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English Language Learners and the New Standards: Developing Language, Content Knowledge, and Analytical Practices in the Classroom Illustrated Edition
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In English Language Learners and the New Standards, three leading scholars present a clear vision and practical suggestions for helping teachers engage ELL students in simultaneously learning subject-area content, analytical practices, and language. This process requires three important shifts in our perspective on language and language learning—from an individual activity to a socially engaged activity; from a linear process aimed at correctness and fluency, to a developmental process, focused on comprehension and communication; and from a separate area of instruction to an approach that embeds language development in subject-area activities.
In English Language Learners and the New Standards, the authors:
- Clarify the skills and knowledge teachers need to integrate content knowledge and language development
- Show how teachers can integrate formative assessment in ongoing teaching and learning
- Discuss key leverage points and stress points in using interim and summative assessments with ELLs
- Provide classroom vignettes illustrating key practices
Finally, the authors explain the theories and research that underlie their vision and examine the role of policy in shaping pedagogy and assessment for ELL students.
- ISBN-101612508014
- ISBN-13978-1612508016
- EditionIllustrated
- PublisherHarvard Education Press
- Publication dateMay 1, 2015
- LanguageEnglish
- Dimensions5.9 x 0.6 x 8.9 inches
- Print length224 pages
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Editorial Reviews
Review
This easy-to-understand book is worth every minute. The authors offer thoughtful descriptions of content and language integration for English language learners to be college and career-ready. Complex theories of second language acquisition, teaching, learning, and assessment are made accessible. Classroom vignettes across content areas and grade levels make for fun reading. And all in such a concise book. Ohkee Lee, professor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University"
From the Back Cover
English Language Learners and the New Standards provides a clear and practical path for helping teachers engage ELL students in simultaneously learning subject-area content, analytical practices, and language. This process requires three important shifts in our perspective on language and language learning: from an individual activity to a socially engaged activity; from a linear process, aimed at correctness and fluency, to a developmental process; and from a separate area of instruction to an approach that embeds language development in subject-area activities. For each step, the authors clarify the skills and knowledge teachers need to integrate content knowledge and language development, and show how teachers can integrate formative assessment in ongoing teaching and learning.
“This easy-to-understand book is worth every minute. The authors offer thoughtful descriptions of content and language integration for English language learners to be college and career-ready. Complex theories of second language acquisition, teaching, learning, and assessment are made accessible. Classroom vignettes across content areas and grade levels make for fun reading. And all in such a concise book.” — Ohkee Lee, professor, Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, New York University
“This book is a must-read for all educators, but essential for all teachers working with English language learners. It identifies the necessary shifts in instruction and policy that must take place in order for educators to successfully engage in the common core with ELLs. The concrete examples put forth allow educators to reevaluate and quickly shift their practice. It is a game changer for the system as a whole.” — Angélica Infante-Green, former CEO, Office of English Language Learners, New York City Department of Education
Margaret Heritage is a senior scientist at WestEd and an assistant director at the National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing at UCLA. Aída Walqui directs the Teacher Professional Development Program at WestEd. Robert Linquanti is a project director and senior researcher at WestEd. Kenji Hakuta is the Lee L. Jacks Professor of Education at the Stanford Graduate School of Education.
About the Author
Margaret Heritage is senior scientist at WestEd and assistant director at the National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards, and Student Testing at the University of California, Los Angeles. For many years her work has focused on formative assessment and on how teachers can implement effective formative assessment in their classrooms. She has made numerous presentations all over the United States, as well as in Europe, Asia, and Australia, and has published extensively on the topic. Her last book, Formative Assessment in Practice: A Process of Inquiry and Action, was also published by Harvard Education Press.
Aída Walqui directs the Teacher Professional Development Program at WestEd. She specializes in the professional growth required by teachers to work with second-language learners deeply and generatively. Her work has focused on defining, designing, and supporting quality education in multilingual, intercultural contexts in the United States, Europe, Asia, and Latin America. She has published extensively on issues related to teacher professional development and the development of deep literacies with English language learners.
