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TEAM UP: Teaching English Language Learners
Action Model to Unite Professionals
The growth of the number of English Language
Learners in our national K-12 schools has skyrocketed in the past decade.
The National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition, Language Enhancement,
and Academic Achievement for Limited English Proficient Students reported in
2002 that during the period between 1989 and 2000 the national growth rate was
105% for K-12 English Language Learners (ELLs) enrolled in public schools. Forty
percent of teachers nationwide have English Language Learners in their classes.
Changing demography in urban, rural, and suburban communities has practicing
elementary and secondary teachers asking one recurring question: "How do
we meet the needs of students for whom English is a second language, and who
are expected to learn academic content and develop language skill at the same
time?"
To address these concerns, CARLA is participating
in a 5-year, $1.3 million grant from the U.S. Department of Education's Title
III National Professional Development Program in partnership with the College
of Education and Human Development at the University of Minnesota. TEAM UP:
Teaching English Language Learners Action Model to Unite Professionals,
led by Professor Constance Walker, will help Minnesota educators improve classroom
instruction for their limited English proficient students through a field-based
and team-centered model of professional development.
Professional development plays a key role in providing
teachers with the skills they need to work with ELLs. Teachers consistently
indicate their tremendous need for information, feedback, and opportunities
for discussion that these learners present. And while they want to know what
instructional strategies and techniques will benefit these students, they also
want and need to know more about working with children who live in poverty,
who may not have literacy skills in their first language, who may also be struggling
with a learning disability. Clearly the pressing needs of second language
learners at school will require more than 2-hour drop-in presentations, more
than an all-day workshop, more than a week-long inservice during the summer.
Traditional inservice structures, which often focus on curricular innovations
or state requirements, do not provide opportunities to explore such questions.
Given that improving the ability of ELLs to succeed
in school requires much more than a "quick fix," TEAM UP grant activities
will be built around a two-year professional development program in Minnesota
that is school-site based and involves all the key members of the educational
community (classroom paraprofessionals, bilingual assistants, ESL, mainstream
teachers) as well as preservice teachers. In addition to the core professional
development activities of the TEAM UP project, the grant will create curriculum
for the professional education of paraprofessionals and other educators working
with ELL students and will be widely disseminated through the CARLA website
and a series of workshops for teachers conducted around the state of Minnesota.
Over the course of the two-year span of their
involvement, the participating educators will address the following questions
in their school-site teams and in role-based groups:
- What can I do personally to prepare myself to best meet the needs of
English language learners in my classroom? indicating personal professional
growth planning that meets professional standards;
- As a member of a team of educators from my school, what are the primary
issues that we need to tackle such that our instruction in the classroom can
best meet the needs of ELL students? indicating team development of plans,
action, and collaborative work to achieve goals);
- What is involved in my role (as a paraprofessional, mainstream teacher,
ESL teacher, preservice teacher) within this school in serving the needs
of all learners?;
- How do we collectively address the development of a healthy school community
that focuses on learning and optimizes individual and collective skill?
indicating collaboratively-developed plans for sustainable school-site partnership.
The TEAM UP professional development model allows
for intensive learning and exchange of ideas about issues related to second
language learners across the professional roles. The model also promotes sustained,
in-depth discussion across these roles within individual schools. Thus, the
professional development "input" will be relevant for all participants
and each school-site team will have up to six team members who are intimately
acquainted with the specific challenges faced by the school and are highly motivated
to work together to find solutions to these challenges.
This grant grows out of previous collaboration
with the Minneapolis Public Schools on a grant entitled Creating
a Model for Mainstream Elementary Teachers with High Numbers of English Language
Learners (ELLs).
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