Best Practices to Support ELLs

 

Teachers of all ages and types of learners strive to use best practices using a wide array of new research, theories, and classroom resources and materials. We know that English language learners can experience difficulties acquiring reading skills for a variety of reasons, and there are many strategies that teachers can employ to prevent their ELL students from falling behind. When possible, alterations can be made to teaching materials to fit the needs of ELLs, but when this is not possible with required reading curriculum, different strategies may be utilized in order to engage students and make reading materials relevant to their lives. Connecting learning to prior knowledge and experiences, encouraging collaboration and scaffolding through peer-mediated instruction, relating learning to real world contexts, and including many visual components during instruction are ways to provide ELL students with deeper learning experiences.

 

Providing Relevant Teaching Materials and Strategies

                Teachers of English language learners must provide engaging learning materials and employ strategies that meet their students’ needs. This includes fostering collaboration among peers, providing useful teacher feedback to students, and including teaching and testing materials in the students’ first language. Previewing reading assignments with students and taking more time to ensure comprehension of learning goals and rubrics can also help. Story previews are an example of this practice. Distributing basal readers or individual books so that each student can follow along at their own pace, reviewing illustrations, defining the genre of the reading material, reviewing key vocabulary, and making a series of predictions based on an initial overview of the text are examples of previewing activities that can help set ELL students up for success (Pacheco, 2010). Story previews can also allow students to express their musings, make guesses about upcoming story events, and draw on their current knowledge base in a relatively risk-free context (p 308).

Using visual aids and physical artifacts, such as drawings, photographs, graphs, and even other visual aspects to teaching such as body language and spoken intonation and cue can aid in acquiring deeper knowledge by offering expressions of ideas that are universally understood (Li, 2013). Making alterations to activities such as allowing students to use multimodal expressions as a response to writing projects or assignments is another idea that involves the use of visual artifacts. Students can make traditional or digital drawings, graphics, comics, or bring photographs from home as valid communications of ideas in response to a writing prompt.

In order to make assignments and content relevant to English language learners, teachers can employ different tactics to engage all students in standard reading curriculum that is often only relatable towards English-speaking students. Writing tasks that require students to relate themselves to reading materials can be used in order to promote deeper interpretation of texts, such as analyzing characters motives, challenges, and personality traits in stories (Pacheco, p 305). Simplifying writing tasks into manageable steps and stages that build up to a complex skill, modeling reading and writing skills and processes explicitly, and providing quality verbal and written teacher feedback will help students avoid becoming overwhelmed and prevent cognitive overload during difficult reading and writing activities (Lee, 2018).

Cultural-historical theory, which sees development and learning as primarily a social process, is a basis for many helpful practices used for English language learners. It is important for ELL students to be understood by their peers and teachers in order for them to learn. Teachers can facilitate this by activating background knowledge during lessons that relates specifically to ELL students, as well as listening to students’ stories about their background, culture, and home life, visiting ELL homes and communities, and by participating in cultural events (Li, p 218). When teachers make efforts to connect to their students, learning is more meaningful.

 

Assessments and Interventions

English language learners can experience incorrect interventions that do not reflect their academic needs, such as being placed in special education programs when it is not necessary. Some ELL students are identified as having a primary language impairment (PLI), which is appropriate only for students with disabilities affecting their underlying ability to learn any language (Pieretti, 2016). In order for ELLs to receive effective and accurate instruction and intervention, classroom teachers must ensure that they provide a description of the student’s academic performance to a speech language pathologist. Classroom teachers, speech language pathologists, and parents need to be involved in the process of pre-evaluation. SLPs should gather a complete case history of the student, which includes parent reports. Parent reports are identified by research as valid tools that help distinguish a language difference from PLI. Perceptions of parents, teachers, and other adults in children’s lives can provide crucial and accurate information to help identify proper assessments and interventions for English language learners. (p 118).