Robert Linquanti is project director and senior researcher at WestEd. His work helps educators and policy makers at local, state, and national levels to strengthen assessment, evaluation, and accountability policies, practices, and systems for English language learners. He has published and presented widely on evaluating education policies, establishing comprehensive assessment systems, and improving accountability and equity for ELLs. He serves on several state and national advisory bodies related to these topics.
Product details
- Publisher : Harvard Education Press; Illustrated edition (May 1, 2015)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 224 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1612508014
- ISBN-13 : 978-1612508016
- Item Weight : 9.6 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.9 x 0.6 x 8.9 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #163,453 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #140 in Common Core
- #1,103 in Education Theory (Books)
- #1,204 in Instruction Methods
- Customer Reviews:
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- Reviewed in the United States on July 22, 2015Excellent text for teachers who teach English to ELLs and/or teach content to ELLs. This book is a tour de force of all the main research findings and theories of the past 30+ years that have shaped how we teach English to non-native speakers. It also does an excellent job of reviewing the new standards and giving practical, useful, and thought-provoking vignettes of how to change our practice as teachers so that we can teach content and language simultaneously using metacognition, authentic tasks, and truly cooperative learning strategies. This book would be excellent for professional development activities.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 17, 2015Excellent book for educators interested in providing high-quality educational opportunities for multilingual learners in the times of the new college and career readiness standards and assessments. The authors make complex theories and practical applications accessible in an engaging and comprehensible way.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2015Good for all language learners including Standard English Learners. Discusses how to address the new cognitive demands placed on students who have not yet mastered academic English.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 8, 2015Great text. It was in great condition.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 2, 2016GOOD Book.
- Reviewed in the United States on June 17, 2016I had to purchase this book as part of my course readings in my teacher education program. Throughout my program, I've read probably upwards of 20+ texts and this is by far the worst and least useful one. I'm being overly generous giving it 2 stars instead of 1 because it still has some warrants. To me, this book is only suitable for those who know almost absolutely nothing about ELL.
Contrary to what another reviewer said about the vignettes being practical, useful, and thought-provoking, I found them to be completely unnecessary and annoying. The vignettes, like most of the book, lacked clarity and analysis in many areas. Though the book brings forth plenty of information, if you already know a bit about ELLs, you find yourself periodically asking throughout the book, "What's your point?" and "Why?" What it had in depth of knowledge, it lacked in depth of analysis and clarity. Contrary to the title, the book tells you nothing explicitly about developing your practices in the classroom. The vignettes either had too much irrelevant detail or not enough relevant detail. After each vignette, I received pretty much the same explanation that goes along the lines of “As you can see, Ms. Bond used this strategy and it worked compared to Mr. Smith’s traditional style, which did not work.” It lacked the analysis to really tell me why such a strategy worked besides offering a common-sense explanation. Perhaps I consider it common sense because the explanation was in line to my teacher training. One particular vignette was absolutely ridiculous. It talked about a student who wrote about how her struggle as a refugee and lost family members along the way. The teacher in the vignette commented, "What an exciting life you've had!" Take a moment and digest that. Yea right? What? WHO in their right mind would write a comment like that???
I was hoping for more explicit strategies to how to extend my instruction to ELL, but the book provided few if any. Those that were provided were pretty much the ones I already implemented in my own lesson design or ones that everybody should have implemented in their lesson designs already: classroom talk, formative assessments, sentence frames, feedback, etc.
As I said, if you know absolutely nothing about ELLs and the new standards, then this would probably be a good and informative read albeit dry in language. For even a first-year teacher like myself, I found I gained nothing new out of this book. Everybody in my cohort did also voice the same opinion and wrote a similar (negative) critique for our book discussion. Of course, this is only our own opinion.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 26, 2017I have great respect for the authors but this book is absolutely NOT worth the price. Most of what is here is not new and not amazingly helpful in terms of theory or practice beyond what is already out there online or in Aida Walqui's other book. This is perhaps most useful for people who need an intro to the ideas the book discusses. I should have bought post-it chart paper with this money (teacher problems).