All language communities share common goals: to communicate effectively with one another to meet personal and collective purposes. Make school learning objectives meaningful so that English learners navigate authentic experiences and have daily practice opportunities as language learners. This article includes simple steps and activity suggestions for each teaching strategy.
We are all language learners. I am often reminded of that when I hear my own children talking and I don’t understand the meaning of words I thought I was familiar with. I listen closely and try to figure out the new way in which they are transforming language to create their own language communities. I am in awe at the ease with which children and adolescents move across language communities and yet I often wonder why that ease is harder when developing language in school. I find myself thinking about what makes their social language experiences so successful and what can we learn from those experiences to support language learning in school and classroom contexts.
All language communities share common goals, to communicate effectively with one another to meet personal and collective purposes. Developing academic language is similar. Students are challenged with learning objectives every day in school across content areas. These objectives are rich with language demands that allow students to access the content, interpret meaning and share what they have learned using oral or written means. Though we share common purposes as members of a language community, what differs often from social language communities to more academic ones is the authenticity and meaningful nature of those communications. Students need to find meaning in learning objectives in school. They need to feel that what they are learning is setting them up to successfully navigate language and literacy in authentic experiences both in and out of school.
Though there are many, many approaches, practices, and strategies for guiding the language learning process in school, we have to begin with what we know about our students and ensure that we provide varied and frequent opportunities to use language across content areas. Here are ways to make learning more meaningful at school.
Learning about our students helps us make language learning in school meaningful. Some of my favorite strategies are those that allow them to open up about who they are. These strategies help them discover their identities. For younger students, I encourage a personal collage. You can come up with a range of categories of what they can include in their collage.
You can explore a range of categories with the class to add to the list of options. Remember that a personal collage is about the child, which means the medium and organization of their collage should be their own. We are not looking for a standard template, but to allow them to create and show you who they are!
Older students may be encouraged to think more deeply about what they may want to share about their identities and the vehicle for sharing it. Some ideas might include the following.
The idea is to allow flexibility in how students may want to share who they are. We try not to tell them what to share because part of their self-discovery is allowing them the choice to try and find something that represents them. Learning about students helps us build bridges from the world they know to one they are trying to navigate, that of school.
Developing language across disciplines requires opportunities to use language in all content areas. Whether it is in history, ELA, science, math, the arts, physical education or a variety of electives, students should be talking about what they are learning. To build fluency in any language, we need to use the language. Though there are many opportunities within any lesson, I encourage quick daily activities at the start of a lesson to promote fluency. Some quick activities might include
These types of activities are sometimes referred to as “language bell ringers,” or simply, “quick activities” for language development. The idea is that they are quick and accessible to all students as a way to settle in prior to starting a lesson. What makes these types of activities so powerful is that students are practicing academic language daily. They are applying the language patterns of the thinking skill related to the activity and the vocabulary connected to the images selected.
To create your own “quick activity” you can follow these simple steps.
English learners struggle to learn new content and language simultaneously. They need ample opportunities to access, interpret and produce content in English. Use strategies to support English language learners in developing content knowledge and language across the curriculum and maximize oral language opportunities in all disciplines through quick daily oral language practices.