Michigan Passes Official English Bill

Without any prior discussion, the Michigan House of Representatives has passed a bill, HB 4053, making English as the state’s official language of government. The vote was mainly along party lines with the Republican majority in support of the move.

 

6% of Michigan residents are immigrants
but 11% of its healthcare workers were born abroad

The bill requires that English be the official language used in all public documents and in all public meetings, but it does not prohibit state departments from translating official documents to languages other than English as long as the original documents are filed in English. There are some exceptions for tourism, business promotion, and the court system.

Michigan Democrats criticized the bill as divisive. “This is a fundamentally wrongheaded and exclusionary effort. It excludes people who are deaf and who use sign language and people who are immigrants,” said Rep. David LaGrand, D-Grand Rapids. “If we start signaling that we shun differences, this is a dark moment for our republic.”

Erin Parris-Dallia, president, Michigan World Language Association, was adamant in her opposition to the bill, “We oppose this bill and any other legislation that seeks to minimize the value of our state’s linguistic diversity, which is one of its great strengths. Proficiency in more than one language is no longer a “nice-to-have” skill, it is a “must-have” in today’s interconnected world. We are troubled by the message this bill sends to Michiganders who speak, study, and teach languages other than English, as well as to those outside our state who recognize the value of these skills.”

The sponsor of the bill, Rep. Tom Barrett (R-Potterville), commented, “Are we so divided that we can’t get 55 people to acknowledge that English is the fundamental language of this state? Diversity with no shared values drives us deeper into our different corners and silos.”

Nathan Bootz, English department chair at Alba Public Schools in Lansing, Michigan, described the move as “both folly and foolish,” adding: “Michigan has always been a diverse population across both peninsulas, and to say that English is the official language is a waste of time and resources. Does it really matter? Will this help unite our country or state? Will it improve the economy? Will it help protect our natural resources? Will it improve the situations of the impoverished? Let’s hope our lawmakers have a better plan to bring Michigan to greatness, than by making English our official language.”

The bill now moves to the state Senate in Michigan, where it is expected to pass, as the Republicans hold a 27-11 majority.

 

 

Learn English with Ted Talks

Video-Based Learning App Supports English Language Learning Courses

National Geographic Learning (NGL), a Cengage company, has announced the release of Learn English with TED Talks, an app developed in partnership with TED designed for students enrolled in programs to learn English as a second or foreign language.

The Learn English with TED Talks app gives students the English learning support they need to understand popular TED Talks and express themselves confidently in English. Designed to be used with any English course for young adults and adults, the app is accompanied by a classroom presentation tool and lesson plans that enable instructors to integrate independent student work on the app with a meaningful classroom experience.

“TED Talks inspire students, while modeling and motivating communication. This app will make it easier and more effective for English learning teachers to integrate TED Talks into their programs,” said Dennis Hogan, general manager of National Geographic Learning.

“Technology and innovation have enabled the learning experience to transcend the walls of the traditional classroom, as well as geographic boundaries,” said Alexander Broich, president, Cengage International. “We are pleased to partner with TED to further engage English Language Learners and help them find their voice in English.”

“TED is dedicated to spreading ideas, and creating a global community of people who want to engage with those ideas and share their own,” said Colin Helms, head of media at TED. “Our partnership with National Geographic Learning expands that community and helps students acquire skills that can change their lives for the better.”

National Geographic Learning offers a wide range of English Language Teaching materials that support instructors and engage students with content and digital learning tools. Its mission is to bring the world to the classroom and the classroom to life—including the world of ideas found in TED Talks. The Learn English with TED Talks app is available on the Apple 9+ and Android 5.0+ operating systems. For more information on the partnership, visit ngl.cengage.com/ted.

 

Celebrate Mother Language Day!

On International Mother Language Day 2018, celebrated on 21 February every year, UNESCO reiterates its commitment to linguistic diversity and invites its Member States to celebrate the day in as many languages as possible as a reminder that linguistic diversity and multilingualism are essential for sustainable development.

