Go To Strategies
Go To Strategies
Go To Strategies
This document may be reproduced and distributed without permission, either in part or as a
whole. However, no changes can be made to this document. And no portion of this document,
nor this document in its entirety, may be reproduced in any other document or publication, in any
medium, without permission in writing from the authors. All inquiries should be addressed to
Laura Lukens, NKCS ELL Program Coordinator, email: llukens@nkcshools.org
The GO TO strategies and this document were developed under Project EXCELL (EXceptional
Collaboration for English Language Learning), a partnership between the University of
MissouriKansas City and North Kansas City Schools with funding from a 2007 National
Professional Development Grant from the Office of English Language Acquisition (OELA) of
the U.S. Department of Education (ED), PR Number T195N070316. The Center for Applied
Linguistics provided professional development and technical assistance for Project EXCELL.
The opinions expressed in this paper do not necessarily reflect the positions or policies of OELA
or ED.
Recommended citation in APA style:
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.
Table of Contents
I.
II.
III.
19
IV.
23
V.
67
Section I
Overview of the GO TO Strategies
The GO TO Strategies: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of
English Language Learners, K-12
by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood
Developed as part of Project EXCELL (EXceptional
Collaboration for English Language Learning), a partnership
between
the University of Missouri-Kansas City
and North Kansas City Schools
under a 2007 National Professional Development Grant
from the U.S. Department of Education PR Number T195N070316
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 MissouriKansas
City and North Kansas City Schools, funded by the US Department of Education, PR Number T195N070316.
The Inventory sorts and describes the 78 strategies according to teaching purpose.
(either lower or higher). The chart is intended to be a quick reference guide for teachers
in planning and implementing instructional modifications for ELLs in their content
classes. On the back of the matrix, sample strategies are briefly defined to demonstrate
how to scaffold instruction for ELLs across the proficiency levels in each language
domain.
The Inventory includes a Table of Contents listing each strategy according to seven key
teaching or learning purpose. These categories are
Interactive Strategies
Teaching Strategies
Reading Strategies
Writing Strategies
References
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.R. (2012a). Listening and speaking: Oral
language and vocabulary development for English language learners. Hot Topics
in ELL Education. (B. A. Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for
Applied Linguistics.
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.R. (2012b). Math and science: Skills and
strategies to adapt instruction for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL
Education. (B. A. Smallwood, Series Ed.) Washington, DC: Center for Applied
Linguistics.
Marzano, R. J. (2003). What works in schools: Translating research into action.
Alexandria, VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D. J., & Pollock, J. E. (2001). Classroom instruction that
works: Research-based strategies for increasing student achievement. Alexandria,
VA: Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Section II
Strategic Teaching and Learning Guided by the Five
Principles of Instruction for
English Language Learners
The GO TO Strategies: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of
English Language Learners, K-12
by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood
Developed as part of Project EXCELL (EXceptional
Collaboration for English Language Learning), a partnership
between
the University of Missouri-Kansas City
and North Kansas City Schools
under a 2007 National Professional Development Grant
from the U.S. Department of Education PR Number T195N070316
principle. The strategies in the left-hand columns are primary to the implementation of
the principle, while those in the right-hand column are additional strategies that are
compatible with implementation of the principle.
Definitions and descriptions of the strategies are provided in the Inventory and Glossary
sections of this document.
Additional Strategies:
Concept/Idea Maps
Contextualize Language
Cornell Notes
Give One Get One
I HaveWho Has?
Line Up
Patterned Oral Language
Roving Charts
Self-Assessment Scales for
Vocabulary
Learning
Snowball
Structured Note-Taking
Stir the Class
T Charts
Teacher Talk
Think-Pair-Share
Think-Pair-Share Squared
Ticket to Leave
Total Physical Response
Varied Grouping Formats
Varied Questioning Formats
Wait Time
Wait Time Two
References
Cummins, J. (2000). Language, power and pedagogy: Bilingual children in the crossfire.
Clevedon, UK: Multilingual Matters.
Doherty, R. W., Hilberg, R. S., Pinal, A., & Tharp, R. (2003). Five standards and student
achievement. NABE Journal of Research and Practice, 1, 124.
Fang, X. (2010). The role of input and interaction in second language acquisition. Cross-Cultural
Communication, 6(1), 11-17.
Frnquiz, M. E., & Reyes, M. D. L. L. (1998) Creating inclusive learning communities through
English language arts: From chanclas to canicas. Language Arts, 75(3), 211-220.
Garcia, G. E. (2000). Bilingual childrens reading. In M. L. Kamil, P. B. Mosenthal, & P. D.
Pearson (Eds.), Handbook of reading research, (Vol. 3, pp. 813-834). Mahwah, NJ:
Erlbaum.
Gass, S. (1997). Input, interaction, and the second language learner. Mahwah, NJ:
Erlbaum.
Krashen, S. D. (1985). The input hypothesis: Issues and implications. London: Longman.
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.F. (2012a). Listening and speaking: Oral
language and vocabulary development for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL
Education. (B. A. Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for Applied
Linguistics.
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.F. (2012b). Math and science: Skills and
strategies to adapt instruction for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL
Education. (B. A. Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for Applied
Linguistics.
Long, M. H. (1983). Native speaker/non-native speaker conversation and the negotiation of
comprehensible input. Applied Linguistics, 4(2), 126-141.
Long, M. H. (1996). The role of linguistic environment in second language acquisition. In W. C.
Ritchie, & T. J. Bhatia (Eds.), Handbook of second language acquisition (pp. 413-468).
New York: Academic Press.
Mackey, A., & Goo, J. (2007). Interaction research in SLA: A meta-analysis and research
synthesis. In A. Mackey (Ed.), Conversational interaction in second language acquisition
(pp. 407-552). Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
Park, E., & King, K. (2003). Cultural diversity and language socialization in the early years.
Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics. Retrieved from:
http://www.cal.org/resources/digest/digest_pdfs/0313park.pdf
Saunders, W., & Goldenberg, C. (2010). Research to guide English language development
instruction. In California Department of Education (Ed.), Improving education for
English learners: Research-based approaches (pp. 21-81). Sacramento, CA: California
Department of Education.
Scarcella, R. (2003). Academic English: A conceptual framework. Santa Barbara, CA: University
of California Linguistic Minority Research Institute.
Short, D., & Echevarria, J. (2005). Teacher skills to support English language learners.
Educational Leadership, 62, 8-13.
Swain, M. (2005). The output hypothesis: Theory and research. In E. Hinkel (Ed.), Handbook of
research in second language teaching and learning (pp. 471-483). Mahwah, NJ: Erlbaum.
Tharp, R. G., Estrada, P., Dalton, S. S., & Yamauchi, L. (2000). Teaching transformed:
Achieving excellence, fairness, inclusion and harmony. Boulder, CO: Westview Press.
Zohar, A., & Dori, Y. J. (2003). Higher order thinking skills and low-achieving students: Are
they mutually exclusive? The Journal of the Learning Sciences, 12(2), pp. 145-181.
Section III
The GO TO Strategies Matrix
The GO TO Strategies: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of
English Language Learners, K-12
by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood
19
Listening
The GO TO Strategies Matrix: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of English Language Learners, K-12
Level 1
Entering
Use physical gestures to
accompany oral directives.
Modify *Teacher Talk.
Label visuals and objects
with target vocabulary.
Introduce Cognates to aid
comprehension.
Ask for Signal Responses
to check comprehension.
Level 3
Developing
Provide graphics or objects
to sequence steps in a process.
Check Comprehension of
all students frequently.
Use *Wait Time.
Provide Anticipation
Guides for previewing content
reading.
Level 4
Expanding
Compare/contrast
relationships from auditory
information using a Venn
Diagram.
Require students to restate
and rephrase from auditory
input as in *Paraphrase
Passport.
Provide Graphic
Organizers or notes to
scaffold oral retelling.
Prompt for academic
language output.
Use Think-Pair-Share.
Repeat and Expand
student responses in a
*Collaborative Dialogue.
Level 5
Bridging
Outline lectures on the
SmartBoard.
Use *Video Observation
Guides.
Confirm students prior
knowledge of content topics.
Extend content vocabulary
with multiple examples and
non-examples.
* Structure debates
requiring various points of
view with graphic organizers
and/or outlines.
Require the use of
academic language.
Require oral reporting for
summarizing group work.
Include oral presentations
in the content classroom.
Require computer and
library research.
Ask students to analyze
text structure and select an
appropriate Graphic
Organizer for summarizing.
Use *Reciprocal
Teaching to scaffold
independent reading.
Reading
Speaking
Writing
Level 2
Emerging
Give two step
Contextualized directions.
Restate/rephrase and use
*Patterned Oral Language
routines.
Model Academic
Language and vocabulary.
Ask for Total Physical
Responses from students.
Use 10-2 structures.
Assign roles in group
work.
Use Clock Buddies.
Use Numbered Heads
Together.
Use *Think-Pair-ShareSquared.
Develop Key Sentence
Frames for pair interactions.
Use Card Sorts.
Use K-W-L charts before
reading.
Use the Language
Experience Approach.
Provide a list of important
concepts on a graphic
organizer.
Use *Shared Reading
and/or simplify the text.
Teach note taking on a
Graphic Organizer.
Use a Roving Chart in
small group work.
Use Interactive Journals.
Use *Think-Write-PairShare.
Provide Cloze sentences
with a Word Bank.
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.
20
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.
Section IV
Inventory of the GO TO Strategies
The GO TO Strategies: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of
English Language Learners, K-12
by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood
11.
Round the Clock Learning Partners
...............................................................................................................36
12.
Roving
Charts .....................................................................................................................................
...........36
13.
Snowball
.................................................................................................................................................
.......37
14.
Stir the Class
.................................................................................................................................................
.37
15.
Think-Pair-Share
............................................................................................................................................38
16.
Think-Pair-Share Squared
..............................................................................................................................38
17.
Think-Write-PairShare..................................................................................................................................38
Teaching
Strategies.............................................................................................................
................................. 39
1.
Collaborative
Dialogues.................................................................................................................................
39
2.
Comprehension
Checking..............................................................................................................................39
3.
Contextualize Language
................................................................................................................................39
4.
Graphic Organizers
........................................................................................................................................40
5.
K-W-L Charts
.................................................................................................................................................
.40
6.
Key Sentence Frames
....................................................................................................................................41
7.
Model Academic Language
...........................................................................................................................41
8.
Patterned Oral
Language...............................................................................................................................4
1
9.
Readers Theatre
...........................................................................................................................................42
10.
Rubrics
.................................................................................................................................................
..........42
11.
Signal Responses
...........................................................................................................................................43
12.
Teacher Talk
.................................................................................................................................................
.43
13.
Total Physical Response (TPR)
.......................................................................................................................43
14.
Varied Grouping Formats
..............................................................................................................................44
15.
Varied Presentation Formats
........................................................................................................................44
16.
Varied Questioning
Formats..........................................................................................................................44
17.
