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But Does This Work With English Learners? - Book Cover

But Does This Work With English Learners?

A Guide for English Language Arts Teachers, Grades 6-12
By: Mary Amanda Stewart, Holly Genova

Foreword by Gretchen Bernabei

Secondary ELA teachers, be excited: here at last is that crash course in utilizing the best of what we already know about teaching reading, writing, and language to ensure our English learners thrive.

Take Penny Kittle and Donalyn Miller’s reader’s workshops. Take Kylene Beers and Robert Probst’s “signposts.” Take the best writing techniques advanced by the National Writing Project. Take Jim Burke’s essential questions for life. Award-winning EL authorities Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova describe immediate adaptations you can put in place to simultaneously build your ELs’ language and literacy, while affirming their languages, cultures, and unique lived experiences.

A rare blend of the humane and practical, But Does This Work with English Learners? is a book on how to leverage our ELs’ full linguistic repertoires in the ELA classroom, while remaining sensitive to those barriers that could restrict learning. With this book as your guide, you’ll learn how to:

  • Look beyond the labels, and better understand the diversity of ELs, English language proficiency levels, and sociopolitical influences
  • Teach and assess through reader’s workshop, recognizing where comprehensible input fits in and adapting recurring features like support, choice, conferencing, and academic conversations
  • Teach and assess through writer’s workshops, including modifications to quick-writes, minilessons, conferencing, sharing, and more
  • Teach through structures and community with classroom schedules and behavior norms, and activities like All About Me Paragraphs and Six Things You Need to Know About Me Listicles
  • Embrace identity in inquiry cycles via research and family interviews, mentor texts and essays, pictorial autobiographies, memory paragraphs, and more
  • Answer your own FAQs such as How do I teach students if I don’t know their language? What about grammar? How do I teach the grade-level ELA standards while I teach the language?

“As you read this book,” Mandy and Holly write, “our hope is that you will begin to see your students as multilinguals—people who already have language as well as a wealth of knowledge and are just adding English to that great repertoire.” If you have even a single English learner in your classroom, we urge you to read this book and institute its practices. Right away!

“Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova have given us a primer for the evolving complexities of our classroom melting pots, a map for navigating the murky waters of regulations, and most importantly, a recipe for opening our arms to children from all over the world. They welcome them with thoughts like ‘A foreign accent is a sign of bravery.’”

--GRETCHEN BERNABEI, Coauthor of Fun-Sized Academic Writing for Serious Learning

“After reading this book, I was left with the feeling that I learned something new on every page--something that I had previously either wondered about or struggled to understand. Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova are the guides we all need to help us understand and better address the needs of our English learners.”

--JIM BURKE, Author of The English Teacher’s Companion

Full description


But Does This Work With English Learners? - Book Cover
Product Details
  • Grade Level: 6-12
  • ISBN: 9781071814956
  • Published By: Corwin
  • Year: 2020
  • Page Count: 232
  • Publication date: August 19, 2020
Price: $33.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

Review copies may be requested by individuals planning to purchase 10 or more copies for a team or considering a book for adoption in a higher ed course. To request a review copy, contact sales@corwin.com.

Description

Description

Secondary ELA teachers, be excited: here at last is that crash course in utilizing the best of what we already know about teaching reading, writing, and language to ensure our English learners thrive.

Take Penny Kittle and Donalyn Miller’s reader’s workshops. Take Kylene Beers and Robert Probst’s “signposts.” Take the best writing techniques advanced by the National Writing Project. Take Jim Burke’s essential questions for life. Award-winning EL authorities Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova describe immediate adaptations you can put in place to simultaneously build your ELs’ language and literacy, while affirming their languages, cultures, and unique lived experiences.

A rare blend of the humane and practical, But Does This Work with English Learners? is a book on how to leverage our ELs’ full linguistic repertoires in the ELA classroom, while remaining sensitive to those barriers that could restrict learning. With this book as your guide, you’ll learn how to:

  • Look beyond the labels, and better understand the diversity of ELs, English language proficiency levels, and sociopolitical influences
  • Teach and assess through reader’s workshop, recognizing where comprehensible input fits in and adapting recurring features like support, choice, conferencing, and academic conversations
  • Teach and assess through writer’s workshops, including modifications to quick-writes, minilessons, conferencing, sharing, and more
  • Teach through structures and community with classroom schedules and behavior norms, and activities like All About Me Paragraphs and Six Things You Need to Know About Me Listicles
  • Embrace identity in inquiry cycles via research and family interviews, mentor texts and essays, pictorial autobiographies, memory paragraphs, and more
  • Answer your own FAQs such as How do I teach students if I don’t know their language? What about grammar? How do I teach the grade-level ELA standards while I teach the language?

“As you read this book,” Mandy and Holly write, “our hope is that you will begin to see your students as multilinguals—people who already have language as well as a wealth of knowledge and are just adding English to that great repertoire.” If you have even a single English learner in your classroom, we urge you to read this book and institute its practices. Right away!

“Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova have given us a primer for the evolving complexities of our classroom melting pots, a map for navigating the murky waters of regulations, and most importantly, a recipe for opening our arms to children from all over the world. They welcome them with thoughts like ‘A foreign accent is a sign of bravery.’”