This year UNESCO also commemorates the 70th anniversary of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and its bold statement that “no discrimination can be made on the basis of language” and celebrates its translation into more than 500 languages. This is also supported in the 1960 Convention against Discrimination in Education which prohibits any discriminatory practices in education, notably discrimination based on language

UNESCO Director-General Audrey Azoulay in her message for the day said: “A language is far more than a means of communication; it is the very condition of our humanity. Our values, our beliefs and our identity are embedded within it. It is through language that we transmit our experiences, our traditions and our knowledge. The diversity of languages reflects the incontestable wealth of our imaginations and ways of life.”

UNESCO has been celebrating International Mother Language Day for nearly 20 years with the aim of preserving linguistic diversity and promoting mother tongue-based multilingual education.

Importance of mother tongue in education  

About 40% of the world’s population does not have access to an education in a language they speak or understand. Nevertheless, progress is being made in mother tongue-based multilingual education with growing understanding of its importance, particularly in early schooling, and more commitment to its development in public life.

Multilingual and multicultural societies exist through their languages which transmit and preserve traditional knowledge and cultures in a sustainable way.

UNESCO uses the day to focus on linguistic diversity and multilingualism as an integral part of sustainable development, and in particular to realize targets 4.6 and 4.7 of Sustainable Development Goal 4 (SDG4) on education.

The SDGs depend on linguistic diversity and multilingualism as a vital contribution to Global Citizenship Education as they promote intercultural connections and better ways of living together.

The event will be marked at UNESCO Headquarters, Paris by a language experts’ debate on the theme “Our languages, our assets” in collaboration with the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie (link is external). There will also be a presentation of the Global Education Monitoring Report on Language of instruction and literacy in multilingual contexts. Download the programme

The idea to celebrate International Mother Language Day was the initiative of Bangladesh. It was approved at the 1999 UNESCO General Conference and has been observed throughout the world since 2000. In Bangladesh the 21 February is the anniversary of the day when Bangladeshis fought for recognition for the Bangla language.

New Zealand Pushes for English as Official Language


A new bill has been submitted in New Zealand to make English the official language. New Zealand First submitted the bill. The nationalist, populist political party recently formed a coalition with the Labor Party, which currently holds the Prime Minister seat with Jacinda Arden. The proposed bill, titled English an Official Language of New Zealand Bill, would give English the same legal status in New Zealand as te reo Māori and New Zealand Sign Language.

While English is the de facto official and predominant language, much how it is in the U.S., it currently does not have official legal status. The te reo Māori became the first official language of New Zealand in 1987. The language is spoke by the indigenous Māori people, which make up around 15% of the population. In 2006 New Zealand Sign Language also became officially recognized.

New Zealand First MP Clayton Mitchell drafted the bill, and thinks that the proposal makes sense for the country. “It’s common sense to officially recognize the language that the vast majority of New Zealanders use on a daily basis,” he said.

ESL Students Outperforming Native Speakers in England


Pupils with English as a second language (ESL), outperform pupils whose mother tongue is English in the UK General Certificate of Secondary Education (GCSE), data shows. Data released by the Department of Education shows that ESL students have a higher attainment score than native speakers by the time they are 16.

The Department of Education measured English skills in terms of what is called Attainment 8. Each student is given an overall score based on the GCSE grades they received in 8 subjects (with English and math counting twice). Each grade is given a certain number of points that are tallied up. This year, the average Attainment 8 score of children who speak English as a second language was 46.8, and it was 46.3 for native speakers.

The figures also showed that many secondary schools in England are underperforming, with 365 falling below the government’s minimum standards. London has the lowest proportion of underperforming schools while the North East had the highest.

Meeting Teachers’ Needs to Help Dyslexic Students Succeed

Shantell Thaxton Berrett explains why teachers need targeted professional development and resources to best serve students with language-based learning disabilities

The beginning of a new year always brings new education policies and strategies. U.S. educators currently find themselves in a rapidly changing time for dyslexia legislation, and many schools are in the process of transforming the type and level of support they offer to these students. In 2015, the Office of Special Education and Rehabilitative Services created a policy identifying dyslexia, dysgraphia, and dyscalculia as specific language disabilities.