Video Observation Guides
.............................................................................................................................45
18.
Wait Time
.................................................................................................................................................
.....45
19.
Wait Time Two
..............................................................................................................................................4
5
Student Learning Strategies
.............................................................................................................................
.... 46
1.
Concept/Idea Maps
.......................................................................................................................................46
2.
Cornell Notes
.................................................................................................................................................
46
3.
Structured Note-Taking
.................................................................................................................................47
4.
T
Charts .....................................................................................................................................
....................47
Vocabulary Teaching Strategies
...........................................................................................................................
48
1.
Closed Sort Tasks
...........................................................................................................................................48
2.
Cognates
.................................................................................................................................................
.......48
3.
Key Sentence Frames
....................................................................................................................................49
4.
Mix and Match
..............................................................................................................................................4
9
5.
Open Sort
Tasks.......................................................................................................................................
......50
6.
Self-Assessment Scales for Vocabulary Learning
..........................................................................................50
7.
Word/Picture Banks
......................................................................................................................................51
8.
Word Squares
................................................................................................................................................
51
Reading Strategies
.............................................................................................................................
.................. 52
1.
4 to
1 ..............................................................................................................................................
...............52
2.
Anticipation Guides
.......................................................................................................................................52
3.
Choral Reading
..............................................................................................................................................5
3
4.
Cloze Passages
...............................................................................................................................................5
3
5.
Directed Reading/Thinking Activity (DRTA)
...................................................................................................54
6.
Guided Reading
.............................................................................................................................................54
7.
H Charts
.................................................................................................................................................
........55
8.
Jigsaw Reading
..............................................................................................................................................5
5
9.
Language Experience Approach
....................................................................................................................56
10.
Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS)
......................................................................................................56
11.
Picture
Walks.......................................................................................................................................
..........57
12.
Question Answer Relationships (QAR)
..........................................................................................................57
13.
Reciprocal
Teaching...................................................................................................................................
....58
14.
Shared
Reading....................................................................................................................................
..........58
15.
Story Maps
.................................................................................................................................................
...59
16.
Teach the Text Backward
..............................................................................................................................59
17.
Teacher Read Aloud
......................................................................................................................................60
Writing Strategies
.............................................................................................................................
................... 61
1.
Content Learning Logs
...................................................................................................................................61
2.
Dialogue Journals
..........................................................................................................................................61
3.
Dictation
.................................................................................................................................................
.......61
4.
Graphic Organizers for Writing
.....................................................................................................................62
5.
Person of the Week
.......................................................................................................................................62
6.
Report Frames / Outlines
..............................................................................................................................63
7.
Shared
Writing ....................................................................................................................................
..........63
8.
Text to Graphics and Back Again
...................................................................................................................64
9.
Ticket to Leave/Exit
Ticket.............................................................................................................................64
10.
Write a Letter
................................................................................................................................................
64
REFERENCES....................................................................................
...................................................... 65
27
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 MissouriKansas
City and North Kansas City Schools, funded by the US Department of Education, PR Number T195N070316.
Teaching Strategies are used by a teacher to scaffold the learning process and
promote comprehension of oral or written language by students. Examples of these
strategies are Teacher Talk and Wait Time.
Vocabulary Teaching Strategies are introduced into a learning unit to help students
learn the academic vocabulary required for high achievement in schools. Examples of
vocabulary strategies are Word Squares and Sort Tasks.
Writing Strategies are taught by the teacher to enable students to develop academic
writing abilities. Examples of writing strategies are Text to Graphics and Back Again and
Report Frames.
Strategies that have a structural framework are often referred to as activity structures
(Berlak, Berlak, Bagenstos, & Mikel, 1975; Saphier & Gower, 1997). Activity structures
follow a patterned format but can be customized to accommodate learner age, proficiency,
teaching objectives, and learning environment. Activity structures are initiated by the
teacher, who makes decisions regarding the level and amount of the content, type of
student behavior or participation, learning procedures to be followed, learning products,
and closure of the activity. Examples of activity structures include Think-Pair-Share, the
K-W-L chart, and Give One-Get One.
Levels of Strategies
The strategies listed below are labeled with language proficiency levels at which the
strategies will be most effective. With scaffolding, strategies can be used at lower
proficiency levels. The levels (from 1 to 5) are aligned to the WIDA Performance
Definitions for levels of English language proficiency: Entering, Emerging, Developing,
Expanding, and Bridging. An explanation of each level can be found at
http://www.wida.us/standards/RG_Performance%20Definitions.pdf.
29
29
Student Actions
2. Team Names
Purpose: To develop community among a group of students
Grouping Format: Interactive small groups
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
NOTE: The shaded boxes indicate the appropriate language proficiency levels for each strategy.
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.
30
3. Things in Common
Purpose: To ask for and provide personal information to define commonalities
Grouping Format: Interactive small groups
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Interactive Strategies
1. 10-2 (Saphier & Haley, 1993)
Purpose: To provide opportunities for students to process oral information
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, interactive student pairs
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
5. I HaveWho Has?
Purpose: To review content information through oral interaction
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Lines up according to teacher direction facing a
partner
Listens to the learning partners question and
attempts to answer the question in complete
sentences using target vocabulary
Asks a question on a note card and confirms or
supplies the correct answer
Stops talking at the teachers signal.
Exchanges note cards and moves on to a new
learning partner to repeat the process
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
11. Round the Clock Learning Partners (Saphier & Haley, 1993)
Purpose: To provide processing time among students in an oral language modality
Grouping Format: Interactive student pairs
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
13. Snowball
Purpose: To promote recall of content learning through interactive writing
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, individual writing time
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Proceeds as in Think-Pair-Share
After student PAIRS share their responses, asks each pair
to meet with another pair and individually SHARE
responses again
Proceeds as in Think-Pair-Share
After pairing with another student to share
responses, the pair meets another pair and each
partner SHARES again
17. Think-Write-Pair-Share
Purpose: To provide written and oral language processing time for content learning
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, individual writing time, interactive Student Pairs,
whole class sharing
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Proceeds as in Think-Pair-Share
Asks students to WRITE their responses in English
following the THINK step
PAIRS each student with a partner to discuss and revise
the written response if needed
Asks for volunteers to SHARE their responses or collects
each response
Teaching Strategies
1. Collaborative Dialogues
Purpose: To support the comprehension and use of academic language structures
Grouping Format: Teacher student dialogue
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Responds to student utterances in a one-to-one or small
group conversation
Uses a variety of strategies that provide needed academic
language information such as: Repetition, Recast,
Reformulation, Prompt (see Glossary)
Models academic vocabulary and structures
Encourages students to continue responding by prompting
for further academic language
Student Actions
Interacts with the teacher by responding to oral
language questions
Incorporates target vocabulary and academic
language structures in the oral language
conversation as the teacher models their usage
2. Comprehension Checking
Purpose: To determine the degree of content and language comprehension among all students
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
3. Contextualize Language
Purpose: To increase the level of comprehension of oral language input
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, small group instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
B
Teacher Actions
Provides visuals, gestures, facial expressions, body
language, illustrations, realia (real objects), maps, graphs,
timelines, diagrams, and manipulatives to increase
comprehension of language and content
Student Actions
Infers meaning of the language from the context
provided in the gestures, illustrations, graphics,
and realia
4. Graphic Organizers
Purpose: To increase comprehension of oral or written language through a graphic
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, small group instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Models and teaches the use of a variety of graphic
organizers (Venn diagrams, concept maps, timelines) to
structure oral and written language with content
information
Student Actions
Uses a graphic organizer to understand concepts
in a text, to take notes, to report, and/or to
structure writing
5. K-W-L Charts
Purpose: To activate prior knowledge and anticipate and confirm future learning
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, individual reflections, questioning, and summarizing
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Teacher Actions
Models the academic language orally and the content
vocabulary required by the lesson
Writes target language on the whiteboard and points to the
written language as it is spoken
Displays a visual when appropriate
Student Actions
Comprehends, internalizes, and reads the
language and vocabulary modeled by the teacher
Student Actions
Student Actions
10. Rubrics
Purpose: To raise achievement levels through stating criteria for assessment
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Student Actions
Listens to and responds to teachers questions at
an appropriate level for current language
proficiency
Student Actions
Attends to the sequence of the advance organizer
for the chronological development of the video
OR attempts to answer the teachers prepared
questions on the video topic
Student Actions
Listens to the teachers question
Thinks about the response and raises hand to
answer
Student Actions
Listens to the teachers question
Thinks about the response and raises hand to
answer
Listens to other student responses
Student Actions
Attends as the teacher demonstrates the notetaking strategy
Copies a smaller version of the Concept Map
Uses the map to access vocabulary and
information
Uses Concept Maps in other learning experiences
Student Actions
Attends as the teacher introduces the note-taking
system
Completes the form with content from a text by
responding to teacher-written questions in the
Cue column
Works with a partner to ask and answer questions
using the completed Cornell Notes form
Uses the Cornell system in future studying and
content reading
3. Structured Note-Taking
Purpose: To increase comprehension and recall of content learning
Grouping Format: Whole-class instruction, individual learning
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Models note-taking on a large chart in front of the class
Shows how to write data on various graphic organizers
such as the Venn diagram, a time line, a flow chart, etc
Displays the graphics during content learning units
Encourages students to create their own note-taking
graphic charts
Student Actions
Attends as the teacher demonstrates the notetaking strategy
Copies a smaller version of the note-taking
graphic
Uses the graphic to access vocabulary and
information
Uses note-taking graphics in other learning
experiences
4. T Charts
Purpose: To increase comprehension and recall of content learning
Grouping Format: Whole-class instruction, individual learning
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Models note-taking on a large T chart in front of the class
Shows how to organize data related to a content lesson by
classifying ideas into two categories, such as
differentiating main ideas from subordinating ideas
Displays the T chart during content learning units
Encourages students to create their own T charts
Student Actions
Attends as the teacher demonstrates the notetaking strategy
Copies a smaller version of the T chart
Uses the T chart to access vocabulary and
information
Uses a T chart in other learning experiences
Student Actions
Works with a learning partner to sort vocabulary
into two or more separate groups which have
been identified by the teacher
2. Cognates
Purpose: To support learning of content vocabulary
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Identifies, models, and displays the cognates from
students home languages that are similar to target
vocabulary, especially in the content areas, e.g., biografa,
optimismo
Student Actions
Relates vocabulary from a home language to new
target vocabulary in order to facilitate content
vocabulary learning in English
Student Actions
Uses the provided sentence frames to structure
and define oral and written language using the
required academic vocabulary in the content
classroom
Note: Please see Key Sentence Frames to support
the use of academic language structures under
Teaching Strategies.
