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EXPANDING EXPRESSION TOOLEET

Mikaely Schmitz

Speech and Language Pathologist

Milwaukee Public Schools

Lincoln Avenue Elementary School

According to Hart and Risely Children in welfare families hear an average of 620 words

per hour

Children in working class families hear approximately 1250 words per hour

Children in professional families hear an average of 2150 words per hour

THEREFORE Children between ages 1-3 In welfare households hear an average of 10 million words

In working class households hear an average of 20 million words

In professional households hear an average of 30 million words

Linguistic exposure before three has a huge effect on speech/language abilities and measured cognitive skills when kids were tested at age 3 and age 9

In poverty and ELL it is not unusual for people to only know the casual register

Majority of poor and ELL students do not have access to formal register at home--- but all state tests, WKCE, ACT, medical forms, case histories, etc are in formal register

Ability to use the formal register is a hidden rule of the middle class

Poor and ELL students do not have the vocabulary or sentence structure knowledge to use formal register, when talking in casual register the meaning comes not so much from word choice but from non verbal assists- when writing the nonverbal assists are taken away and the student tends to really struggle

ELL and Special Education

Milwaukee Needs Assessment 2000: 618 Students with ELL and Special Ed Needs

2012: 1391 Students with ELL and Special Ed Needs

Greatest needs in reading- ELL and Special Needs students Phonemic Awareness

Fluency

Vocabulary

ELL as a group is one of the fastest growing school age populations in the US

By 2015 approximately 30% of the school age population will be ELL

We need to teach our ELL Students….

Exploring information systematically

Using appropriate and accurate labels (vocabulary), without a strong vocabulary the ability to use or retrieve information is severely limited.

It is not enough that a student can do a task- they must be able to label the procedures and processes involved so that the task completion can be replicated.

How to systematically organize information

Define and Describe an APPLE

Red, you can eat it, kinda big, good,

http://www.expandingexpression.com/index.html

This program…

–is multisensory

–targets the way students organize language elements

–helps students give more detailed descriptions and definitions of items

Helps organize thoughts

Helps give informative descriptions

Helps identify essential and missing information

Teach strategies-not content specific/transferable

Primarily targets semantics: defining and describing

The ability to define words is important for “effective spoken and written communication in literate contexts…[such as] technical reports, informative articles, and persuasive essays. Skill in word definition is important also because it is closely associated with measures of academic achievement, verbal ability and intellectual performance in school age children and adolescents”

EET

Each ball stands for a language element for describing

Green- group

Blue- do

What does it look like?

What is it made of?

Pink – parts

White- where?

What else do I know?

Green: Group

What group does it belong to?

Blue: Do

What do you do with it? Or

What does it do?

What does it look like?

What size, shape, or color is it?

What is it made of?

What is it made of or come from?

Wood

Plastic

MetalCloth

Pink: Parts

What are its parts? What parts go with it?

LeafStem

Skin Core

White: Where

Where do you find it? Where would you use/see it?

What else do you know?

Prior KnowledgeFun facts

Apple

Green Group-Fruit

Blue Do- Eat it, bake a pie with it, bob for it

What does it look like?-Red, yellow, green, round, size of a baseball

What is it made of?- Comes from a seed, made of flesh and skin

Pink parts- Core, seeds, skin, stem,

White Where- On trees, grocery store, etc

What else do you know?- apples can be eaten cooked or raw

SHANNON REEDFIRST GRADE BILINGUAL TEACHER

SANDRA VALADEZSECOND GRADE BILINGUAL TEACHER

Overview of EET in a classroom

Most frequently used during ELA block

Content areas

Support for oral English development

(morning routine, preview/review, extension activity)

I finished my work, what can I do now?

When do I use EET in first grade?

When do I use EET in 2nd

grade?

Beginning of Year- reading

ELA Block

Reading station to refresh their minds from previous year’s experience

Spanish– describe vocabulary words

Writing station CLP Block

Pick one vocabulary word, use EET Graphic Organizer to write sentences to describe word

Objective in 1st grade:

Spanish English Develop oral and written

language

Applies to CCSS Listening and speaking

Writing

Vocabulary Classifying/sorting

Compliments grammar lessons: Nouns, verbs, adjectives,

adverbs

Develop oral language MPS kindergarten 10%

informal English instruction

First grade 30% informal English instruction (outside of ESL)

Increase academic vocab Reinforce ESL instruction

Grammar

Classifying/sorting skills

In kid friendly terms: Speak and write in complete sentences using interesting details!