Today, 39 states have statewide dyslexia laws, and many others have handbooks or resource guides. Although schools are taking steps to help dyslexic students, change does not happen overnight. State mandates, unfortunately, are not always funded, which makes it difficult for schools to obtain the resources they need to help this group of students.
As a literacy specialist and a parent of a child with dyslexia and dysgraphia, what I have found most successful to help my child succeed has been a solid relationship with the school and learning as much as I possibly could about the language disability. For teachers, too, knowledge is key. The results from state-mandated screening provide schools the information they need to identify gaps in phonological awareness and decoding, allowing districts to identify what type of intervention will be the most effective to help students with dyslexia succeed.

The Necessity of Dyslexia PD

One in five students has a language-based learning disability, the most common of which is dyslexia. Students with dyslexia are often not identified until they are older, so they are not offered proper services and intervention until after the ideal time for intervention (kindergarten and first grade) has passed. This is called the dyslexia paradox.

There is a very strong connection between pre-literacy skills and reading skills like emergent literacy skills, phonological processing, alphabetic knowledge, print concepts, rapid automatized naming, and language skills. To be truly effective, teachers should be measuring these skills when students are in K–1, during an early screening assessment, which is part of the mandates that some schools are working to implement.
Even at this young age, students will begin to demonstrate signs of dyslexia, which teachers can be trained to identify.

Some indicators may be:
difficulty in learning the alphabet, including the names and sounds of letters;
difficulty recognizing rhymes;
difficulty telling left from right; and
not being able to remember instructions they have been given in class.

However, no two people with dyslexia are exactly the same, and each student may manifest different combinations of signs. This is why it is important for teachers to have comprehensive preparation in identifying these students, so they can provide them with the best instruction possible.

Instruction: What, How, and Who

In 2000, the National Reading Panel established five core components for literacy instruction. Many mainstream classrooms and schools are trying to follow these but are using phonics instruction that is more implicit, is part of a core reading program that addresses it more incidentally, or is not necessarily aligned with science-based reading research.

Phonics instruction needs to be explicit, systematic, and sequential. Educators may think they are covering phonics, but may not be aware that the way the phonics is instructed is what determines the level of success for students, particularly those with processing deficits such as dyslexia. Because of this, students are still at risk of not developing core language and literacy skills and falling behind as they move up grade levels.

The good news is that some new laws come with funding for certain specialists. In the past, if teachers wanted to seek dyslexia certification, they had to find their own funding. With the recognition of dyslexia as a language disability, more schools are providing professional development through short seminars.

Resources for Teachers

District-level administrators are supposed to be the ones enforcing and implementing these new mandates to support dyslexic students, but they sometimes struggle due to lack of government support and funding—as well as lack of knowledge. Some administrators I have worked with are hungry for “the right answer” in supporting these students to meet the mandate, but there is no one action schools can take to support these students. While research has shown that the one thing that does need to happen is explicit, systematic, sequential phonics instruction, there are also other elements that need to be in place. Teachers’ knowledge about the disability is key for students’ success.

One resource that has been extremely helpful for administrators is the Knowledge and Practice Standards for Teachers of Reading, created by the International Dyslexia Association. It is a very specific guideline for K–3 educators, providing a standard of what students need to know and how teachers can support them. The research shows a high correlation between teachers’ knowledge and students’ outcomes, which should be a huge motivator for districts to provide sufficient professional development to all educators.
I have committed my career to helping students with dyslexia succeed.

After my child was diagnosed, I recognized my own need for more understanding to better help those individuals with dyslexia, which led to me completing my MA in education for reading science, as well as earning a dyslexia certification. I now serve as the dyslexia specialist for Reading Horizons. For teachers to support dyslexic students, they need in-depth professional development on teaching core reading skills including phonological awareness, decoding, an understanding of structured language, and literacy in general.
To provide the professional development that teachers need, we created new online training modules that are spread out over an entire year.

The online modules provide flexibility so educators can complete the courses on their own time and deepen their knowledge around general literacy and research to support students with dyslexia.

Administrators, educators, and parents can all contribute to supporting these students and ensuring their success both at home and at school. Knowing that there are support, resources, and new mandates for students with dyslexia and other language disabilities gives me hope that change within the educational system is possible.