Student Actions
Walks around the classroom reading and
exchanging cards with other students
At the teachers signal, stops Mixing and begins
to search for a Match for the term or the
definition on a card
Reads the term and the definition with a partner
Student Actions
Student Actions
Self-evaluates understanding of academic
vocabulary by rating comprehension on a scale
Works alone or with a partner to assess
knowledge
Works alone or with a partner in studying the
unknown vocabulary
7. Word/Picture Banks
Purpose: To increase comprehension of academic vocabulary and study skills
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, individual or paired activity
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Encourages students to use academic vocabulary in
speaking and writing tasks by compiling content
vocabulary into boxed lists which are displayed or
provided to students
Models how to collect vocabulary on note cards OR
models how to use vocabulary lists and identify the
vocabulary in a vocabulary notebook
Teaches students to use illustrations, symbols,
synonyms/antonyms, foreign language translations, model
sentences, and definitions to illuminate the meaning of the
vocabulary
Directs students to periodically review the collected
vocabulary and edit the collection
Student Actions
Collects or refers to critical academic target
vocabulary during a learning unit
Uses a variety of strategies to make the
vocabulary comprehensible
Returns to the Word Bank frequently (perhaps
with a learning partner) to review the meanings
of the words during a learning unit
Periodically reviews and edits the collection of
vocabulary
8. Word Squares
Purpose: To increase comprehension of academic vocabulary and study skills
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, individual or paired activity
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Provides students with 5 x 7 note cards divided into four
quadrants
Teaches students to write a target vocabulary item in the
top right quadrant
Models grade appropriate strategies for completing the
other three quadrants: e.g., illustrations, definitions,
antonyms/synonyms, foreign language equivalents, nonexamples
Directs students to periodically review the collected
vocabulary and edit the collection
Student Actions
Follows teachers directions for completing a
word square for a target vocabulary item
Uses the word square format for compiling a
bank of vocabulary cards throughout the
learning unit
Reviews word squares frequently, either alone or
with a partner during a learning unit
Periodically reviews and edits the collection of
vocabulary
Reading Strategies
1. 4 to 1
Purpose: To analyze a topic for critical concepts and share orally
Grouping Format: Individual writing task, interactive small groups, whole class instruction.
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Places students into small groups of four students
Asks each student to select a word or a phrase that
summarizes the concepts from prior learning or a reading
text
Asks students to share their ideas in the groups
Tells students to negotiate the selection of one idea from
their group that represents the topic
Provides time for the groups to share their ideas and to
justify their choices to the whole group
Student Actions
Generates one word/phrase that captures
important aspects of the reading, lecture, or
discussion
Shares the word/phrase with the group, so that
the group collects four words/phrases
Each small group negotiates the selection of the
one big idea that best represents the topic
A spokesperson for the group shares the big idea
with the whole class and justifies why the group
chose it
Student Actions
Reads a list of true-false statements and
completes the you column in the guide with a
personal opinion of the truth value of the
statement
Shares answers within a small group and justifies
the choices
Reads the text
Amends the guide by changing information or
adding new information learned from the text
Shares opinions with the class and supports them
with text information
See Glossary for other variations of Anticipation
Guides.
3. Choral Reading
Purpose: To provide a model of fluent reading
Grouping Format: Whole-class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Provides all students with copies of the text
Leads reading the text aloud while urging students to read
along
When reading dialogue, assigns small groups roles in the
narrative
Student Actions
Reads aloud from the text with the teacher
4. Cloze Passages
Purpose: To increase comprehension of a text and increase inferencing skills
Grouping Format: Individualized writing activity or learning partner activity
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Prepares a text where every fifth word or target vocabulary
word is eliminated
Provides a Word Bank with the Cloze to scaffold the
activity for Level 2-3 students
Teaches students to read the text and supply the missing
word or a synonym of the word
Student Actions
Uses information in the text and/or the Word
Bank to fill in the blanks of a text
Student Actions
Listens to the teachers introduction of text.
Responds to open-ended questions (orally or in
writing) to predict text content
Reads the text in short segments, responding to
specific teacher questions and evaluating
predictions
Locates supporting statements in text to verify
predictions or modifies predictions as a result of
text content
Student Actions
Listens carefully to teachers instruction
regarding vocabulary, phonics elements,
features of print, and other textual elements
Reads the text individually
Responds to teachers pointers relevant to
improving fluency and comprehension of the
text
7. H Charts
Purpose: To increase comprehension through scaffolding a comparison and contrast analysis of content
texts
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Levels 3, 4, 5
Teacher Actions
Prepares a large H Chart and smaller H Charts for students
Models the process of comparing two concepts or topics
from a reading text
Writes contrasting information from a text on the two
outside columns of the H
Writes similar information from a text on the center cross
bar of the H
Provides opportunities for students to use the structure with
other reading passages
Student Actions
Listens as the teacher models use of the H Chart
to analyze a reading passage
Writes contrasting and similar information in
the appropriate spaces on the H Chart
Uses an H Chart when reading other
comparison/contrast tests
Student Actions
Reads the assigned text either individually or
with other students in a small expert group
Discusses the meaning of the text and any
unknown vocabulary with members of the small
group
Asks questions of other students to clear up any
misunderstandings
Returns to the home group and shares the
information in the text with home group
members
Makes the information clear to others by
drawing/sharing pictures, defining new
vocabulary, and/or questioning for
comprehension
Student Actions
Joins in a shared experience
Recalls the experience orally with the class
Dictates parts of a narrative describing the
experience to the teacher
Listens as the teacher revises and edits the
narrative
Re-reads the narrative frequently
Learns aspects of reading from subsequent
readings and teacher instruction
10. Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS) (Fuchs, Fuchs, Mathes, & Simmons, 1997)
Purpose: Peer instruction in specific reading strategies
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction, interactive small group instruction, interactive pair instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Teaches students the processes and routines needed to tutor
each other in three reading strategies: retelling (sequencing
information), paragraph shrinking (generating main idea
statements), and prediction relay (generating and evaluating
predictions). May use sentence frames as scaffolds for each
strategy,
Pairs students according to language and/or reading
proficiency levels
Assigns one student as the Coach and the other as the Reader
Provides appropriate texts to involve students in 3 to 4
tutoring sessions per week up to a total of 90 minutes per
week
Student Actions
Learns to tutor other students in three reading
strategies
Works with a partner to correct reading
errors, award points for correct responses,
and provide encouragement and feedback
Student Actions
Listens and watches as the teacher introduces
the text and displays the pictures or other
graphic elements in the text
Makes inferences and shares them with the
whole class as to the content of the text
Student Actions
Listens as the teacher models and teaches
four levels of questions about a text
Participates in answering the questions
Reads a text in a small group and answers the
questions with the group
Selects the appropriate QAR category for
each questions and shares with the group,
justifying each choice
Listens as the teacher shows how to ask/write
four levels of questions
Practices asking/writing four levels of
questions
Exchanges questions with other groups
Answer another groups questions and
categorize them by QAR levels
Student Actions
Listens as teacher models each of four
reading strategies: summarizing, clarifying,
questioning, and predicting
Practices using an assigned strategy as group
discussion leader
Continues to practice as new strategies are
assigned by the teacher
Takes turns using the different roles
Student Actions
Listens and participates in pre-reading
activities
Focuses on the text and follows the teachers
pointer
Reads aloud with the teacher
Reads the text multiple times, each time with
more confidence
Participates in the follow up activities
Note: Level 1 students can be scaffolded to
participate in this strategy through providing a
learning partner, strategic front row seating, and
multiple exposures to text with a reading partner.
Student Actions
Completes a graphic story map as the teacher
identifies the important elements
Uses the story map to retell the story orally
Student Actions
Engages in application activities with the
teacher and peers in order to understand major
concepts of the text
Discusses the applications activities with the
teacher and peers in pairs and small groups to
enlarge comprehension of the major concepts
Reads the summary questions at the end of
the chapter and attempts to answer them
based upon current understanding of the
concepts
Reads and comprehends the textbook chapter
Student Actions
Listens to the teachers input regarding the
meaning and background of the text
Listens to the text as read aloud and attempts
to comprehend the language
Asks questions for clarity and responds to
teachers questions
Writing Strategies
1. Content Learning Logs
Purpose: To increase skill of summarizing in writing
Grouping Format: Individualized writing activity
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Requires students to keep a notebook (a log) of their learning
in content classes
Provides a format for the structure of a Learning Log
Requires students to write a statement summarizing learning
or identifying key points at the end of each content lesson
Reads the learning logs occasionally to assess student
progress
Student Actions
Writes a statement summarizing
understanding of content and concepts or
identifying key points at the end of each
content lesson
Student Actions
Writes in a notebook with the teacher as the
audience
Reads teachers comments from previous
entries and responds to them
Uses the teachers writing as a model for
future writing
3. Dictation
Purpose: To develop skill in listening and recording oral language
Grouping Format: Whole class instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Chooses short sentences with vocabulary that is familiar to
students and related to their content learning and at students
language proficiency levels
Instructs students to listen to an orally dictated sentence
Signals students to begin writing
Checks the sentences and provides feedback on correctness
Student Actions
Listens attentively as the teacher dictates
Waits for a signal to begin writing the
dictated sentence
Checks the writing for correctness and edits
for errors
Student Actions
Identifies organizational text structure in
sample content tests
Associates a specific graphic organizer and
signal words with sample content text
Observes the procedure for outlining written
information on a graphic organizer from a
content text
Practices writing content material using
appropriate graphic organizers and signal
words
Student Actions
Listens and learns formal letter writing style
Writes a letter, as described by the teacher,
summarizing understandings of content and
student concerns about the topic
Student Actions
Uses the outline provided by the teacher to
structure a written report, presentation,
narrative, or other piece of academic writing.
7. Shared Writing
Purpose: To develop reading and writing skills and to teach multiple writing strategies
Grouping Format: Whole group instruction
Levels: 1 2 3 4 5
Teacher Actions
Begins the lesson with a shared experience, memory, readaloud text, or content concept
Encourages students to dictate their understanding of the
experience to the teacher
Writes notes from student dictation
Generates words and ideas for the writing as the text is
constructed
Assists students in reading the text
Leads a discussion of revisions which incorporate appropriate
strategies and skills needed by the readers/writers
Incorporates elements of text into the writing such as sentence
combination and/or text organization
Revises the text in front of the students, perhaps cutting and
pasting and using other revision tools
Posts the writing (with illustrations) in the classroom
Finds other ways to use the writing piece to reinforce what
students have learned
Student Actions
Attends to teacher introduction of a whole
class experience
Responds to teachers questions to dictate
understanding of the experience
Reads the text as it is being constructed
Suggests modifications of the text according to
teacher input
Attends to text revisions strategies
Reads and re-reads the constructed text
Incorporates new writing strategies into future
writing
Student Actions
Watches and listens as the teacher models the
process
Reads and takes notes onto a graphic
organizer from a content text
Watches and listens as the teacher models a
written summary
Writes a written summary of the text from
notes on the graphic organizer
Student Actions
Listens to the teachers summarizing question
or problem
Writes a brief response based on the learning
accomplished in the days lesson
Delivers a correct written response to the
teacher before leaving the classroom
Student Actions
Listens and learns informal letter writing
style
Writes a letter, as described by the teacher,
summarizing understandings of content and
concepts from the lesson
65
References
Aronson, E. (2008). Jigsaw classroom. Retrieved from http://www.jigsaw.org.