Objective in 2nd grade:

Spanish English Develop oral and written

language

Create independent writers

Extend writing sentences to add more details to written work

Develop oral and written language

Second grade 40% formal English instruction (once transitioned)

Increase vocabulary usage in speaking and writing

Extend sentences to add more details to written work

Organize ideas in writing

Demonstrate differences in sentence structure between both langauges

CCSS: Literacy: Conduct short as well as more sustained research projects based on focused questions, demonstrating the subject under investigation

Developing oral language for ELLS– 1st grade

Let’s roll it out!Getting started….

1. Introduction and explanationo Exposure

Frequent use – get familiar

Informal – have fun!

2. Explicit, scaffolded instructiono In depth

Explain and practice each step

Increasing level of Bloom’s taxonomy

Formal writing

What are examples of groups or categories?

Students 1st attempt … with a little prompting

What does green group mean?What are examples of other groups/categories?Make a web of ideasPractice with examples

Common Core StandardSort words into categories (e.g., colors, clothing) to gain a sense of the concepts the categories represent.

Green group¿A qué grupo pertenece?

• Review examples of groups/categories?

• Practice with examples

• Writing assignment:

Journal entry:

Give 3 examples under each group*model how you want journal to look!

Continue with the same routine for each colored EET ball…CCSS: Define words by category and by one or more key attributes (e.g., a duck is a bird that swims;a tiger is

a large cat with stripes)

Blue do¿Qué hace? Para qué se usa?

What does it look like?

¿Cómo se mira?

• Explain blue do

• Discuss verbs/ make a web

• Students role play different actions (it moves)

• play game (run vs gallop)

• Students pick cards to place on chart

• Shared writing IMPORTANT!

• Explain what does it look like

• Make a web of what we can talk about (size, shape color what it has) *modification

• play game

• Students pick cards to place on chart

• Shared writing

Fun activity or quick assessment?!

Systematic approach

Scaffolds:

• I do (teacher model)

• We do (shared experience)

• You do (student driven)

Teacher objective

• Did they get it? Do they understand groups? Have the students reached proficiency on a common core standard

Adivina que…(this is the you do part)

teacher models activity

teacher assigns category

students think of an idea

rough draft

conference

final copy and decorate

What’s in the bag? 1st grade…moving on to Writing focus

• 4 details

Focus on writing complete sentences with interesting and specific details

Good examples vs. bad examples

Think alouds

First done in journal (model!), conference, final project

CCSS: Produce and expand

complete simple and compound

declarative, interrogative,

imperative, and exclamatory

sentences

Expanding our writing

Student-led Teacher prompted

Es comida.

Se come.

Se ve como un triangulo.

Se encuentra en una tienda

Es una comida fria.

Se lambe. Cuando hacecalor, se derrite.

Viene de muchos colores y sabores como vanilla, chocolate o fresa.

Hay que guardarlo en el congelador.

Group write of a secret object-2nd grade

Modeling the EET graphic organizer

Use the graphic organizer to write ideas, thoughts, details for each calendar

Develop ideas, thoughts, and details into sentences that give more information about the vocabulary word

avion/ airplane

Individual write about a secret object – 2nd grade

Creating independent writers

Students were given a blank EET graphic organizer

They were allowed to choose a word from Headbanz game

They were given a choice to create a descriptive writing on their word in English or Spanish

What else do I know???

I know that first graders are very capable of exceeding our expectations when given a

strong foundation, multiple opportunities to practice and a little encouragement!

Go for it all! Foundation plus structure ~ A graphic organizer

Writing: Title, introduction sentence, complete sentences, interesting details, voice, conclusion.

Shared writing: use student ideas, but model advanced work!

Student examples. Out of this world!

Astronauts- 1st grade

Community Helpers- 2nd gradeEET to create a short research project

Find a resource to gather information

Complete EET graphic organizer with details from resource

Using details, write complete sentences that provide information about the topic

Vocabulary Word Research Project

Simple sentences

One sentence per category/bead color

Lack of introductory or conclusion sentence

Extended sentences

One paragraph per category

Introductory and conclusion sentences

Extended sentences

El niño lloró.

¿Por qué?

El niño lloró porque se lastimó.

¿Cómo?

El niño lloró porque se lastimó jugando fútbol.

¿ Dónde

El niño lloró porque se lastimó jugando fútbol en el parque.

¿ Cuándo?

El niño lloró porque se lastimó jugando fútbol en el parque ayer.

The final product!

http://youtu.be/f2PYzaLcjr0

Once they understand the system… ADAPT it!

Adjust graphic organizers

How many details do you want?

Manipulate order and organization of information in final draft

Flowers for Mom– 1st grade

Manipulate organizer to fit needs

Examples of interesting details

Skills and ideas transfer to writing prompt… even using a different organizer.

EET at a Glance 2014-2015

Oral practice

Classifying/sorting assignments

Written practice

Focus on writing more details

Present graphic organizer

Shared writing

Individual writing

Writing prompt

Research project

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