References

https://www2.ed.gov/policy/speced/guid/idea/memosdcltrs/guidance-on-dyslexia-10-2015.pdf
http://www.dyslexiacenterofutah.org/dyslexia/statistics/
https://www.gse.harvard.edu/news/uk/16/06/fixing-failure-model
https://www.readinghorizons.com/reading-strategies/teaching-reading-strategies/
https://dyslexiaida.org/knowledge-and-practices/
https://www.readinghorizons.com/accelerate/online-professional-development

Shantell Thaxton Berrett is the lead professional development and dyslexia specialist for Reading Horizons. She has a BA in English teaching and an MA in education with a reading science concentration and dyslexia certification. She is trained in LETRS, CERI, and both basic and advanced training/certification in Orton-Gillingham. She is a featured speaker at dyslexia conferences, sharing effective reading strategies for every learner. She is passionate about raising awareness about the importance of effective reading instruction for every student, especially for individuals with dyslexia.

Lead with Languages & Get a Free Multilingual Baby Book

February 2018 is Lead with Languages Advocacy Month. Throughout this month, we will be celebrating the successes of language advocates from around the country, and we encourage you to share how you are encouraging language learning using #LangMag and #LeadWithLanguages

At Language Magazine, we believe that every child deserves the opportunities offered by speaking multiple languages, so we are offering all public and community-funded preschools in California a free copy of Levi’s Book of Barnyard Animalsthe perfect tool to help speakers of other languages instill multilingualism in young children. This 6″ x 6″ board book also enables monolingual parents and teachers to open children’s minds to new and heritage languages. It even comes with downloadable audio files, so you don’t have to worry about pronunciation. 

Together, we’re creating a new generation of Americans competent in other languages and cultures and fully equipped to compete and succeed in a global economy.

The first step to realizing that dream is the introduction of additional languages to babies and toddlers just as their cognition systems are developing.

Preschool administrators can request their completely free copy (no shipping/packing charges) by email to dan@languagemagazine.com

Additional copies can be ordered at https://languagemagazine.com/levis-books/

Great Teachers Aren’t Born, They’re Taught


Mary Thrond explores trends in world language development for teachers (Teaching Works, University of Michigan, www.teachingworks.org)

Commissioned by a bipartisan group of members of Congress “to examine the nation’s current capacity in languages and recommend actions to ensure excellence in all languages as well as international education and research” (vii), the American Academy of Arts and Sciences Commission on Language Learning released the report America’s Languages: Investing in Language Education for the 21st Century in 2017, which found that “the ability to understand, speak, read, and write in world languages, in addition to English, is critical to success in business, research, and international relations in the 21st century” (viii).

The overarching recommendation was to establish “a national strategy to improve access to as many languages as possible for people of every region, ethnicity, and socioeconomic background—to value language education as a persistent national need” (viii). However, they cited a lack of teachers as a major obstacle to the accomplishment of this recommendation, with 44 states reporting a shortage of qualified language teachers.

Not surprisingly, one of the report’s key suggestions was to “increase the number of language teachers at all levels of education so that every child in every state has the opportunity to learn a language in addition to English” (ix). This article will look at how to best prepare these badly needed teachers with education programs and how to support existing teachers, whether they be novice, emerging, or advanced, in order to keep them in the profession.

After some research and some help from experts in the field, here is a look at existing tools and resources, current trends, and insights into the future of professional development for world language teachers.

The well-established tools of the trade, the textbooks for most teacher-education programs, are Languages and Learners: Making the Match: World Language Instruction in K–8 Classrooms and Beyond, by Helena Curtain and Carol Ann Dahlberg, and Teacher’s Handbook: Contextualized Language Instruction, by Judith Shrum and Eileen Glisan, both in their fifth editions. These textbooks provide insight into second-language acquisition (SLA) research as well as effective pedagogical strategies. Created with a pragmatic approach, they go beyond theory and serve not only as primers for beginning teachers but as guides for ongoing professional development for experienced teachers as well.