Asher, J. (1979). Learning another language through actions: The complete teachers guidebook. San
Jose, CA: Sky Oaks
Ashton-Warner, S. (2002). Teacher. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Berlak, A. C., Berlak, H. Bagenstos, N. T. & Mikel, E. R. (1975, February). Teaching and learning in
English primary schools. School Review, 215-243.
Black, A., & Stave, A. M. (2007). A comprehensive guide to readers theatre: Enhancing fluency and
comprehension in middle school and beyond. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
Fountas, I. C., & Pinnell, G. S. (1996). Guided reading, good first teaching for all children. Portsmith,
NH: Heinemann.
Fuchs, D., Fuchs, L. S., Mathes, P. G. & Simmons, D. C. (1997). Peer-assisted learning strategies:
Making classrooms more responsive to diversity. American Educational Research Journal, 34,
174-206.
Jameson, J. (1998). Enriching content classes for secondary ESOL students. Washington, DC and
McHenry, IL: Center for Applied Linguistics and Delta Systems.
Kagan, S. (1994). Cooperative learning. San Clemente, CA: Kagan Cooperative Learning.
Kauffman, D. (2007). Whats different about teaching reading to students learning English?
Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics and Delta Systems.
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.F. (2012a). Listening and speaking: Oral language
and vocabulary development for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL Education. (B.
A. Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Levine, L.N., Smallwood, B.A., & Haynes, E.F. (2012b). Math and science: Skills and strategies
to adapt instruction for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL Education. (B. A.
Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Marzano, R. J. (2003). What works in schools: Translating research into action. Alexandria, VA:
Association for Supervision and Curriculum Development.
Marzano, R. J., Pickering, D. J., & Pollock, J. E. (2001). Classroom instruction that works: Researchbased strategies for increasing student achievement. Alexandria, VA: Association for
Supervision and Curriculum Development.
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
Merchant, P. & Young, L. (2000). Investigating how much: Linear, volume, and mass measurement.
In S. Irujo (Ed.), Integrating the ESL standards into classroom practice grades 6-8, (pp. 55-84).
Alexandria, VA: TESOL.
Palincsar, A. S., & Brown, A. L. (1984). Reciprocal teaching of comprehension-fostering and
comprehension-monitoring activities. Cognition and Instruction, 1(2), 117-175.
Pauk, W., & Owens, Ross J. Q. (2010). How to study in college (10th Ed.). Cengage Learning.
Palincsar, A. S., & Brown, A. L. (1984). Reciprocal teaching of comprehension-fostering and
comprehension-monitoring activities. Cognition and Instruction, 1(2), 117-175.
Peyton, J.K., & Reed, L. (1990). Dialogue journal writing with nonnative English speakers: A
handbook for teachers. Alexandria, VA: TESOL.
Raphiel, T. E. (1984). Teaching learners about sources of information for answering comprehension
questions. Journal of Reading, 28, 303-311.
Rowe, M. (1986). Wait time: Slowing down may be a way of speeding up. Journal of Teacher
Education, 37, 43-50.
Rutherford, P. (1998). Instruction for all students. Alexandria, VA: Just Ask Publications.
Saphier, J., & Gower, R. (1997). 5th Ed. The skillful teacher: Building your teaching skills. Carlisle,
MA: Research for Better Teaching.
Saphier, J.,& Haley, M. A. (1993). Summarizers: Activity structures to support integration and
retention of new learning. Carlisle, MA: Research for Better Teaching.
Smallwood, B.A. (2011). Marvelous modifiers. Professional development material for Methods of
Teaching ESL, Certification course for Project EXCELL. (Unpublished material). Washington,
DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Stauffer, R. G. (1969). Directing reading maturity as a cognitive process. New York: Harper & Row.
Section V
Glossary of the GO TO Strategies
The GO TO Strategies: Scaffolding Options for Teachers of
English Language Learners, K-12
by Linda New Levine, Laura Lukens, and Betty Ansin Smallwood
Developed as part of Project EXCELL (EXceptional
Collaboration for English Language Learning), a partnership
between
the University of Missouri-Kansas City
and North Kansas City Schools
under a 2007 National Professional Development Grant
from the U.S. Department of Education PR Number T195N070316
1.
4 to 1
...................................................................................................................
......................... 72
2.
10-2
...................................................................................................................
........................... 72
3.
Anticipation Guides
...................................................................................................................
... 72
4.
Choral
Reading.......................................................................................................
....................... 73
5.
Closed Sort Tasks
...................................................................................................................
....... 73
6.
Cloze Passages
...................................................................................................................
........... 73
7.
Cognates
...................................................................................................................
.................... 74
8.
Collaborative Dialogues
................................................................................................................
74
9.
Comprehension Checking
............................................................................................................. 74
10.
Concept/Idea Maps
...................................................................................................................
... 74
11.
Content Learning
Logs............................................................................................................
....... 75
12.
Contextualize Language
................................................................................................................
75
13.
Cornell Notes
...................................................................................................................
............. 75
14.
Dialogue
Journals.......................................................................................................
................... 76
15.
Dictation
...................................................................................................................
.................... 77
16.
Directed Reading/Thinking Activity
(DRTA)................................................................................... 77
17.
Four Corners
...................................................................................................................
.............. 77
18.
Gallery Walk / Brainstorm Carousel
.............................................................................................. 77
19.
Give One - Get One
...................................................................................................................
.... 78
20.
Graphic Organizers
...................................................................................................................
.... 78
21.
Graphic Organizers for Writing
..................................................................................................... 78
22.
Guided Reading
...................................................................................................................
......... 80
23.
H Charts
....................................................................................................................
.................... 81
24.
I HaveWho Has?
....................................................................................................................
.. 82
25.
Information Gap Activities / Barrier Games
.................................................................................. 82
26.
Inside - Outside Circle
...................................................................................................................
82
27.
Jigsaw
Reading.......................................................................................................
....................... 83
28.
K-W-L Charts
....................................................................................................................
............. 83
29.
Key Sentence Frames
....................................................................................................................
84
30.
Language Experience Approach (LEA)
........................................................................................... 84
31.
Line
Up................................................................................................................
.......................... 85
32.
Marvelous
Modifiers......................................................................................................
............... 85
33.
Mix and
Match...........................................................................................................
................... 85
34.
Model Academic Language
........................................................................................................... 85
35.
Numbered Heads Together
........................................................................................................... 86
36.
Open Sort Tasks
....................................................................................................................
........ 86
37.
Paraphrase Passport
....................................................................................................................
. 86
38.
Patterned Oral Language
.............................................................................................................. 87
39.
Peer-Assisted Learning Strategies (PALS)
...................................................................................... 87
40.
Person of the Week
....................................................................................................................
.. 87
41.
Picture Walks
....................................................................................................................
............ 87
42.
Question-Answer Relationships
(QAR).......................................................................................... 88
43.
Readers
Theatre........................................................................................................
................... 89
44.
Reciprocal Teaching
....................................................................................................................
.. 89
45.
Report Frames/Outlines
............................................................................................................... 89
46.
Round the Clock Learning Partners
............................................................................................... 90
47.
Roving Chart
....................................................................................................................
............. 90
48.
Rubrics
....................................................................................................................
...................... 91
49.
Self-Assessment Scales for Vocabulary Learning
........................................................................... 91
50.
Shared Reading
....................................................................................................................
......... 91
51.
Shared Writing
....................................................................................................................
.......... 91
52.
Signal
Responses....................................................................................................
....................... 92
53.
Snowball
....................................................................................................................
................... 92
54.
Stir the Class
....................................................................................................................
............. 92
55.
Story Maps
....................................................................................................................
............... 93
56.
Structured NoteTaking..........................................................................................................
....... 93
57.
T
Charts..........................................................................................................
............................... 93
58.
Teach the Text Backward
.............................................................................................................. 94
59.
Teacher Read Aloud
....................................................................................................................
.. 94
60.
Teacher Talk
....................................................................................................................
............. 94
61.
Team Names
....................................................................................................................
............. 95
62.
Text to Graphics and Back Again
................................................................................................... 95
63.
Things in Common
....................................................................................................................
.... 95
64.
Think-Pair-Share
....................................................................................................................
....... 95
65.
Think-Pair-Share Squared
............................................................................................................. 96
66.
Think-Write-Pair-Share
.................................................................................................................
96
67.
Three Truths and a Lie / Whale of a Tale
....................................................................................... 96
68.
Ticket to Leave/Exit Ticket
............................................................................................................ 96
69.
Total Physical Response
(TPR)....................................................................................................... 97
70.
Varied Grouping Formats
.............................................................................................................. 97
71.
Varied Presentation Formats
........................................................................................................ 97
72.
Varied Questioning Formats
......................................................................................................... 97
73.
Video Observation Guide
.............................................................................................................. 97
74.
Wait Time
....................................................................................................................
................. 98
75.
Wait Time
Two..............................................................................................................
................ 98
76.
Word/Picture
Banks...........................................................................................................
........... 98
77.
Word Squares
....................................................................................................................
........... 98
78.
Write a Letter
....................................................................................................................
........... 99
REFERENCES ...........................................................................
...............................................100
72
1.
4 to 1. This reading strategy supports English language learners (ELLs) in their attempts to
identify and articulate the most important concepts from a reading passage. Students work in groups
of four and are given a text to read. They first individually identify a word or phrase that summarizes
the major concepts in the text. They then share their ideas with each other and choose one word or
phrase that best summarizes the concepts in the text. The groups then report to the class and explain
their choices. (Reading Strategies)
2.
10-2. (Saphier & Haley, 1993). This interactive strategy gives ELLs time to process new
information and academic language frequently during an oral presentation, video, or lecture. Every
ten minutes, the oral input is stopped, and the teacher poses a question or a problem or gives time for
processing what has been heard. Students talk, summarize, or problem solve for two minutes before
the oral presentation resumes, usually working with a learning partner. The teacher may request
student responses in the form of signal responses (Teaching Strategy), responses written on slates, or
oral or written responses. (Interactive Strategies)
3.
Anticipation Guides. This strategy activates prior knowledge of a topic and helps ELLs
make connections between a new topic and their prior knowledge. In one variation, the teacher
prepares a list of true / false statements related to the concepts in a text. Next to the statements, the
teacher adds two columns, one labeled You and the other labeled Author or Text. In the You column,
students rate each statement true or false prior to reading the text and then justify their choices with a
small group. After reading the text, they complete the Author or Text column.
A variation of Anticipation Guides is Anticipation/Reaction Guides. In this variation, students follow
the same procedure as above, reading statements and determining truth value based upon their prior
knowledge and experience. After the lesson or text reading, students use a reaction guide to revise
their statements to reflect their new learning. The reaction guide requires the student to state Why My
Choice was Confirmed or Why My Choice was not Confirmed.
