Teacher-student talk is critical to student success. There are five ways to make sure that teachers are being supportive to their EL learners:
1. Extending teacher-student exchanges- teacher initiates a question, a student responds, the teacher gives positive feedback on he student's response, there needs to be increased opportunities for the student to participate.
2. Giving students time to think- teachers need to give students wait time. The teacher asks a question and allows the students 30 seconds of thinking time before calling on a student to answer. You can also allow students to pair up and discuss their answers before asking a student to share.
3. Approaching and recasting student language- use something that is familiar to students in their every day lives as a base to develop thinking and language. Student language is used as a basis for modeling new language.
4. Encouraging literate talk- give learners opportunities to use the kind of spoken language that is closer to written language and provide them with a chance to rehearse more complete and explicit language by talking with others.
5. Making reasoning explicit- we want to help students learn to think and reason and solve problems and emphasize the need to make thinking visible.
Student-student talk is also important to student success. Group work provides and environment where students who are less confident are more comfortable, interact with other students, take turns, take on more responsibility for understanding the material. There are many strategies to get students more involved in their learning and communicating more with one another. When different groups or pairs of students hold different information, they must share in order to complete tasks and assignments. The following strategies do just that.
- Thinking sheets- provide overall structure and purpose for students to solve problems together, students make their own ideas heard, encourage conversations, students have a chance to engage in meaningful conversation, and provide scaffolding for following activities.
- Jigsaw groups- in groups of 4-5, students research one aspect of a topic, later the class is split up into new groups (1 person from each of the original groups) and each student shares the information that they learned while the others take notes. In the end all students should have the whole picture and be able to complete the assignment.
- Paired problem solving- two pairs of students solve one of two problems, the pairs cross question each other to solve the problem.
- Find the difference- two pictures that are almost identical, with a few minor differences, students sit back to back and examine and ask each other questions about the others pictures until all the differences are found.
- Picture sequencing- students work in groups, students describe the picture they have in hand and the groups decides on the picture sequence.
- Picture-sentence matching- students match a sentence to the picture that is the same, with only a description of the picture.
- Word-picture matching- students match key words to pictures.
- Inquiry and elimination- students take silent turns choosing a picture, their buddy asks yes or no questions in order to guess the picture.
This book has been so insightful and eye opening to me! I have walked away with many new strategies and tools to use in my class with not just my ELL, but all my students. I think that it is crucial to want our students to be successful, but we need to guide them to success. We need to encourage them to take ownership and charge in their own learning. We want to build our students up and let them know that they can do anything they put their minds to. Learning doesn't need to be boring and rote, it can be fun and interactive, but it all starts with us, the teachers/educators.