Effectiveness

Similarly, the Teacher Effectiveness for Language Learning Project (tellproject.com) provides a framework, tools, resources, and a community network for language teachers. The framework identifies teacher characteristics and behaviors that represent the model world language teacher. It is meant to guide teacher growth toward that model. Seven domains are divided into three stages of preparing, planning, and supporting student learning: preparing for student learning; environment and planning; advancing student learning; the learning experience; performance and feedback; learning tools; and supporting student learning: collaboration and professionalism. Each domain is broken down into characteristics presented as can-do statements.

The STELLA modules created by the federally funded STARTALK program are an excellent companion to the TELL Project, as they provide tasks and resources to develop those characteristics of the model teacher.

These modules allow teachers to self-assess and set their own goals toward growth. This shift from teaching to learning in order to meet the needs of the learner is supported by the backward design model (Wiggins and McTighe, 2005). The can-do statements developed by the National Council of State Supervisors for Languages (NCSSFL) and the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Languages (ACTFL)  allow language learners to identify and set learning goals in language and intercultural proficiency. Educators use them to create communication learning goals around the interpretive, interpersonal, and presentational modes for curriculum, unit, and lesson plans. The can-do statements are just one of a plethora of staff development resources available through ACTFL.


Paul Sandrock, ACTFL director of education, addresses the role of assessment in professional development: “Today’s language educators need to help learners, their parents, and administrators understand what counts in charting progress toward higher levels of proficiency in using language. Different forms of assessment are needed to match the information one is trying to discover. Educators need to identify the purpose behind the assessment in order to design the assessment that provides the best match.”
“Learning checks are those quick responses that indicate if the learners ‘got it.’ The key question is: did the learners pick up the vocabulary, structures, or language functions taught? The response may be physical (thumb up/thumb down), a selection (hold up fingers to indicate number one, two, three, or four as the right choice), or another indication where the educator can scan the room and decide if the content needs reteaching or not.

“Formative assessments provide evidence that learners can apply or manipulate what they have learned. This is where learners apply the vocabulary, structures, or language functions they have learned in a manner that helps the educator decide if learners can use what was taught in a way that is less and less scaffolded or supported by the educator. The educator reflects on the results to decide what adjustments to instruction or what future practice may be necessary.

“Summative assessments demonstrate what learners have acquired. Summative assessments answer the important question: what can learners do with what they have learned (and perform independently of the educator)? In the summative assessment, learners show their progress toward the desired proficiency target.

“In the classroom, educators support learning so that learners can demonstrate higher levels of proficiency than that which they can reach independently. This is performance where learners practice and become increasingly familiar with the content within the thematic focus of each unit.

This practice raises the level of language performance. When the next unit begins with a new focus to explore, the learners’ performance drops, until the practice and familiarization again raise performance back up to a slightly higher level. Proficiency is ‘independent use of language.’ The flow of assessment in the classroom world of performance (from learning checks to formative assessments to summative assessments) provides indicators of learners’ level of proficiency.”


Donna Clementi, classroom teacher for over 30 years, now leading workshops for world language teachers, and co-author of The Keys to Planning for Learning: Effective Curriculum, Unit, and Lesson Design, remarks that “Teaching world languages in the 21st century has expanded our knowledge base of teaching and learning. Research around the world about second-language acquisition and how the brain learns is influencing how we think about structuring instruction, assessment, and curriculum.

“There are 16 National Language Resource Centers under the Department of Education’s Title VI across the U.S. conducting research and designing resources to improve world language education. Various organizations and universities are offering specialized conferences on topics such as immersion and dual-language immersion, intercultural communicative competence, technology-assisted language learning, and heritage language learners to allow participants to explore a topic in depth.

“In the past year, ACTFL has published Enacting the Work of Language Instruction: High-Leverage Teaching Practices by Eileen W. Glisan and Richard Donato, highlighting high-leverage teaching practices in the world language classroom, and While We’re on the Topic: BVP on Language, Acquisition, and Classroom Practice by Bill VanPatten on principles underlying contemporary communicative language teaching. These examples underline the critical need for ongoing, high-quality professional development so that educators can make informed decisions about the most effective ways to teach world languages.”
Clementi shares recommendations: “Through my work with a variety of schools and districts, I find that the most successful professional development initiatives are the ones that are designed with input from the world language teachers and a clear plan to sustain exploration of the identified professional development topic over an extended period of time.

