". . .the word of God is not bound." II Tim. 2:9b

Friday, January 31, 2020

Student bath products line takes off thanks to teacher's inspiration and a whole lot of love

KTVB 7 recently came to our school and interviewed teachers and students to find out more about For the Love of Logan, a line of bath and skin-care products created by a group of students to raise awareness of one student's unique needs and gifts. Meet Logan, a student at Camas County High School, and the caring group that are learning entrepreneurship skills while giving their friend a whole lot of support.

Further reading:

Flashback to when Logan was five:
Equine therapy helps Fairfield boy gain his balance, article in the Times-News by Amy Ballard

Sunday, January 19, 2020

Visit Idaho Coaching Network's blog to read my new post on intentional reflection




Hop over to idahocoachingnetwork.wordpress.com to read my guest blog post, "Intentional Reflection: Why and How." I hope it will take you from "Of course I reflect on my teaching. . .in my head. . .sometimes!" to intentional, daily journaling. While taking just a few minutes out of your busy day, reflective writing will give back to your teaching in many vital ways (I list twelve in my post).

The Idaho Coaching Network builds teacher efficacy across the state of Idaho. Visit their Web site for unit plans and resources on text complexity and more.

Tuesday, January 14, 2020

Presenting a Lively Professional Development: Strategies for Teaching English Language Learners



In 2016, the percentage of Idaho public school students who were English Language Learners was 5.4, nothing to California's 20.2 (National Center for Education Statistics). Still, teachers in small rural schools in Idaho and elsewhere may feel lost when it comes to supporting ELs in their classes.

Where can teachers get help? What do teachers need to know?

When my tiny school enrolled a Spanish-only student two years ago (see my previous post, Be Unforgettable to English Language Learners), I knew my training was not adequate to meet her learning needs. Happily, my administrator asked me to take a colleague and attend a one-day session on Go-To Strategies for teaching English learners. The training was presented by the Idaho State Dept. of Education's Title III Consortium using a toolkit developed in Missouri by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood.

During the training, participants test-drove dozens of strategies and watched the presenters model the approaches they offered. My favorite strategy had to be Roving Charts, which works like this:

Purpose: To activate prior knowledge; to level the playing field for all learners; to allow learners to teach each other; to promote oral language

Grouping Format: Interactive small groups

Strategy Basics:
1. Divide students into groups
2. Teacher presents a concept, question, or problem
3. Group members brainstorm and write ideas on graphic organizer chart
4. One student “rover” passes chart to next group [Play up-tempo music during passing!]
5. That group brainstorms more ideas on chart
6. Rover returns the chart to original group; group discusses information gained
7. Whole-group discussion

Remember to have students sign their charts and to use for formative assessment as appropriate.


When my colleague and I returned from the training, we built a PD for our staff and presented it, passing on what we learned in a "teach the teacher" opportunity. We got our teachers up and moving (roving charts!) and put strategies in their hands to support all learners, not just ELs. The response was overwhelmingly positive.

This year, I'm presenting a similar session to the staff, which includes some new faces this year. As an added twist, I'm incorporating some of the cognitive science "Power Tools" I've gleaned from the awesome, must-read book Powerful Teaching: Unleash the Science of Learning, which I just finished reading. That means I'm including opportunities for staff to retrieve prior learning, to receive spaced practice, and to receive elaborative feedback. Their metacognition, or thinking about thinking, will help ensure long-term learning and transfer. Meaning that what we discuss about supporting English learners won't just be a one-hour PD, but will find its way into the classrooms of our school.

Yes, there's only one school in my district. Like I said, small.

To capture attendees' attention and get them started with retrieval practice, I created a retrieval guide focusing on the Five Principles of Instruction for English Learners, developed as part of Project EXCELL, a partnership between the University of Missouri-Kansas City and North Kansas City Schools.


Principle 1. Focus on academic language, literacy, and vocabulary: Teach the language and language skills required for content learning.
Principle 2. Link background knowledge and culture to learning: Explicitly plan and incorporate ways to engage students in thinking about and drawing from their life experiences and prior knowledge.
Principle 3. Increase comprehensible input and language output: Make meaning clear through visuals, demonstrations, and other means and give students multiple opportunities to produce language.
Principle 4. Promote classroom interaction: Engage students in using English to accomplish academic tasks.
Principle 5. Stimulate higher order thinking and the use of learning strategies: Explicitly teach thinking skills and learning strategies to develop English language learners as effective, independent learners.

For each principle, teachers will write (retrieve) one way they already use the principle in the classroom.

Later (after spacing), teachers will add one new strategy to try that will help them support English learners for each principle.

After the initial retrieval, we'll go into a get-up-and-move activity that lets us test drive some strategies. Then it's time to go back to the retrieval guide and decide where to place the strategies we are most likely to try in class.

With boxes filled in, teachers will then turn to a learning partner and tell which strategies they chose and where they placed them. Learning partners will offer elaborative feedback and then do the same. Both learning partners should add to their retrieval guides as desired during pair and share time.

Last, participants will have time to reflect on what they have learned. Powerful Teaching calls this a brain dump or a brain drain, but the box on my retrieval guide just says "reflect." This is a low-stakes or no-stakes learning opportunity for teachers (or students) to retrieve what they know, understand what they still don't know, benefit from spaced practice, put in some powerful metacognition work, and (if you do another pair and share) get elaborative feedback.

I am so excited to put together a PD that combines strategies for teaching English learners with strategies for increasing learning for all learners, and to model these strategies for my staff. I'm praying for wisdom as I build the session and asking God to bless the outcome. May the result be timely, research-supported, and targeted, and may we all be better-equipped to help our students learn.

Related Resources:



Amy's Retrival Guide for professional development

PowerfulTeaching.org

Used with Permission:

Levine, L. N., Lukens, L., & Smallwood, B. A. (2013). The GO TO strategies: Scaffolding options for teachers of English language learners, K-12. For Project EXCELL, a partnership between the University of Missouri- Kansas City and North Kansas City Schools, funded by the US Department of Education, PR Number T195N070316. Available online at www.cal.org/excell.