 

Providing Supportive Learning Environments

                Providing a supportive learning environment is considered to be a best teaching practice for all classrooms. When the needs of English language learners are considered specifically, supportive learning environments will require extra adjustments to teaching materials and strategies. It is also important for English language learners to know that teacher perceptions of them are positive and inclusive of the funds of knowledge that they bring to their learning environment, rather than being viewed as having a deficit in knowledge. An affectively supportive learning environment (generally referring to a student’s emotions) ensures that student’s motivation to learn, self-esteem, and comfort level in the classroom are prioritized (Li, 2013). An affectively supportive learning environment includes frequent verbal encouragement, reinforcement, and positive feedback in order to alleviate anxiety that English language learners can experience if they are struggling in reading, especially reading aloud or speaking in front of the class. Peer perception is also important, and fostering collaborative learning is a teaching practice that can instill confidence and help academic success. Peer-mediated instruction is a strategy that can have multiple purposes, and some research has shown that it can be effective to utilize it to strengthen both social and academic skills. ELLs should receive peer-mediated instruction in Spanish, or if it is in English, then instructional materials can be in Spanish. ELLs can demonstrate improved outcomes in phonemic awareness, fluency, vocabulary, and comprehension if they receive peer-mediated instruction in Spanish (Pyle, 2017). Allowing students to discuss learning objectives and instructional materials with their peers will help build social and academic skills. It is important as a teacher to organize and facilitate a wide range of practices, such as extension activities, informal conversations, and partner read alouds (Pacheco, 2010). Partner and group work is beneficial for students to learn both formal and informal ways of speaking English, and extension activities in addition to basic curriculum broaden learning opportunities and provide students with extra time to practice skills.

                Teacher mediation is another practice in every classroom that fosters the acquisition of literacy skills in a supportive learning environment. Joint teacher-student mediation of reading activity is accomplished through conversations, whether formal or informal, and these conversations are sources of literacy learning (Pacheco, 2010). Teacher mediation can help students understand abstract concepts, particularly during a reading activity where unfamiliar words or phrases in English appear in either shared reading material or while reading individually. It is important to define and contextualize unfamiliar words, figures of speech, or concepts for English language learners in order for them to participate in important meaning-making.

                Below is a link to Colorin Colorado, a website geared toward both parents and teachers of English language learners. This link sends the reader to a page of classroom strategies and tools, including videos and articles related to this topic. The YouTube video entitled “Building Upon Student Strengths” is pertinent to best practices for English language learners.

https://www.colorincolorado.org/teaching-ells/ell-strategies-best-practices/classroom-strategies-and-tools

               

                English language learners face learning challenges in the classroom that can be mediated by teachers and even peers. Encouraging social collaboration, relating content to backgrounds of ELL students, and taking extra steps to connect to students by having informal and formal conversations are all examples of how teachers can mediate learning. Ensuring that ELL students receive proper interventions from other school professionals and accommodations that fit their needs is crucial to facilitate a strong academic career, especially when considering that they often do not receive correct interventions, such as being placed in special education programs or being identified as having a primary language impairment. Classroom strategies such as creating projects that relate students’ background knowledge to curriculum content are essential for ELL comprehension development in reading and writing. Teachers should also strive to provide a learning environment that works to include English language learners’ funds of knowledge rather than viewing their knowledge as a deficit. Peer-mediation instruction can allow students to develop social skills and academic skills simultaneously, there should be a focus on social aspects of learning.

 

References

Lee, S. (2018). Scaffolding Evidence‐Based Writing for English Learners in Three Steps. The Reading Teacher, 72(1), 99-106.

Li, N. (2013). Seeking Best Practices And Meeting The Needs Of The English Language Learners: Using Second Language Theories And Integrating Technology In Teaching. Journal of International Education Research, 9(3), 217-222.

Pacheco, M. (2010). English-Language Learners' Reading Achievement: Dialectical Relationships Between Policy and Practices in Meaning-Making Opportunities. Reading Research Quarterly, 45(3), 292-317.

Pieretti, R.A., & Roseberry-McKibbin, C. (2016). Assessment and Intervention for English Language Learners With Primary Language Impairment. Communication Disorders Quarterly, 37(2), 117-128.

Pyle, D., Pyle, N., Lignugaris-Kraft, B., Duran, L., Akers, J. (2017). Academic Effects of Peer-Mediated Interventions With English Language Learners: A Research Synthesis. Review of Educational Research, 87(1), 103-133.

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