Successful plans articulate why the topic was selected and the intended outcomes. Teachers need regular opportunities to meet together to share efforts to implement what they are learning through professional development and how well what they tried worked. The overall plan includes time for the entire school or department to hear a common message about the topic, integrated with a variety of options that teachers can pursue individually and in small groups to further their understanding of the topic.

Groups might complete a book study to gain important background information or read and discuss articles from Foreign Language Annals and/or The Language Educator related to the identified topic. Technology can facilitate these discussions to allow teachers to share ideas from the articles and ask questions synchronously and asynchronously.

“The internet includes a rich library of resources including webinars, classroom videos, online discussions, and virtual conferences, giving teachers the opportunity to pursue aspects of the identified professional development topic of personal interest to them. The use of digital badges to document an individual’s professional development experiences and learning is spreading as more people understand the potential to meet teachers’ individual needs for learning. This potential to build in choice as part of a school’s or district’s professional development increases teachers’ interest and engagement and builds community among the teachers, as everyone is bringing important knowledge and understandings to the in-person meetings to share.”

Teaching with Tech

America’s Languages: Investing in Language Education for the 21st Century suggested that digital technologies could help address the shortage of teachers, yet, “technology should not be seen as a replacement. Any successful program in language education requires at least some direct communication with a qualified instructor to teach complicated concepts like context, speaker intent, and shades of meaning” (2017). Twenty-first-century learners are particularly responsive to and motivated by the use of technology.

Language apps for computers and smartphones allow students to access language in their own time. Advances are being made in voice recognition, artificial intelligence, and human–systems interface design. In the future, “language education will continue to be influenced by [these] advances in technology” (2017).


Marlene Johnshoy, web manager and online education program director of one of the National Language Resource Centers, the Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition (CARLA) at the University of Minnesota, has created an online STARTALK course for teachers who want to learn to teach online. She and her colleagues collaborate to allow the teachers to first experience learning online as they learn to teach language online, which shows them what their students will experience when they offer their own courses entirely online. CARLA offers 15 different summer institutes for the professional development of language teachers, plus the STARTALK program.

Three of those have a technology focus, three of them are offered exclusively online, one has a remote synchronous option to a face-to-face course, and many of them have online components or resources. Johnshoy adds, “ACTFL offers online courses through virtual learning modules and online courses. The ACTFL Special Interest Group (SIG) for Distance Learning is starting a mentor program for new online teachers and has also created online lessons for the mentor/mentee pairs to work through, which include three series of materials the NFLRC has developed on the following topics: designing interaction for online language learning, online materials development, and assessing online language learning.
“All of the lessons and resources are free and openly available to all language educators. In addition, more and more teacher preparation programs are including information about teaching online with the increasing need for teachers to know how to teach online. Many institutions are now offering completely or mostly online programs and certificates with maybe a summer course or two that are face to face; for example, Kean University is now offering a mostly online master’s in Hindi and Urdu pedagogy.”


Carol Gaab, founder of Fluency Matters, which publishes comprehension-based novels, has been providing teacher training in comprehensible input (CI)–based strategies since 1996. She summarizes her experience and her vision for the future with the following comments: “There is no doubt there has been a major shift in the focus of professional development as it relates to language instruction. In the ‘90s, I took Dr. Stephen Krashen’s message of comprehensible input and Blaine Ray’s notion of total physical response storytelling [now known as teaching proficiency through reading and storytelling] on the road, and more often than not, I encountered resistance. In 2018, however, the doors to acquisition-driven, CI-centered instruction have been blown open by thousands of educators and researchers who have spent the last 20 years searching for answers to the mysteries of acquisition and how to align the principles of second-language acquisition to their classroom practices. Today, progressive language educators use scads of CI-based approaches to facilitate acquisition.

“The internet has played a huge role in the shift to acquisition-centered instruction. Dr. Bill VanPatten hosts a weekly live internet talk show to discuss the underpinnings of second-language acquisition, and numerous other acquisition-minded educators publish blogs, webinars, and podcasts dedicated to SLA and CI-focused approaches. I suspect that the professional development of old will be eradicated by 2025—’old’ meaning the focus on ‘practice’ (vs. authentic communication), on contrived approaches that result in consciously learned (memorized) language and NOT in proficiency, and on using L2 in order to fulfill some underlying grammar-based agenda.”