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
Other variations ask students to indicate what I think or What is in the text, whether they Agree or
Disagree with a statement, to indicate their opinions Before and After reading the text, or to compare
two concepts from the reading such as Old World and New World. (Reading Strategies)
4.
Choral Reading. This reading strategy enables ELLs to participate in the reading process
while being scaffolded by the teachers reading as well as that of other students. Texts with
repetition are useful, because they allow many repetitions of sentences, phrases, and words. The
teacher provides a large text for the class to read together or individual texts for each student. The
class is encouraged to read along with the teacher. The teachers voice acts as a model for the
reading process. Eventually, small groups of students may be assigned to read sections of a text.
(Reading Strategies)
5.
Closed Sort Tasks. This vocabulary teaching strategy isolates lists of critical target
vocabulary that can be compared and contrasted (e.g., the names of reptiles vs. mammals). Students
work with a learning partner to sort the vocabulary into two or more categories, which are provided
by the teacher. Vocabulary items may be listed on the whiteboard or written on individual note cards.
(Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
6.
Cloze Passages. For ELLs with limited writing ability in English, cloze passages provide a
sentence or paragraph structure with selected words missing. Cloze passages scaffold the writing
process at the early levels of learning. The teacher selects an appropriate text or sentence structure
related to the content and eliminates every fifth word or specific target vocabulary. Students are then
asked to supply the missing words. This task can be scaffolded further if the teacher provides
students with a word box containing the missing words. (Reading Strategies)
Cognates. Teachers use cognates in content classes to increase comprehension and learning of
7.
academic and technical vocabulary. Cognates are foreign words that share roots with English words
(herbivore/herbivoro, invertebrate/invertebrado). Students who speak languages that share roots
with English (e.g., Spanish, Portuguese, French, German) will benefit from this strategy.
(Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
8.
collaborative dialogues for the purpose of modeling academic vocabulary and grammar forms and
encouraging students to actively use those forms in a communicative dialogue. The teaching
techniques for engaging students in this way include doing the following after a students utterance:
Repetition. The teacher repeats (and may expand) a students utterance in an effort to continue
the conversation and signal the fact that the student is understood.
Reformulation. The teacher models the necessary academic language and grammar.
Prompt. The teacher questions or prompts a student reformulation and provides opportunities for
the teacher checks the comprehension of all students in the class frequently, during instruction. A
variety of techniques can be used: signals, choral responses, written responses, partner responses,
note card responses, and varied questioning. (Teaching Strategies)
10.
Concept/Idea Maps. These graphic maps are useful for teaching students how to organize
specific characteristics, traits, or examples of a central concept. The visual aspect of a concept map
enables ELLs to participate in content learning. The teacher models the note-taking process by
writing the central topic in a circle in the middle of the map on a large chart. Similar ideas and
concepts are clustered in surrounding circles on the map, as in the example below. The map is then
displayed during the content learning unit and used to support summarizing of the learning. See the
example below. (Student Learning Strategies)
con
e
triangle
Shap
es
square
circle
11.
cylinder
sphere
cube
Content Learning Logs. Students keep a notebook with them in the content class and write
a statement at the end of the class summarizing their content learning, which helps them know what
they understand and what they have not yet learned. Teachers should read the logs occasionally to
check student comprehension. Teachers can scaffold the activity by asking a question that is based
on the days objectives and asking students to answer the question in the learning log. (Writing
Strategies)
12.
Contextualize Language. Many techniques can be used to provide context and increase
comprehension of oral and written language: visuals, gestures, word stress, illustrations, realia, maps,
graphs, timelines, and manipulatives. (Teaching Strategies)
13.
Cornell Notes. (Pauk & Owens, 2010). This is a widely used note-taking system for older
learners that promotes valuable learning strategies. A paper is divided into three parts with a heavy
horizontal black line drawn one inch from the top of the paper, a heavy horizontal black line drawn
three inches from the bottom of the paper, and a vertical line drawn 2 and inches from the left
hand side of the paper. (See the example below.) The narrow column on the left is the Cue Column.
The wide column on the right is the Note-Taking Area. The rectangle at the bottom is the Summary
Area. The small rectangle at the top is for the students name, class name, date, and topic. Students
listen to a lecture and write notes in the note-taking area. As soon after class as possible, students
summarize the notes on the page in the summary section. Next, they write questions in the cue
column to clarify meanings, reveal relationships, establish continuity with prior instruction, and
strengthen memory. When studying, students cover the note-taking area and use the questions in the
cue column to recite aloud, in their own words, the answers to the questions. Students then reflect on
the material by asking themselves, What is the significance of this content? What principle are
these facts based on? How do these facts fit in with what I already know? Students are encouraged
to spend at least 10 minutes per week reviewing all previous notes.
Teachers can scaffold the Cornell note-taking system by writing questions appropriate to the content
topic and to students language proficiency in the cue column. Students use these questions to find
critical information in the oral presentation or in the textbook. Further scaffolding and practice with
academic language occurs when teachers provide time for students to ask and answer questions with
each other using the completed Cornell notes form. (Student Learning Strategies)
STUDENT
INFORMATION
CUE
COLUMN
2.5 inches
SUMMARY
14.
NOTE-TAKING AREA
6 inches
2 inches
Dialogue Journals. (Peyton & Reed, 1990). Dialogue journals give students the opportunity
to write frequently and informally on topics of their own choosing. The target audience is the teacher.
Students are given class time to write several times during the week. The teacher collects the
journals on a routine basis and responds to questions; offers information; asks questions; and models
spelling, vocabulary, and grammatical structures that the student may need in order to progress.
(Writing Strategies)
15.
Dictation. Short-term auditory memory can be lengthened through the use of dictation. The
teacher chooses short sentences with vocabulary that is familiar to students and related to content
they are learning. Students are asked not to pick up a pencil until the teacher has finished the
sentence-length dictation. At a signal, they write the dictated sentence and immediately receive
feedback on the correctness of their writing. More proficient students can write simultaneously as
the teacher dictates longer passages. (Writing Strategies)
16.
Four Corners. (Merchant & Young, 2000). To encourage interaction about a content topic,
the teacher places four pieces of chart paper on the wall in each of the four corners of the room. The
charts are labeled with a choice regarding the content topic. Next, the teacher asks a question or
poses a problem and directs students to choose one of the four choices in response to the prompt.
Students move to their corner choice and talk to others in their corner describing the reasons for their
choice. (Interactive Strategies)
18.
about a content topic, the teacher tapes several large pieces of chart paper on the walls of the
classroom. At the top of each chart is a content-related question. Students are paired or placed in
small groups and directed to a chart. They discuss and write an answer to the question on the chart.
At a signal from the teacher, the student groups rotate to the next chart. An option called Hosted
Gallery Walk requires that one student is selected from each group to summarize the information on
the groups chart for the entire class at the end of the activity. (Interactive Strategies)
19.
Give One - Get One. This interactive strategy aims to engage students in oral language
exchanges using academic vocabulary or structures. The teacher prepares and distributes information
sheets with four quadrants. Students are told to complete quadrant one with information they have
learned or researched (e.g., names and descriptions of aquatic animals). Next, students move around
the room sharing their information with other students and collecting new information to complete
quadrants two, three, and four. (Interactive Strategies)
20.
Graphic Organizers. Graphic organizers, such as Venn diagrams, timelines, word maps, and
flow charts, help to communicate many different kinds of information: the structure of a written text,
the relationships among concepts, and the required vocabulary for a content lesson. The teacher
models and provides an example of a graphic organizer and then encourages students to use them to
summarize a reading passage, take notes on a presentation, or structure their writing. (Teaching
Strategies)
21.
Graphic Organizers for Writing. Text structures and their accompanying signal words can
be learned by students through the use of graphic organizers. Graphic organizers scaffold the
organization of academic writing, provide a visual of the organization, and support the transitional
thought processes that occur throughout the writing. The following four text structures are used most
often in Grades K-12. They are listed here with their accompanying signal words and selected
graphic organizers that might be used.
Simple Listing:. Sample signal words: some, for example, a few, such as, include, others.
Chronology:. Sample signal words: first, last, later, at last, next, soon, finally, since. Graphic
Comparison and Contrast: Sample signal words: also, andtoo, both, similarly, but, however,
Cause and Effect: Sample signal words: because, as a result, cause, due to, lead to, result in,
effect of. Graphic organizers: Fishbone graphic, cause and effect flow chart.
Below are examples of the graphic organizers most commonly used with these text structures.
Simple Listing:
(concept map)
clouds
temperature
WEATHER
air
moving air
precipitation
rain
sleet
snow
hail
wind
Chronology:
Egg
Caterpillar
Larva
Butterfly
Compare & Contrast: How are they similar? How are they different?
(Venn
diagram)
Both Topics
Topic 1
Topic 2
80
Cause and Effect: What are the causes & effects of this
The fall of
Rome
(Effec
t)
Disorganized
army
(Caus
e)
Weak
leadership
(Caus
e)
Poorly
managed
economy
(Caus
e)
Graphic organizers for writing can be scaffolded as they are taught to students. The procedural steps
are as follows:
1. Teacher selects and provides the appropriate graphic organizer (GO) and fills it in while
students copy the information on a smaller version.
2. Teacher selects and provides the GO and helps students to find the information to complete it.
3. Teacher selects and provides the GO while students complete it alone or with learning partners.
4. Teacher repeats # 1-3 with each of the four kinds of GOs until students are familiar with each
one.
5. Teacher asks students to decide which GO is appropriate for a new reading or a topic, and
students complete the information themselves.
6. Students use GOs on their own, to assist them in learning, preparing for a test, or organizing a
piece of content writing. (Writing Strategies)
22.
Guided Reading. (Fountas & Pinnell, 1996). In guided reading, students are taught together
in small groups. ELLs receive instruction at their proficiency and reading levels and enjoy increased
interaction with the teacher. Progressively leveled texts are used to introduce new vocabulary, teach
81
phonics elements, demonstrate features of print, and scaffold text organization and sophistication.
Students are supported by the teacher as they read the text individually. The teacher observes
students carefully and makes teaching points and mini lessons based on these observations. Follow
up activities reinforce the reading skills taught during the reading session. (Reading Strategies)
23.
Topic 1
Topic 2
Both
Topics
82
24.
information from a content unit: for example, geographical locations, dates in history, states and
capitols, math equations, or characters and events in literature. The teacher prepares sets of cards
(one card for each student).
Each card contains a question and an answer relating to the same topic: I have Montgomery,
Alabama. Who has the Civil Rights leader who sat in the white section of a bus? Or I have 18x = -72.
Who has x = 46? Or I have the Louisiana Purchase. Who has Jefferson? Students read their cards
silently and then walk around the room searching for the person who has the answer to their Who
has question. When students meet, they read aloud their Who has questions to each other,
searching for the answer that matches the question. When they make a match, they swap cards and
search for a new match. The activity continues until the teacher calls Time.
