I (pp. 1-8). Bloomington, IL: Public School Publishing CompanyHalliday et al. 1993 : Halliday, M.A.K. and J.R. Martin, Writing science: Literacy and discursive power , Pittsburgh: University of
Pittsburgh Press, 1993; London: Falmer Press, 1993. Krashen, S. (1982). Principles and practices in second language acquisition. NY: Pergamon Press.Krashen, S. (1985). The input hypothesis: Issues and implications. NY: Longman.Lorenza Lara and D.W. Moore (2009)Lara, L., & Moore, D.W. (2009, October). Literacy Instruction for Adolescent English Learners: An Interview With Lorenza Lara . Journal
of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 53(2), 173–175. doi: 10.1598/JAAL.53.2.8enDavid Marsh (2009), Every teacher is a Language Teacher, Prácticas en Educación Bi/Plurilingüe, nº1, Prácticas en EducaciónMehisto, P., Marsh, D. & Frigols, M.J. (2008). Uncovering CLIL: Content and Language Integrated Learning in Bilingual and
Multilingual Education. Macmillan Education.Mohan, B. A. (1986). Language and Content. Reading, MA: Addison-Wesley.Shanahan, Timothy & Cynthia, Teaching Disciplinary Literacy to
Adolescents: Rethinking Content-Area LiteracyTimothy Shanahan & Cynthia ShanahanUniversity of Illinois at Chicago
Swain, M. (1985). Communicative competence: Some roles of comprehensible input and comprehensible output in its development. In S. Gass & C. Madden (Eds.), Input in second language acquisition (pp. 235-253). Rowley, MA: Newbury House.
Vogt, M.E. (2002). SQP2RS: Increasing students’ understandings of expository text through cognitive and metacognitive strategy application. Paper presented at 52nd Annual Meeting of the National Reading Conference.
Zwiers, J. (2008). Building Academic Language: Essencial Practices for Content Classrooms. Jossey-Bass Teacher, U.S.A.