Cultural Context

There is an increasing awareness of acknowledging the background, experience, and culture of the learner, as well as of building an awareness of one’s own frame of reference as a teacher (Glynn, Wesely, and Wassel, 2014). Christine Sleeter (2017) recommends that teacher preparation programs require teacher candidates to complete at least one ethnic studies course. She suggests that teachers need to gain culturally responsive and ethnic studies content in order to work with it effectively.

She also believes that prospective teachers need guidance to get to know the cultural context their students come from, as well as to be familiar with their communities. This can help them to engage their students. When students can identify with their own life experiences and interests, they excel academically. She recognizes that prospective teachers also need to develop a sense of themselves as cultural and racialized beings, so that they can develop a comfort level in bringing up discussions of racialized issues in the classroom.


Carol Ann Dahlberg, co-author of Languages and Learners: Making the Match: World Language Instruction in K–8 Classrooms and Beyond, expresses her concern to keep language learning relevant and joyful. “Teachers of world languages today have more guidelines and resources at their disposal than ever before, a constantly evolving set of principles and checklists. Conscientious teachers seek to use this information for the benefit of their curriculum and their students. With so many ‘boxes’ to check, however, we can miss the very elements that make all learning effective and meaningful.

“As we prepare teachers to create curriculum and lessons guided by structure and accountability, we should also empower them to build in important elements that bring joy to teaching and learning. We need to incorporate qualities of imagination, wonder, surprise, discovery, curiosity, creativity, and play to bring life and purpose to language learning. As we seek to give greater emphasis to these less measurable elements, it can be helpful to keep these questions, based loosely on the work of Kieran Egan, in mind as teachers plan:
What is most important about this topic/unit/lesson?
What is affectively engaging about it?
Why should it matter to these learners?

They can serve as a starting point to remind us of the qualities that can make language learning relevant and joyful.”

In sum, professional development for world language teachers is trending to focus on the learner. Key elements are the development of an understanding of second-language acquisition, a cultural awareness of students’ backgrounds as well as one’s own, and goal-setting.

Assessment needs to be meaningful to students and to lead to higher proficiency. Teachers need to stay abreast of advances in technology and to continue to make learning relevant and joyful. Staying connected through professional organizations, conferences, periodicals, online groups, and newsletters has never been more important.

References

Commission on Language Learning. America’s Languages: Investing in Language Education for the 21st Century. Cambridge, MA: American Academy of Arts and Sciences, 2017.
Glynn, C., P. Wesely, and B. Wassel. Words and Actions: Teaching Languages through the Lens of Social Justice. Alexandria, VA: ACTFL, 2014.
Sleeter, C. “Designing Lessons and Lesson Sequences with a Focus on Ethnic Studies or Culturally Responsive Curriculum.” Working paper, TeachingWorks, University of Michigan, November 2017. http://www.teachingworks.org/images/files/TeachingWorks_Sleeter.pdf
Wiggins G. and J. McTighe. Understanding by Design, second edition. Alexandria, VA: ASCD, 2005.

Mary Thrond supervises teachers in concurrent enrollment courses in Spanish for Southwest Minnesota State University and directs a STARTALK Chinese program for teachers and students in the summer.

Bill in Congress Aims to Help ELL Teacher Shortage


The Reaching English Learners Act has been introduced in Congress in hopes of creating a solution to the national shortage of ELL teachers. The act would create a grant program under Title II of the Higher Education Act. The grants will be awarded on a competitive basis to eligible teachers. The grants aim to ensure that teachers possess the knowledge necessary to effectively instruct English learners.