A variation/extension is to use the same cards the next day while students are standing in a line or
sitting in a circle. Students question and respond individually and sequentially. One student begins
by reading the Who has question on the card. The student who has the response to the question
responds by reading the I have answer. The activity continues until all students have answered
and the last question read matches the last answer on another students card. This activity can be
repeated and timed, with students seeking a faster pace in each round. (Interactive Strategies)
25.
Information Gap Activities / Barrier Games. Language is acquired more easily when
students exchange real information that they need to complete a task. Information gap activities are
designed by teachers to provide pairs of students with two different sets of information. Students
need to combine their information in order to complete an assignment. Teachers create two sets of
pictures, graphics, or texts that are similar, but with different amounts of information. Learning
partners are taught to question each other to obtain the missing information. (Interactive Strategies)
26.
Inside - Outside Circle. As an interactive test review or to summarize learning, the teacher
divides the class into two groups. Each group forms a circle. One circle is inside and the other
outside. Students in the inside circle face outward, and students in the outside circle face inward.
Each student is opposite a partner. The teacher provides each student with a note card (or students
prepare these). On one side of the card is a problem or a question. On the other side is the answer. At
83
a signal from the teacher, the outside circle students read their question to the student opposite them.
The inside circle students answer the question and then ask their note card questions. After student
pairs have asked and answered one question each, they exchange note cards. Then the outside circle
moves one place to the right, and students ask and answer the new question. (Interactive Strategies)
27.
Jigsaw Reading. (Aronson, 2008). By using jigsaw readings, teachers can lighten the reading
load for ELLs and support their content learning through structured interactions with other students.
Content texts are first divided into sections, each section typically addressing a subtopic of the
content. Students are placed into home groups of four to six students. Each home group member
is assigned a different section of a text. Students who have the same sections leave their home
groups and work with other students in reading their text, assisting each other in understanding the
text, asking and answering questions about the text, and determining the best way to teach members
of their home group about the subtopic. These groups are called expert groups. When students
return from their expert groups to their home groups, they take turns teaching each other about their
specific text sections. Teachers may design an assessment for all students following the jigsaw
reading.
In a variation, students in expert groups do not return to their original home groups. Instead, the
teacher reassembles expert students into sets of third groups with new members, each representing
one section of the text. As when returning to the home groups, students proceed to teach each other
the text concepts and prepare for an assessment of the material. This adaptation has the advantage of
providing interaction with a new group, if students have already interacted a lot with their home
groups. This variation is sometimes called double jigsaw (Levine, Smallwood & Haynes, 2012).
(Reading Strategies)
28.
K-W-L Charts. Activating prior knowledge helps ELLs, and other students, to make
connections between a new topic and what they already know about that topic. Students feel
empowered, because they have some knowledge to bring to the content lesson. The teacher initiates
K-W-L by labeling three columns on a chart: What I Know, What I Want to Know, What I Learned.
Through questioning, the teacher determines what students already know about a topic and writes
84
this information in the first column. If students have small copies of the chart, they can participate by
copying the information for later study. Next, the teacher encourages students to ask questions
concerning what they want to know about the topic. Here, the teacher can be made aware of any
misunderstandings that students may have. These questions are written in the second column. The
chart is then displayed in the classroom and referred to as students learn more about the topic. The
questions act as a road map for the unit. Finally, at the end of the unit, students summarize their
learning, and the teacher writes these statements in column three. An alternative is to ask students to
summarize their learning individually or in learning partner groupings. (Teaching Strategies)
29.
Key Sentence Frames. Sentence Frames are displayed for students, to scaffold oral and
written communication about content. Sentence Frames are sentence structures with the content
words eliminated. They are useful for ELLs, because they provide an academic sentence structure
that allows students to focus on stating the content while practicing sentence patterns. An example
from geography might be:
is located on
degrees longitude.
Sentence frames can be scaffolded by progressively reducing the amount of structure provided.
(Teaching and Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
30.
strategy enables ELLs with limited English proficiency to understand texts. The strategy requires
that all students in the class have shared an experience (e.g., viewing a demonstration, watching a
video, participating in a science experiment, or reading a book together). Students are then urged to
tell what they recall of that experience. The teacher writes a dictated student narrative on chart paper,
a computer screen, or a document camera. As the teacher writes, the narrative is revised and edited
for vocabulary, sentence structure, text organization, and conventions of print, with student
participation. For example, the teacher may cut and paste parts of the narrative into different
positions to enhance the chronological flow of the writing or combine separate sentences using more
complex grammatical structures. All students watch, listen, and participate as these revisions are
made. The story is then read many times by the class as a whole, by learning partners, and by
individuals. The story may be illustrated and displayed in the classroom library, and students may
make individual copies to read to their families at home. (Reading Strategies)
85
31.
Line Up. (Kagan, 1994). This is another strategy for review and summary of content learning.
The teacher divides the class into two groups and asks one group to stand in a straight line while the
other group stands in a line opposite and facing them. Each student has a partner. The teacher asks a
summary question and provides time for students to discuss the answer with their partner. At a signal,
one line of students moves one place to the right. The last person in the line walks to the front of the
line, and the questioning continues. (Interactive Strategies)
32.
creating a positive classroom environment while also developing the academic skills of vocabulary,
comprehension, and spelling. The teacher begins by modeling the use of a positive modifier (an
adjective) to describe an attribute of an individual. The modifier and the individuals name must
begin with the same letter (but not necessarily the same sound): for example, Clever Cindy, or
Serious Sam. Then, working in small groups, the students create Marvelous Modifiers for each
student in their group. Next, they use this modifier to introduce their classmates. The teachers can
extend this oral activity to literacy by writing the students names and modifiers on a two-column
chart (name and modifier), then covering one side of the chart and asking students to restate the
modifier or the name. This develops comprehension and speaking skills. This strategy can also
expand vocabulary, as not all students will know the same range of modifiers. It can also be used to
describe characters in history or literature. (Community Building Strategies)
33.
Mix and Match. This interactive and vocabulary strategy may be used to summarize learning
or to provide for additional oral practice of new vocabulary. The teacher makes two sets of cards.
They may be matches (such as a word on one card and a picture or definition on the matching card),
or they may be members of a set (such as examples of mixed fractions and the term mixed fraction.
Each student has a card from one of the sets. In the Mix portion of the activity, students walk around
the room reading and trading their cards with other students. In the Match portion of the activity,
students make a match with one word card and one definition card. When partners match, they sit
down together until all students have completed the activity. (Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
34.
Model Academic Language. In order to help students acquire academic vocabulary and
grammar structures, the teacher models the target forms during oral language presentations and
86
displays the target forms on the whiteboard (as in the examples below). It is also helpful if teachers
point to these forms as they model them. (Teaching Strategies)
An octopus and a squid have tentacles.
Both an octopus and a squid have tentacles.
A mussel and a clam have shells.
Both a mussel and a clam have shells.
35.
Numbered Heads Together. (Kagan, 1994). This strategy provides scaffolding support for
ELLs while also requiring participation of all students. The teacher puts students into groups and
asks them to Number yourselves in your group from 1 to 4. Next, the teacher asks a question, and
the students put their heads together to determine the answer collaboratively. Each student in the
group should be sure that all group members can answer the question correctly. Finally, the teacher
calls a number at random or spins a spinner. The students assigned that number stand or raise their
hands. One of them is then selected to answer the question orally or in writing, on the white board or
on individual note cards. (Interactive Strategies)
36.
Open Sort Tasks. This vocabulary learning strategy isolates lists of critical target vocabulary
that can be compared and contrasted (e.g., the characteristics of the three branches of government).
Students work with a learning partner to sort the vocabulary into two or more categories. The
categories are not named by the teacher. Students must determine appropriate titles for each of the
vocabulary categories. There may be more than one choice of category title for any group of
academic terms. Vocabulary items may be listed on the whiteboard or written on individual
notecards. (Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
37.
Paraphrase Passport. (Kagan, 1994). This strategy enables ELLs to participate in class
discussions and also encourages students to listen to their peers. The teacher asks a question, waits
for volunteers, and calls on one student. The student responds while other students listen. After the
response, the teacher calls on another student and asks, What did (previous student) say? The
student paraphrases the response, and the teacher calls on another student to paraphrase again. ELLs
will be better able to respond after listening to several student answers. (Interactive Strategies)
87
38.
of students with limited English proficiency use patterns of language that are simple and consistent
when giving directions. These directions are accompanied with gestures to further communicate
meaning. (Teaching Strategies)
Today we are going to read about
Listen to the topic sentence of the paragraph. (Read the topic sentence aloud.) This is the
main idea of the reading. The reading is mostly about
the next paragraph to see what details we will learn. (Read the topic sentence aloud.)
(Teaching Strategies)
39.
1997). PALS is a supplementary reading program for elementary school students. It is highly
structured and uses peer-mediated instructional pairs of students who tutor each other. The tutoring
consists of teaching three reading strategies: retelling, paragraph shrinking, and prediction relay.
These have been identified as key skills, critical to reading achievement. Students are taught the
processes and routines for implementing each of these strategies and then taught to correct a
partners reading errors and provide encouragement and feedback. The 35-minute sessions typically
occur three to four times per week. (Reading Strategies)
40.
Person of the Week. The teacher begins this motivational writing strategy by teaching the
genre of formal letter writing through demonstration. First, a topic or problem is raised, one that is
related to the content teaching objectives. The teacher then urges students to write a letter to a
specific person (a real person in the community) explaining the topic and student interests and
concerns. The letters are collected and sent. Any responses are shared with the class. This strategy
can also be used with a whole class, similar to the Language Experience Approach. (Writing
Strategies)
41.
Picture Walks. Another way to activate a students prior learning is to preview the pictures
that appear in a text. For this strategy, the teacher displays the pictures in the text in order. As each
picture is shown, the teacher questions students about what they see and prompts them to make
88
inferences about what is happening in the picture and in the text as a whole. The strategy can be used
with fiction and non-fiction texts. In addition to pictures, the teacher may also preview graphs, charts,
photographs, text glosses, and other text enhancing graphics. The picture walk provides an
opportunity to introduce critical academic vocabulary needed for comprehension of the text.
(Reading Strategies)
42.
to find, analyze, and infer information from a text by differentiating among various kinds of
questions about the text. The teacher begins by creating a list of questions to be answered. There are
four levels of questions: Right There, Think and Search, Author and You, and On My Own.
Right There questions are text-based and answered with one word or phrase. They require literal
thinking. Right There questions may include Who, What, Where, How many, and so on.
Think and Search questions are also text-based, but they require students to search across
paragraphs or pages to find the answer. They also require literal thinking. Think and Search
questions may use words such as Summarize, What caused, How did, Retell, and so on.
These questions require students to respond in full sentences.
Author and You questions require the reader to use prior knowledge to respond. These questions
lead to inferential thinking that combines information from the author with what the student
already knows. These questions usually contain the word you.