~Gretchen Bernabei, Coauthor of Fun-Sized Academic Writing for Serious Learning

“After reading this book, I was left with the feeling that I learned something new on every page--something that I had previously either wondered about or struggled to understand. Mandy Stewart and Holly Genova are the guides we all need to help us understand and better address the needs of our English learners.”

~Jim Burke, Author of The English Teacher’s Companion

Author(s)

Author(s)

Mary Amanda Stewart photo

Mary Amanda Stewart

Mary Amanda (Mandy) Stewart is passionate about languages, literacies, and literature! She brings these areas together in her work with multilingual adolescents as they engage in critical literacy and language development across content areas using a variety of authentic texts. Viewing language learners as multilinguals, she works with them and their teachers to leverage all of their languages for success both in and out of school.

Mandy is an associate professor in the Department of Literacy and Learning at Texas Woman’s University where she directs the Certificate of Biliteracy graduate program. She has published books about literacy instruction for adolescents acquiring English as well as many articles in literacy and bilingual/ESL journals. Because she believes that our work in education should lead to greater equity in society, she also writes op-eds and blogs for various media outlets about diverse literature, multilingualism, and advocacy for refugee and (im)migrant families.

Born and raised in small-town East Texas, she now lives in the Dallas/Fort Worth area where she leads an ESL book club for adults, attempts to raise bilingual children, and moonlights as an intense baseball/soccer mom.

Please contact your Professional Learning Advisor for consulting services.

Holly Genova photo

Holly Genova

Holly Genova is a high school ESOL and Newcomer teacher in Lewisville, Texas, at Lewisville High School, Harmon Campus. Holly is charged with working with marginalized students to develop English their first year in the United States, but Holly sees her work much differently than simply developing students’ English. Thus, she works diligently to ensure that her students build curiosity, stamina, and independence to be lifelong readers and writers. She has served in leadership positions in the North Texas Council for Teachers of English Language Arts and the North Star of Texas Writing Project, has been a member of NCTE since 2014 and in 2019 served on the NCTE nominating committee. Holly was a first year teacher of the year award winner on her high school campus, and in 2016, Holly was awarded the High School Teacher of the Year award for the Texas Council of Teachers of English Language Arts. As a teacher and advocate for culturally and linguistically diverse students, Holly is committed to advocating for educators to view linguistically diverse learners through an asset lens, and she believes we should leverage students’ cultures and lived experiences in the classroom. Outside of the classroom, Holly is involved in refugee and immigrant people's lives through her father’s gardening project in which he grows fresh food with the Chin community in his garden. She also enjoys attending former students' family, cultural, and religious events with her daughter.

Please contact your Professional Learning Advisor for consulting services

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

Foreword by Gretchen Bernabei


Preface


Mandy’s Teaching Story

Holly’s Teaching Story

Our Teaching Story: A Research/Practice Partnership

Our Purpose: Every ELA Teacher, a Language Teacher

Overview of the Book

Using the Book

Acknowledgments


About the authors


Chapter 1: Language Learners: Seeing Beyond the Labels

Diversity of Language Learners

Sociopolitical Influences

Second-Language Acquisition

Bilingualism and Biliteracy

Student Profiles: Meet Language Learners

Conclusion

Chapter 2: Teaching Through Reader’s Workshop

The Reader’s Workshop Model

Know Your Multilingual Students

Second-Language Acquisition Regarding Reading

Modification of Reader’s Workshop for Language Learners

Student Profiles: Meet Multilingual Readers

Conclusion

Chapter 3: Teaching Through Writer’s Workshop

The Writer’s Workshop Model

Know Your Multilingual Students

Second-Language Acquisition Regarding Writing

Modifications of Writer’s Workshop for Language Learners

Student Profiles: Meet Multilingual Writers

Conclusion

Chapter 4: Teaching Through Structures and Community

Learning Structures

Building Community: Who Am I? Who Are My Classmates?

Student Profiles: Meet Classroom Community Members

Conclusion

Chapter 5: Teaching Through Inquiry Cycles

Identity: Who Am I?

My Life, My Stories: How Am I Unique?

Student Profiles: Meet Students Who Shared and Healed

Conclusion

Chapter 6: ESL FAQ: Our Most Frequently Asked Questions as ESL Teachers

How do I teach students if I don’t speak their language?

What about grammar?

What do I do with a newcomer?

How do I continue my instructional plan when I get new students, who are also newcomers, throughout the school year?

How do I teach the grade-level ELA standards while I teach the language?

What does students’ first language have to do with the ELA classroom?

What language should students read in for independent reading time?

How do I learn about their previous educational experiences?

What is the best way to help long-term English learners (L-TELs)?

How do I incorporate culture into the classroom in an authentic way?

How do I not offend students whose culture is so different from mine?

How do I get support from students’ families?

How do I get support from my administrators and other teachers?

What if students are undocumented or underdocumented?

How do I motivate students to want to use English in and out of the classroom?

What is your favorite learning activity with language learners?

Conclusion

Get QUACKing!

Appendix A


Appendix B


Appendix C


Appendix D


Appendix E


Glossary


References


Index


Price: $33.95
Volume Discounts applied in Shopping Cart

Review Copies

Review copies may be requested by individuals planning to purchase 10 or more copies for a team or considering a book for adoption in a higher ed course. To request a review copy, contact sales@corwin.com.

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