Difference between revisions of "Caslon Language Education Wikimedia (C)"

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==comprehensive language education programs==
 
==comprehensive language education programs==
* Instructional programs for ELLs that have been designed by a team of educators who take into consideration the literacy, academic, and English language needs of the district’s ELL student populations. ESL, literacy, and content area instruction is taught by certified ESL and bilingual teachers and mainstream teachers who have substantial training in sheltered instruction methods. [http://caslonpublishing.com/titles/9/assessment-and-accountability-language-education-p/ (Gottlieb et al., 2007)]. [http://caslonpublishing.com/titles/3/implementing-effective-instruction-english-languag/ Implementing Effective Instruction for English Language Learners] by [https://www.linkedin.com/pub/suzanne-wagner/74/150/a47 Suzanne Wagner] and [http://www.thecenterweb.org/irc/pages/f_staff2.html Tamara King]
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* Instructional programs for ELLs that have been designed by a team of educators who take into consideration the literacy, academic, and English language needs of the district’s ELL student populations. ESL, literacy, and content area instruction is taught by certified ESL and bilingual teachers and mainstream teachers who have substantial training in sheltered instruction methods. [http://caslonpublishing.com/titles/3/implementing-effective-instruction-english-languag/ <i>Implementing Effective Instruction for English Language Learners</i>] by [https://www.linkedin.com/pub/suzanne-wagner/74/150/a47 Suzanne Wagner] and [http://www.thecenterweb.org/irc/pages/f_staff2.html Tamara King]
  
 
==comprehensible output==
 
==comprehensible output==

Revision as of 19:04, 14 December 2015

Caslon Language Education Index

A, B, C, D, E, F, G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N, O, P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y, Z

calco (calque)

Canadian immersion programs

Castañeda v. Pickard

choral reading

circular discourse pattern

circumstantial bilingualism

Civil Rights Act (1974)

clustering

code-switching

cognates

cognitive academic language proficiency (CALP)

  • A term coined by Jim Cummins that refers to the type of language proficiency that is required to achieve academically. CALP is both context reduced (there is little support in the learning context to facilitate understanding) and cognitively demanding (the concepts are challenging for the learner to grasp). Research has shown that it can take four to nine years to acquire CALP (see BICS). Teaching Adolescent English Language Learners by Nancy Cloud, Judah Lakin, Erin Leininger, Laura Maxwell

cognitive approaches

collaborative reading

collaborative writing

common assessments

Common Core State Standards (CCSS)

common measures

common underlying proficiency (CUP)

communicative competence

communicative competence

communicative function

  • The purposes for which language is used. Includes three broad functions: communication (the transmission of information), integration (expression of affiliation and belonging to a particular social group), and expression (the display of individual feelings, ideas, and personality). Examples include asking for or giving information, describing past actions, expressing feelings, and expressing regret. Teaching Adolescent English Language Learners by Nancy Cloud, Judah Lakin, Erin Leininger, Laura Maxwell

communicative language teaching (CLT)

community-based language schools

comprehensible input

  • A term coined by Krashen (1985) that describes the scaffolding process in which teachers explicitly adjust their speech and use instructional supports so that new information is understood. ESL teachers implement comprehensible input by explaining concepts and academic tasks clearly. They use speech appropriate for students’ language proficiency (slower rate, gestures, simple sentences) without using slang or idioms. They use visuals, graphic organizers, word sorts, word maps, and Venn diagrams to teach vocabulary words and support instruction throughout the lessons. Implementing Effective Instruction for English Language Learners by Suzanne Wagner and Tamara King
  • Oral or written language that is slightly above a second language learner’s current level of proficiency in the second language and thus provides linguistic input that leads to second language acquisition. Represented by the formula i + 1, where i is the current level of proficiency, and +1 is input slightly above this level. Foundations for Teaching English Language Learners, second edition by Wayne E. Wright

comprehensive language education programs

  • Instructional programs for ELLs that have been designed by a team of educators who take into consideration the literacy, academic, and English language needs of the district’s ELL student populations. ESL, literacy, and content area instruction is taught by certified ESL and bilingual teachers and mainstream teachers who have substantial training in sheltered instruction methods. Implementing Effective Instruction for English Language Learners by Suzanne Wagner and Tamara King

comprehensible output

  • Oral or written language produced by a second language speaker that is comprehensible to the individual or individuals with whom he or she is communicating. Second language learners’ need to produce comprehensible output pushes them to pay attention to gaps in their proficiency and thus may prompt them to notice more in the input and motivate them to learn the language they need to express their intended meanings. Foundations for Teaching English Language Learners, second edition by Wayne E. Wright

concept attainment

  • Instructional strategy in which students are provided with a series of appropriate and inappropriate examples of a new concept. Students analyze these appropriate and inappropriate examples to formulate a definition of the concept (Bruner, Goodnow, and Austin, 1956). Teaching for Biliteracy by Karen Beeman and Cheryl Urow

concepts of print

  • Refers to such reading-related issues as understanding the differences between letters and words and words and spaces; knowing where to start reading and how to do a return sweep to continue reading the next line; and understanding the basic features of a book, such as title, front and back cover, and even how to hold it properly. Foundations for Teaching English Language Learners, second edition by Wayne E. Wright

concurrent translation

connecting language environments

content allocation

content-area journal

content-based instruction (CBI)

  • An approach to second language instruction in which content-area subjects and topics are used as the basis of instruction. Foundations for Teaching English Language Learners, second edition by Wayne E. Wright
  • Language instruction in which English language development is the goal. The big ideas of the content and the requisite terminology of a particular topic is the focus of the language instruction that is designed to reach English language development standards. In content-based ESL, teachers use the big ideas of content topics in various content areas (e.g., science, social studies, math, language arts) as a vehicle to learn academic language in English. In order to make second language instruction comprehensible, they implement multiple vocabulary-building strategies and use graphic, sensory, and interactive supports to differentiate instruction and assessment according to the ELLs’ English proficiency levels. The origins of content-based ESL methodology, sheltered instruction, and sheltered strategies are based on Krashen’s comprehensible input theory. (Gottlieb et al., 2007). Implementing Effective Instruction for English Language Learners by Suzanne Wagner and Tamara King

contextual information

continua of biliteracy model

continuum of services framework

contrastive analysis

conversational fluency/conversational language proficiency

cooperative learning

corpus planning

criterion-referenced measures

criterion-referenced test

cross-cultural competence

cross-language connections

  • The ability to use one language to analyze and understand a second language. Cross-language connections enable children to develop metacognitive abilities and knowledge about their two languages and how they are the same and different. Cross-language connections are bidirectional. This project uses two types of cross language connections. The first cross-language connection refers to specific methods that the model has adapted from Mexico and modified for use in U.S. English/Spanish literacy programs. The second focuses on teaching children the metacognitive linguistic skills of cross-language expression in reading and writing. Biliteracy from the Start by Kathy Escamilla, Susan Hopewell, Sandra Butvilofsky, Wendy Sparrow, Lucinda Soltero-González, Olivia Ruiz-Figueroa, and Manuel Escamilla

cross-linguistic transfer

cross-sectional data

cultural bias

cultural competence

cultural distance

culture shock

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