Tuesday, June 7, 2016

Small Group Systematic ELD-- 1st Grade B/EI at Garfield Elementary with Merce Guixa



00:00 Intro
00:30  Open the Lesson
2:34:   Model and Practice - I Do / We Do
16:47  Practice the Language - You Do
25:09  Close the Lesson
26:06  Comments from Mercè - Chunking the lesson on the fly

I taught systematic ELD at the Kindergarten, 1st and 2nd grade levels when I was a classroom teacher. I am now a TSA at Garfield Elementary, where we use systematic ELD in Kindergarten, 1st and 2nd grade during Designated ELD. We use ADEPT as an internal assessment to group students based on their proficiency level for ELD. For 1st and 2nd grade we teach ELD in small groups, as you can see in the video, which shows a group of 1st graders at a beginning/early intermediate level.

The lesson in the video is from lesson 3, week 2 of the The Art of Getting Along. The objective of the lesson was for students to use I need with classroom vocabulary to make requests, pronouns it’s or they’re, and prepositions in, on, next to and under to tell where something is located. Previous to this lesson, students had already learned the prepositions in and on, and were asked for object locations using where is and are with associated classroom vocabulary.  

The systematic ELD lessons are designed for 40 minutes of instruction but our Designated ELD time in small groups is for a shorter amount of time. I planned the lesson to include and practice all the elements described in the learning objective and including all five parts of the lesson flow--the opening, the I do, the we do, the you do and the closing, but in this short amount of time.

However, while teaching the lesson, I realized that students were struggling using all the prepositions together so I made the decision to just practice sentences with the plural form of the verb and the pronoun they and leave the singular and the pronoun it for another day. This is an example of “chunking” the objective into smaller pieces and taking two days to do one lesson. It is often necessary with Systematic ELD lessons and it is also common for the chunking ideas to occur to me as I am teaching a lesson which is when  the needs of students become clearer. This is often true even when I have planned well.

Even though it might seem that this chunking is slowing down the pacing, I believe it is about the “quality” time to practice over the “quantity” of the lessons being taught. And again, providing students with multiple opportunities to practice the language will only help and reinforce their learning.

As I explained at the end of the video, the follow up for this lesson would be to review and practice the same language and with the added singular form of the verb to be with it. This would provide students with more opportunities to practice the language and grammar with a special emphasis on the prepositions.


Thursday, April 28, 2016

D4L Giant Rock Lesson Video--Third Graders at TCN--Ryan Lyle

Click here for: D4L Video-3rd Grade, Level B, Theme 3, Week 15, Lesson 3
   
Note: To view video, you must be logged into your OUSD.org account

Video Table of Contents:
00:00 to 00:17 Introductory Materials
00:18 to 03:10 Reviewing Previous Lesson
03:11 to 17:03 Teaching the Day's Lesson
17:04 to 17:26 Materials Review



While I've only been using Discussions4Learning for a month or so in my third-grade classroom, I've seen that my students love to talk about the interesting and unique artwork in this curriculum.  

They especially love the review time at the beginning when they can practice using the new vocabulary as they look back on older lessons.  Keeping a running list of "words we have learned" allows many students to remember and use words they might have forgotten otherwise.  








Since it is only my second year as a classroom teacher, classroom management can be a struggle throughout these lessons.  As my management skills grow, I hope to be able to use more of the curriculum that asks for students to describe and interpret.  Unfortunately, I often find I've taken up the 20 minutes on the rug in a more call-and-response type of lesson and have little time left to ask students to discuss.  

As I continue to work on these lessons, my goal is to save more time for the "Connecting to the Theme" section of the curriculum.  This might mean I will do less turn and talks. However, as you can see in the video, students are bursting at the seams to talk about what they see and share their ideas about the art.  I'm working to find this balance.

--Ryan Lyle, 3rd Grade, Think College Now, OUSD

Wednesday, April 13, 2016

Small Group Systematic ELD--1st Grade B/EI at Garfield Elementary with Roya Bazaei


VIDEO: SysELD Art of Getting Along: Edited 11-minute version in Roya Bazaei's class
VIDEO: SysELD Art of Getting Along: Full 21-minute version in Roya Bazaei's class

Note: To view video, you must be logged into your OUSD.org account

I teach first grade at Garfield Elementary School in Oakland’s incredibly diverse San Antonio District. Well over half of our students are English Language Learners and we are welcoming a growing population of newcomers from all over the world. Over the past few years, teachers, coaches, and administration have put serious thought into how to structure our Designated ELD program most effectively. Here’s what we’ve come up with in first grade:

We start by administering an English proficiency exam (we use ADEPT) to all students (English Language Learners and native English speakers). In years past, students across all first grade classes were put into homogenous groups based on their levels of English proficiency, as determined by ADEPT results. Each first grade teacher was responsible for teaching a different proficiency level. For 30 minutes each day, all students would participate in a Designated ELD block, during which they may or may not have been with their homeroom teachers. We found that this was not the best model in first grade, as it presented challenges with transition time and classroom management, among others. In this year’s new system, each teacher creates homogenous small groups of his or her own homeroom students and teaches two, 20-minute small group Designated ELD lessons each day, while the rest of the class works independently.


Although this does mean fewer minutes per week of direct Designated ELD instruction for each student, it has allowed us to use our instructional minutes much more effectively (also, see "Integrate it" below for integrated ELD). We’ve cut down on transition time and time wasted because of behavior management challenges. It’s so much easier to manage your own students with whom you’ve built relationships and who have internalized your systems and expectations. Additionally, small group instruction allows teachers to gain a better understanding of each student’s mastery and to use the Systematic ELD curriculum to its fullest potential, adapting it to meet students’ unique strengths and needs. A few ways I’ve learned to do this are:


  • Change the pace: Sometimes a lesson plan just has too much to cover in one session… so don’t! It’s ok to break up a lesson over two or three days, especially for newcomers.


  • Supplement it: Sometimes I like to supplement SysELD lessons with relevant read alouds, book talks, songs, games, or other activities to switch things up and keep students interested, or to give a bit more scaffolding or practice.


  • Integrate it: In schools like mine with so many ELLs, Designated ELD instruction can’t be isolated in a 30-40 minute block each day, so we do lots of Integrated ELD. It has to be woven into everything we do. We can model academic language and ensure that it is being used throughout the day. We can incorporate songs, chants, and shared reading across content areas. We can use quick turn and talks to practice challenging language structures (e.g. “If you could be any animal, what would you be?”). We can also add more Designated ELD time whole class to focus on some deep language instruction from which ALL students will benefit.

This is my fourth year using the Systematic ELD curriculum, and I continue to learn more and more about how to ensure that my students are getting the most out of it!

---Roya Bazaei, Garfield Elementary

Thursday, February 18, 2016

Lean and Useful D4L Intro with Video on Davis Website

The  Program and Action page of the Davis website has some excellent resources that give a lean and useful overview of how the Discussions4Learning program works. Even if you have been using Discussions4Learning for a while, you might want to have a look.

1. The 4-minute video which is on the page features some key points about the program, and it is nice to see kids from a 1st grade class in a low-income school engage with and enjoy D4L (though you should also definitely view our own Ryan Lyle and Jasmine Tow at work if you haven't yet).


2. The green Vocabulary button provides a strong overview of how vocabulary is developed in D4L. This is a powerful aspect of the program that we have covered here on this blog, but not in such a pithy and elegant way.


3. The Images button covers the rationale for using images to develop vocabulary and oral language.



4. The Instruction button allows you to peruse lesson layout and sequence.



Thursday, January 21, 2016

D4L Videos Including "Focused Language Study" 10-minute Pre-teach













As we consider the usefulness of Discussions4Learning for Designated ELD, defined in the 2014 California ELA/ELD Framework, it is necessary to consider how the program can provide Focused Language Study, that is, a time to focus on developing standard academic language. These academic language forms are described in Part II of the 2012 CA ELD Standards, Learning about how English Works. 

The two videos show how Jasmin Tow, former 2nd grade teacher at Greenleaf, uses a schedule including:

  1. 10 minutes of Focused Language Study in a small-group while higher proficiency students are engaged in Designated ELD Centers 
  2. 20 to 25 minutes minutes of a more standard D4L lesson seems an efficient way to get the most out of the program

Note that this is a self-contained setting, with this model allowing for differentiation without shifting students between classrooms.

The first video, shows Jasmin Tow providing Focused Language Study to a small group of CELDT 1s and low 2s (what might be called the "pre-Emerging" level in the parlance of the 2012 CA ELD Standards). The small-group lesson develops vocabulary and language patterns that will support the students to participate more fully in the longer, 20-minute whole-group lesson. 


In the second video, Jasmin teaches the whole-group D4L lesson that follows the small-group pre-teach.


Thanks, Jasmin!

--Mike Ray, OUSD ELL Coordinator


Note: To view video, you must be logged into your OUSD.org account