The grants will be awarded for up to five years and do the following:

  1. develop or strengthen an undergraduate, postbaccalaureate, or master’s teacher preparation program by integrating strategies for teaching English learners into the education curriculum and academic content;
  2. provide teacher candidates participating in a program with skills related to helping English learners achieve high levels in kindergarten, elementary schools and secondary schools;
  3. help ELLs achieve English proficiency;
  4. aid teachers in appropriately identifying and meeting the specific learning needs of children with disabilities who are English learners;
  5. aid teachers in recognizing and addressing the social and emotional needs of English learners;
  6. provide funds for teachers to promote parental, family, and community engagement in educational programs that serve English learners;
  7. provide work-based learning opportunities for teacher candidates participating in the program;
  8. provide teacher candidates with the required coursework to qualify for an English-as-a second-language endorsement or initial teaching credential

With at least 32 states in the U.S. suffering from ELL teaching shortages, the doors the grant would open could help struggling school districts find qualified bilingual teachers.

What’s Hot in Literacy

Mother-tongue literacy, access, and equity under-recognized

A new report released by the International Literacy Association (ILA) reveals wide gaps between what’s truly valuable to educators around the globe and what’s getting the most attention from the media and policymakers.

The ILA 2018 What’s Hot in Literacy Report provides a snapshot of what 2,097 literacy professionals from 91 countries and territories deem the most critical topics to advancing literacy worldwide.

The survey asked respondents to rate 17 literacy-related topics in terms of what’s hot and what’s important. Topping the hot list for the second year in a row: Digital Literacy, despite it dropping in terms of importance from No. 8 in 2017 to No. 13.

On the other hand, Access to Books and Content, Mother Tongue Literacy, and Equity in Literacy Education ranked significantly higher in importance than they did on heat. These gaps reflect the challenges of teaching in today’s world, such as a rise in racial, ethnic, and cultural diversity; a growing number of English learners; and an unequitable distribution of resources in classrooms— and illustrate a growing number of unmet needs in these areas.

“We learned that many educators, working with increasingly diverse student bodies, do not have sufficient training, parental support, or resources to respond to student needs,” said ILA executive director Marcie Craig Post. “This survey helps us to identify where more support is needed so we can provide solutions.”

Respondents recognized positive early literacy experiences, family engagement, and professional preparation and development as among the most critical factors for advancing literacy for all.

Equity and access go hand in hand

 

Respondents indicated not only that issues of both equity and access should be a higher priority, but many also remarked that schools bear the responsibility of providing equitable opportunities and resources for all students.

 

  • According to 86% of respondents, Equity in Literacy Education is extremely or very important, placing it in the No. 2
  • Access to Books and Content—giving students access to content and books that are relevant for all learners, for both pleasure and academic reading—is rated extremely or very important by 82% of all
  • Outside of the U.S., 71% of respondents said Mother Tongue Literacy is very or extremely important, compared with 62% of respondents from the U.S. where respondents are also less likely to say this topic is
  • Strategies for Differentiating Instruction—tailoring instruction to accommodate each individual student’s needs—ranks among the top five most important and hottest topics overall.

The community–literacy connection

 

One of the greatest predictors of lifelong success, early literacy experiences create the foundation for learning in all subject areas. Many respondents remarked on the importance of exposing young children to books, words, and stories—early and often. Respondents also noted the importance of involving families and community-based organizations in these early literacy activities.

 

  • Early Literacy remains the No. 1 most important topic for the second year and ranks as the second hottest topic
  • Only 35% of respondents said Family Engagement is very or extremely hot, whereas 79% of respondents believe that it is very or extremely

Excellence in literacy education

Another important aspect of equitable education is ensuring teachers’ readiness to respond to their students’ unique literacy strengths and needs. Respondents expressed that improvement initiatives often focus too much on standards and not enough on the conditions of teaching and learning in schools. Results show a desire for more preparation and knowledge for wider support and involvement across communities.

 

  • Teacher Preparation holds the highest gap among the topics, ranking No. 3 among important topics but No. 12 among hot
  • According to 73% of respondents, Administrators as Literacy Leaders is very or extremely important, but only 29% said that it’s very or extremely
  • Often associated with standardized tests, Summative Assessments—measurements of student achievement and acquisition of literacy skills at the conclusion of an instructional period—is viewed as a hot topic (at No. 3) but the least important (coming in at No. 17).

The full survey findings are available in the ILA 2018 What’s Hot in Literacy Report, available at literacyworldwide.org/whatshot.