On My Own questions are also inferential. Students answer them based on prior knowledge and
need not read the text to respond to them. On My Own questions usually ask students to write
about a personal situation, problem, or event similar to the one in the reading.
When using this strategy, the questions are modeled, and the teacher demonstrates how the
information differs for each type of question. First, students have opportunities to practice answering
each type of question with teacher support. Next, students are placed in small groups and given a
text with questions at the end. They read the text and the questions and collaboratively determine
the QAR level for each question and justify their decisions. Students are then taught how to ask or
write the four different levels of questions for a specific text. Once again, they are given
opportunities to practice asking or writing the questions. Questions from one group can then be
89
89
exchanged with another group. Each group answers their new set of questions and categorizes them
into QAR levels. (Reading Strategies)
43.
Readers Theatre. (Black & Stave, 2007). This strategy offers opportunities to incorporate
oral language development into literature or content study. The teacher helps learners turn a text into
a script and then dramatize the action. The strategy enables students with a wide variety of language
proficiencies to participate in classroom learning, as the script can be adapted to many language
levels. Readers Theatre increases comprehension of the text as well as oral language production.
(Teaching Strategies)
44.
Reciprocal Teaching. (Palinscar & Brown, 1984). ELLs learn valuable reading strategies
within a supportive environment through reciprocal teaching. Students are typically placed into
groups of four. The teacher instructs them in four reading strategies: summarizing, clarifying,
questioning, and predicting. Students have opportunities to practice each of these strategies with
familiar texts. The teacher then assigns one strategy to each of the four students in a group and
assigns a content-focused reading to the group. As the students read short sections of the text, they
take turns practicing their assigned strategy. One student summarizes the reading, another clarifies
any unfamiliar vocabulary concepts, another asks a question regarding the content of the text, and
another makes a prediction about the next section of the text. Eventually, the teacher rotates roles in
the group, so that all students have opportunities to practice all four strategies. (Reading Strategies)
45.
Report Frames/Outlines. ELLs who are learning to write long pieces of writing, such as
essays, reports, narratives, summaries, and lab results, can be assisted in the process by using a
report frame. The frame is essentially an outline that structures the writing. In some cases, a Report
Frame might resemble a Cloze passage, with full sentences included but selected vocabulary
eliminated. The teacher has the option of providing greater amounts of information in the frame for
students who are limited in their writing proficiency. The frames are helpful in modeling the
structure of academic writing. Teachers can scaffold the writing process by modeling procedures for
creating full, grammatical sentences to complete the topics in the Report Frame. Sentence Frames
further scaffold the writing by modeling topic sentences and conclusions. (Writing Strategies)
90
46.
Round the Clock Learning Partners. (Saphier & Haley, 1993). This interactive strategy
provides the teacher with multiple opportunities to engage students in oral language interaction and
to practice higher order thinking, such as analyzing, reflecting, or problem solving during content
lessons. Students are given a clock graphic with lines next to each numeral for 12 signatures.
Students are told to meet with 12 other students and Make an appointment at each time on the
clock face. Students meet and sign up at each hour, recording each others names on their graphic.
During subsequent lessons, the teacher may use the clock graphic to help students process a content
concept. She says, Meet with your two oclock partner. Students find the appropriate partner and
work together to process information in a text, problem solve, or respond to complex questions.
In variations of this strategy, teachers use content graphics to reflect the learning topic. For example,
pre-K and primary learners may use a shapes graphic with space for four names on each of four
shapes: circle, square, rectangle, and triangle. A colors graphic uses primary colors. Students
studying geographic regions may be supplied with a graphic map of the regions with spaces to
identify a New Jersey partner, a Vermont partner, and so forth. In foreign language classes, maps of
the foreign country can be adapted for French City Learning Partners. Physics and chemistry
teachers can use graphics of the scientific apparatus required in the lab. (Interactive Strategies)
47.
Roving Chart. This interactive writing strategy works best when students are placed in small
groups at tables. The teacher gives each group a large piece of chart paper and magic markers. Each
chart paper has a thinking or summarizing question at the top. Students are asked to discuss the best
answer. The group writes the answer on the chart paper. At a signal from the teacher, the paper is
passed to the next group, and a new question appears on the new chart. The Roving Chart strategy
offers the teacher an opportunity to assess the whole class on a topic of study. (Interactive
Strategies)
91
48.
Rubrics. This assessment aims to increase student achievement. Rubrics are especially
helpful for ELLs, because they clearly specify the type of process or product required for
academic success. The teacher distributes a rubric to each student that lists the specific criteria that
will be used to assess the unit outcomes a product or presentation. The rubric usually contains
four columns defining four levels of performance. The teacher shares the rubric prior to the
learning experience and provides clear explanations and models of expected performance. The
teacher then uses the rubric to evaluate students. (Teaching Strategies)
49.
their vocabulary acquisition through the use of self-`assessment scales. The scales can be adapted to
a students level of language proficiency. For example, Level 1 students may use a series of smiley
to sad faces to assess ability to comprehend vocabulary. More proficient students might use a
numeric Likert Scale with descriptive headings to assess their ability to comprehend academic
vocabulary within a text passage or to use that vocabulary in an oral report. Self-Assessment Scales
can be used before, during, and after instruction. (Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
50.
Shared Reading. This strategy scaffolds the reading process for ELLs as they learn reading
skills and vocabulary. It also increases participation in oral reading of a text. The teacher uses a Big
Book or enlarges the text on an interactive whiteboard or document camera. Before reading, the
students prior knowledge is activated, critical vocabulary is explicated, and students are led to make
connections between their lives and the text. While reading, the teacher points to the words in the
text as students read along chorally. The text is read multiple times over several days, so that more
and more students can participate in the reading. Follow up activities direct students to return to the
text for specific information. (Reading Strategies)
51.
Shared Writing. Shared writing is a collaborative process through which learners provide
content for a text and the teacher provides scaffolding for the texts construction. It is a valuable
writing experience for ELLs, because the writing is connected to their lives and experiences. The
teacher leads a whole-class lesson in which students recall a shared experience; e.g., a memory, a
read-aloud text, a content learning lesson, a field trip, an interview. As students dictate their
92
understandings of the experience, the teacher takes notes on a chart or on a large graphic organizer.
The teacher generates words and ideas for the text as the writing proceeds and introduces elements
of text structure appropriate to the content. Revision takes place in front of the whole class, with the
teacher sometimes cutting and pasting sections of the text and listing ideas for titles or further
information. Teacher questioning enables all students to take part in the writing and revisions.
Finally, students read the finished piece, and it is displayed in the classroom as a model for future
writing. Although shared writing is similar to the Language Experience Approach (LEA), the focus
here is on developing writing by proceeding through the stages of the writing process. LEA,
however, focuses on the development of a shared text for reading skill instruction. (See Language
Experience Approach) (Writing Strategies)
52.
Signal Responses. This strategy allows teachers to check listening or content comprehension
of an individual student, a group, or the whole class without requiring speaking. The teacher simply
asks students to respond to questions by signaling (thumbs or hands up / thumbs or hands down),
holding up note cards, clapping, or displaying slates. (Teaching Strategies)
53.
Snowball. This review or summarizing strategy engages all students. The teacher asks a
question or presents a problem. Students individually (or in pairs) record their responses on a sheet
of paper. They then crumple the paper and, at the teachers signal, toss the snowball to the
opposite side of the room. Each student retrieves a fallen snowball, opens it, and reads another
students response. The teacher calls on a sample of students to share responses with the whole class.
If the teacher collects and reviews the responses after class, this strategy can also serve as a
formative assessment for the class as a whole (i.e., Did they understand what I was asking?)
(Interactive Strategies)
54.
Stir the Class. (Rutherford, 1998). This interactive strategy can be used as an activator or as
a summarizer. The teacher asks students to write on a piece of paper three examples, causes, reasons,
results, or names about the topic under study. At a signal from the teacher, students walk around the
room sharing their ideas and collecting ideas from other students. After a given amount of time, the
teacher signals students to Freeze. The teacher then directs students to form groups by asking a
question with a number as an answer: How many sides are in a triangle? How many musicians play
in a duet? Students form groups according to the numerical answer. The teacher can then ask
93
summarizing questions, activation questions, or recall questions, which are answered by members of
the small groups. The teacher may repeat the process of walking, freezing, group formation, and
language interaction several times. Finally, students may return to their seats and be asked to sort,
categorize, or prioritize the information. (Interactive Strategies)
55.
Story Maps. These graphic organizers visually illustrate and isolate the critical elements of a
narrative: setting, characters, problem, resolution, conclusion. The graphic reduces the language
elements of the story and scaffolds comprehension. The teacher prepares the graphic on a chart and
provides a smaller version for each student. After reading the narrative, the teacher defines each
element and demonstrates how to find that element in the story and write it on the story map on the
chart. Students record the teachers answers on their own individual versions. These story maps can
then be used to help students retell the story while including all the critical elements. (Reading
Strategies)
56.
Structured Note-Taking. This learning strategy is useful for ELLs, because it helps them to
record content and academic vocabulary in note form on a graphic. The teacher selects a graphic
organizer that reflects the structure of the original text: for example, chronology, cause/effect,
compare/contrast. The teacher gradually introduces a variety of graphic organizers throughout the
year. The teacher demonstrates the note-taking format using target academic vocabulary. Students
copy these graphics on smaller versions, which can then be used for self-study. Teachers can also
encourage students to use the graphics for summarizing and as a model for future content units or
texts. (Student Learning Strategies)
57.
T Charts. The T chart is a learning strategy with similar benefits to Structured Note-taking
and Cornell Notes. Students record content information and vocabulary on a structured T Chart. The
chart has a long horizontal bar at the top of the paper and a vertical line one third of the way from the
left side of the paper. Students are asked to place main ideas or major concepts in the left-hand
column and supporting facts and details in the right-hand column. This activity benefits ELLs who
may have difficulty differentiating main ideas and supporting facts on their own. (Student Learning
Strategies)
94
58.
Teach the Text Backward. (Jameson, 1998). This reading strategy works well to increase
comprehension of concepts from academic texts in content classes. It enables ELLs to make
connections to the major concepts and begin to use the target vocabulary required before actually
reading the text. The strategy also helps students to progress from the concrete to the conceptual,
from the known to the unknown, and from simple concepts to more difficult ones. There are four
steps:
1. Students complete the application and expansion activities at the end of a chapter (the hands
on activities) to help them make connections with the main concepts in the chapter.
2. Students talk about the material in various ways, with each other and with the teacher, to help
them make explicit their understandings of the concepts. This usually includes introduction and
discussion of key vocabulary.
3. Students read the questions at the end of the chapter and make guesses about the answers based
on their current level of understanding.
4. Students read the text and confirm or revise their predicted answers to the questions. (Reading
Strategies)
59.
