Sharing
Literacy Lesson Design and Implementation Through Professional Collaboration
When planning lessons for diverse students, the teacher
must first assess the students in order to know the academic level of the
students. ELL students may have
difficulty understanding the spoken word in English so it is ideal for teachers
to use pictures or hand gestures when communicating with ELL students. Students should be encouraged to speak their
home language in the classroom and at home, because it helps students to
successfully become bilingual (Bauer, 2009).
It has been my experience that the Hispanic parents of my students do
not encourage their children to speak Spanish at home but the older household
members still speak the home language to the students (Bauer, 2009). So often the students are caught between two
worlds of language so it is the responsibility of literacy teachers to provide
a safe passage for these students into the world of English attainment.
I have gained a large amount if insight during this
course and I have learned effective strategies to reach my diverse
learners. Teachers should practice
anti-bias education because every
student deserves the best chance to acquire and excellent education regardless
of their culture and/or economic status (Derman-Sparks & Edwards, 2010). In order for diverse students to thrive in
the classroom they must feel safe, secure, and accepted. This course made me examine my own beliefs of
how to infuse culture responsiveness into lesson planning. I never realized until participating in this
course how important it is to invite students to use their home language when
they are expressing themselves in the classroom. I also learned that I needed to include
pictures with vocabulary words and the language should represent the students.
Students bring a wide variety of experiencess to the classroom and it should be
the goal of the teacher to find out about the strengths that students bring (Mazur
& Doran, 2010). It is a great idea
to conduct oral interviews in order to find out information about the student’s
background, family customs, and what topics hold the student’s interest (Indiana Department of Education, Office of English Language Learning
and Migrant Education, n.d.) I plan to utilize all of these literacy
strategies in order to ensure all of my students to succeed.
Lesson
Plan Submission
I chose the book Peter’s
Chair by Ezra Jack Keats for this lesson because it relates to home
experiences that are familiar for English and Spanish speaking students. It also contains great vocabulary words
(stretched, fussing, cradle, whispered, muttered, chair, believe, and special). The story tells of a little boy name Peter
who suddenly has a little sister and he notices that his life is changing.
The lesson starts with examining the book cover and
asking the students to discuss what they see.
Next I told the students about some of my favorite toys and invited the
students to mention their favorite toys as I wrote the responses on a
chart. Then we discussed what it meant
to outgrow toys and what feelings may arise.
Students are more engaged when stories are connected to home life. when
they connect the story to home life.
Next I introduced the vocabulary words (The words were written in Spanish
and English along with pictures. During
the reading we took a “picture walk” and we made predictions together about the
story. I asked “I wonder” questions and
discussed what Peter may have be feeling during the transitions in the
story. After reading we examined the
prediction chart and then we checked the validity of the predictions. Next I administered a shared writing exercise so the students will be able to view
how sentences are formed and how to apply phonemic awareness skills. Interactive writing is a way to show students
how to convey meaning to writing and it reinforces the English language to ELL
students (Williams & Pilonieta, 2012).
Interactive writing is a great model to show my young kindergartners how
to initiate writing and put ideas to paper.
After this exercise the students drew pictures about what happened in
the beginning, middle, and end of the story.
This lesson focused on the following Common Core State Standards:
RL.K.1- With prompting
and support ask and answer questions about key details in a text.
RLK.2 – With prompting
and support retell familiar stories, including key details.
RL.K.3-With prompting and
support identify characters, settings, and major events in a story.
RL.K.4- Ask and answer
questions about unknown words in a text.
The students were evaluated by teacher observation
process and how well the students are able to discuss the story and if they
could accurately identify what happened in the beginning, middle, and at the
end of the story. and if they understand the process of checking predictions. Most of this lesson went well because the
students were excited and completely engaged.
To my disappointment the majority of the students could not identify the
different parts of the story accurately.
I will use the overall strategies from this lesson but next time I will
make sure that I model how to identify the beginning, middle, and the end of
the story.
References
Bauer, E.
B. (2009). Informed additive literacy instruction for ELLs. Reading Teacher, 62(5),
446–448.
Derman-Sparks, L., Edwards, J. O., &
National Association for the Education of Young Children. (2010). Anti-bias
education for young children and ourselves. Washington, DC: National
Association for the Education of Young Children.
Deussen, T., Autio, E., Miller, B., Lockwood,
A., & Stewart, V. (2008). What teachers should know about instruction for
English language learners. Retrieved from http://educationnorthwest.org/resource/669
Indiana
Department of Education, Office of English Language Learning and Migrant
Education. (n.d.).Authentic assessment.
Retrieved September 4, 2014, from http://www.msdwt.k12.in.us/msd/wp-content/uploads/2011/10/authentic_assessment.pdf
Mazur,
A., & Doran, P. (2010). Teaching
diverse learners: Principles for best practice. Thousand Oaks, CA: Corwin
Press
Williams, C., & Pilonieta, P. (2012). Using interactive
writing instruction with kindergarten and first-grade English language
learners. Early Childhood Education Journal, 40(3),
145–150.
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