Teacher Read Aloud. This reading strategy provides a model of proficient reading and a
means to provide content for ELLs who cannot yet read at the level of the text. The teacher typically
provides background information about the text and activates what the students already know about
the topic. Teachers should try to make connections between the students, their cultures, and the text
when possible. For younger students, large-size texts (big books) are often used, so the group can
see comfortably. The teacher often does a picture walk first to introduce key vocabulary and
encourages students to make inferences about the text from the pictures. The whole text is then read
to students, although longer texts may be read in sections. As the reading proceeds, the teacher
defines unknown words, provides context when needed, and checks regularly for comprehension.
(Reading Strategies)
60.
Teacher Talk. The teacher modifies speech directed at students in order to communicate
meaning and promote vocabulary development. Teacher gestures, repetition, word stress, modeling
of behaviors, simplified sentence structures, and patterned language help to accomplish these goals.
(Teaching Strategies)
95
61.
Team Names. This strategy encourages students to work well together in small groups. The
teacher asks students to brainstorm a name for their group (or team) using the interests of the people
in the group as a basis for the team name. Students reach a consensus and write the team name on a
piece of oak tag or note paper, which is displayed on the group table. (Community Building
Strategies)
62.
Text to Graphics and Back Again. (Jameson, 1998). This strategy teaches ELLs the ways
that content is organized in a text and the linguistic devices and signal words needed to comprehend
and write academic texts. The teacher chooses an appropriate text and determines how the text is
organized. Most texts will be written as a chronological, cause/effect, comparison/contrast, or simple
description. The teacher selects a graphic organizer that reflects the text organization: for example, a
circle map for chronology; a flow chart for cause and effect; a Venn diagram for
comparison/contrast; a web for a simple description. Using a large format of the graphic and smaller
versions for the students, the teacher models the process of reading the text and then accessing the
critical concepts to write on the graphic organizer. The next step provides oral practice of the
information, supported by key sentence frames and signal words. Finally, the teacher demonstrates
how to take information from the graphic and create sentences that summarize the text. Examples of
graphics can be found under Graphic Organizers for Writing. (Writing Strategies)
63.
Things in Common. This strategy builds community among small groups of students by
having them find three (or four) things they have in common. The teacher suggests that they share
favorite sports, food, music, and other activities or interests in order to find commonalities. One
student in the group reports the findings to the whole class. (Community Building Strategies)
64.
Think-Pair-Share. (Kagan, 1994). This strategy provides additional time for students to
reflect and process ideas through oral language. After presenting content information, the teacher
poses a question or a problem to students and asks them to THINK about the answer. After a short
time, the teacher asks students to PAIR with a partner and discuss the answers. Finally, students
volunteer to SHARE their responses with the class. (Interactive Strategies)
96
65.
more student and language interaction. Students complete the THINK and PAIR steps of the activity.
The student pairs then meet with another pair, and the groups of four students SHARE again. This
strategy is appropriate when teachers anticipate that ELLs, and other students, can benefit from
additional oral practice on a topic or question. (Interactive Strategies)
66.
second step. After posing a question to the class, the teacher asks students to WRITE a response,
PAIR with a learning partner to read and perhaps edit the written responses, and then SHARE the
written responses with the class. The teacher may also collect the responses. This strategy infuses
reading and writing skills into oral language development, which provides valuable reinforcement
for ELLs. (Interactive Strategies)
67.
Three Truths and a Lie / Whale of a Tale. This strategy builds community among
members of a small group and also helps students discern the difference between fact and fiction.
The teacher leads the activity by revealing three (or four) pieces of personal information. Three of
the statements are true, but one of them is a lie. Students discuss the information to determine which
statement is the lie. The teacher asks for a show of hands while repeating the statements. Students
vote on which one is a lie. Next, the teacher asks students to repeat the process in their table groups.
Students write three (or four) statements and read them to the group. The group votes to determine
the lie. (Community Building Strategies)
68.
learning in a quick and simple way at the end of a class. The teacher poses an oral or written
question to the class just before dismissal. The question is based on the learning objective of the
days lesson. Students then write a brief answer to the question on a sticky note, which the teacher
collects as students walk out the door. An alternative is to ask students to line up at the door and
answer the question orally before exiting. Students who are unable to answer can get help from their
fellow students or the teacher. First language support, if available, can be useful here. (Writing
Strategies)
97
69.
strategy used with students in the early stages of language development. The teacher gives auditory
commands, and students respond kinesthetically but not orally. They move their bodies in response
to the commands and demonstrate their comprehension of the language. (Teaching Strategies)
70.
Varied Grouping Formats. Teachers can increase comprehension and language interaction
in the content classroom by using a variety of grouping formats for students while engaged in
learning tasks. The more common groupings include the following: learning partners, small-group
work, cooperative learning groups, whole-class instruction. (Teaching Strategies)
71.
Varied Presentation Formats. Variety in presentation format ensures that students with
different learning styles and ELLs are included in the learning experience. Teachers choose the
presentation format based on the level of language proficiency of the students and the nature of the
content learning. Some of the formats to consider include direct instruction, role plays, group work,
cooperative learning, and project learning. (Teaching Strategies)
72.
Varied Questioning Formats. This strategy engages all students in interaction. Teachers
match a question type to the students level of language proficiency. Easier questions include yes /
no and either /or questions. Next in difficulty are the WH questions: Who, What, When, Where. The
most complex are open-ended questions that require students to respond in a full sentence: for
example, What do you know about How would you describe What can you remember?
(Teaching Strategies)
73.
Video Observation Guide. This strategy increases comprehensibility for ELLs by alerting
them to the events and concepts that will be seen in a video. The teacher can increase student
comprehension of a content-related video by outlining the chronological progression of events in the
video or by providing questions to activate prior knowledge about the topic of the video. This is
essentially a graphic organizer for understanding a video that students watch as a class activity. The
students take notes on the guide during or after watching the video. They can use their notes to
participate in a classroom discussion about the video. (Teaching Strategies)
98
74.
Wait Time. (Rowe, 1986). This strategy increases ELLs ability to comprehend and respond
to the teachers oral questions. It also leads to increased student participation and higher-quality
responses from all students. After asking a question, the teacher waits 5 to 7 seconds before calling
on a volunteer to respond. (Teaching Strategies)
75.
Wait Time Two. (Rowe, 1986). This strategy is a extension of the basic Wait Time strategy.
After the first student responds to a question, the teacher waits an additional five to seven seconds
and then calls on another student. The strategy is useful, because students can benefit from extra
time to process both the question and the answer. (Teaching Strategies)
76.
Word/Picture Banks. Word Banks enable students to learn and use academic vocabulary
necessary for a content unit. The teacher encourages students to use academic vocabulary by
compiling a collection of critical vocabulary in a boxed list. The words are displayed or provided to
students on the board, a wall chart, or in a cloze passage or report outline. Students are encouraged
to retain the vocabulary throughout the learning unit in a vocabulary notebook or written, each
separately, on individual note cards. The note cards flesh out the meaning of the words as students
add illustrations, symbols, synonyms/antonyms, foreign language translations, model sentences,
and definitions. The cards can be sorted in various ways or used to study definitions with a learning
partner. Students are encouraged to refer to the note cards for academic speaking and writing
purposes. (Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
77.
Word Squares. This strategy enables ELLs to learn target academic vocabulary by using
various word learning strategies. The teacher provides students with 5 by 7 notecards divided into
four quadrants. The target vocabulary word is written in the upper left quadrant. The other three
quadrants define the target word in various ways, depending on the grade and language level of the
student. Students might be asked to draw a picture and write a definition in their home language.
Students with higher levels of language proficiency are taught to also write antonyms/synonyms,
dictionary definitions, and sentences using the target word in the remaining three quadrants. The
word squares are used throughout the learning unit. Teachers provide opportunities for learning
partners to teach each other the new words. (Vocabulary Teaching Strategies)
99
78.
Write a Letter. This strategy enables ELLs to summarize academic content in an informal
writing genre. The teacher models informal letter writing and poses a topic related to the lessons
objectives. Students are then asked to write a letter to a specific person, such as another student in
the class, a person from history, a parent, or the teacher. The letter should summarize the major
concepts in the lesson. If students write to each other, they can then be paired to read their letters and
help each other with any misunderstandings. (Writing Strategies)
References
Aronson, E. (2008). Jigsaw classroom. Retrieved from http://www.jigsaw.org.
Asher, J. (1979). Learning another language through actions: The complete teachers guidebook. San
Jose, CA: Sky Oaks.
Ashton-Warner, S. (2002). Teacher. New York: Simon and Schuster.
Black, A., & Stave, A. M. (2007). A comprehensive guide to readers theatre: Enhancing fluency and
comprehension in middle school and beyond. Newark, DE: International Reading Association.
Fountas, I. C., & Pinnell, G. S. (1996). Guided reading, good first teaching for all children. Portsmith,
NH: Heinemann.
Fuchs, D., Fuchs, L. S., Mathes, P. G. & Simmons, D. C. (1997). Peer-assisted learning strategies:
Making classrooms more responsive to diversity. American Educational Research Journal, 34,
174-206.
Jameson, J. H. (1998). Enriching content classes for secondary ESOL students. Washington, DC and
McHenry, IL: Center for Applied Linguistics and Delta Systems.
Kagan, S. (1994). Cooperative learning. San Clemente, CA: Kagan Cooperative Learning.
Levine, L. N., Smallwood, B. A., & Haynes, E. F. (2012). Listening and speaking: Oral language
and vocabulary development for English language learners. Hot Topics in ELL Education. (B.
A. Smallwood, Series Ed.). Washington, DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Merchant, P. & Young, L. (2000). Investigating how much: Linear, volume, and mass measurement.
In S. Irujo (Ed.), Integrating the ESL standards into classroom practice grades 6-8 (pp. 55-84).
Alexandria, VA: Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages.
Palincsar, A. S., & Brown, A. L. (1984). Reciprocal teaching of comprehension-fostering and
comprehension-monitoring activities. Cognition and Instruction, 1(2), 117-175.
Pauk, W., & Owens, Ross J. Q. (2010). How to study in college (10 ed.). Cengage Learning.
Peyton, J.K., & Reed, L. (1990). Dialogue journal writing with nonnative English speakers: A
handbook for teachers. Alexandria, VA: Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages.
Raphiel, T. E. (1984). Teaching learners about sources of information for answering comprehension
questions. Journal of Reading, 28, 303-311.
Rowe, M. (1986). Wait time: Slowing down may be a way of speeding up. Journal of Teacher
Education, 37, 43-50.
101
Rutherford, P. (1998). Instruction for all students. Alexandria, VA: Just Ask Publications.
Saphier, J., & Haley, M. A. (1993) Summarizers: Activity structures to support integration and
retention of new learning. Carlisle, MA: Research for Better Teaching.
Smallwood, B. A. (2011). Marvelous Modifiers. Professional development material for Methods of
Teaching ESL, Certification course for Project EXCELL. (Unpublished material). Washington,
DC: Center for Applied Linguistics.
Stauffer, R. G. (1969). Directing reading maturity as a cognitive process. New York: Harper & Row.