Tag: Targeted and Relevant

Instructional Modifications for English Learners at Lindsay

Teacher Marla Earnest explains how she modifies learning activities to support English language learners.

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Transcript: Marla Earnest: It depends on the kid. It depends on what level they’re working on. But let’s take a newcomer, for example, a learner that’s been here less than a year. What they would do is we would have a whole class lesson that day which usually revolves around discussion so that they’re using language, we’re building background knowledge and vocabulary. And then having some kind of experience with that. It might be a small group table talk where they’re discussing a particular cultural item that we learned about that day. And then they would work on grammar. We use IXL for grammar. I’m able to choose a level that’s appropriate for them so even though that program might say it’s a second grade level it might be that that particular lesson in IXL meets the emerging standard for ELD. So we choose what lesson they’re going to do based on that. They also will do some sort of writing so that we’re practicing the language and the vocabulary and they can do that in their personalized time. The writing is personalized to them. We use a program called Write to Learn. But Write to Learn also really heavily depends on the learning facilitator to help the learner meet what they need to meet. We have rubrics that we use. They are district rubrics designed for each level of ELD competency. So as they’re writing they have the rubric and I’m able to give them feedback based on that rubric. They give each other feedback; there’s some peer feedback in there as well.

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Different Learning Choices Students Make at Lindsay

Brandy Quintero, a teacher at Lindsay, explains how students have choice over when to take an assessment as well as which content areas to tackle.

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Transcript: Brandy Quintero: So students can come in here. And these are all the standards that are going to be covered in 9B. So a student can go in here and say, “You know what; I think I already know this particular standard. I’m going to just like go through and do it.” And they thought like the level of knowledge in here. […] Once they feel like, “Hey, I’ll do the Learning Accelerator, I’m good,” then they can take the district’s proficiency test and they could be done with that learning target. And so that’s one option of student voice and choice. We also have like – it’s going to look a little different. So when you open up ERWC Module 1, we’re going to have the regular English 9 Module 1, and then we’re going to have Academy of Engineering’s Module 1 and Academy of Health Science Module 1. Now you’re still going to have to read a test and a take it. You’re still going to have to follow the general steps of it. But because AOE needs to be able to focus on the engineering, their articles are going to be different. Their project choices are going to be different.

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Romeo and Juliet: Leveled Readings

This is an example of a playlist of different levels of a reading. Students can select traditional or nontraditional formats, such as annotated or graphic texts, as well as a Spanish version.

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Student Choice Over How to Demonstrate Mastery at Lindsay

A student explains how he decided to choose and execute against his own “level four” mastery demonstration.

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Transcript:

Marco Lopez: She gave us an opportunity for a Level Four, but a Level Four seemed kind of – I didn’t really like it. We do this thing called IXL and there’s like lessons on there, and it teaches us different ways to use like colons and semicolons and stuff like that. So she told us that if we could use all them correctly and incorporate them in our writing, that it could be a Level Four for grammar. And so I did that, and she said that I did an excellent job in that. So I got a Level Four in grammar. And then on theme I also got a four for that with my essay.
Interviewer: So you did an assignment that was different from the original one assigned, but it’s still totally showed that –
Student: Yeah, it still kind of referred the things it would have counted for.
Interviewer: You were excellent at all those learning targets?
Student: Yeah.

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Students’ Choice in How to Use Personalized Learning Time at Lindsay

Brandy Quintero, a Lindsay teacher, explains how students sign up for Personalized Learning Time.

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Transcript: Brandy Quintero: Is the PLT. So kids get to sign up. We have a flex time manager and they get to go in and see what their teachers are offering on Tuesday and Thursday for an hour-and-a-half at the end of the day, and they get to sign up to what class they want to go. If they don’t sign up with a class, they get to go with Ms. Moore who’s our in-school suspension/detention lady. So we’re trying to teach them, “You do have to sign up for something. You can just say, ‘Oh, there was nothing I needed.'” And then we have opportunities for kids who are on pace in all our classes and don’t need that personalized learning time to get caught up for extra support. Some teachers are doing like woodwork, like creative stuff. One of the teachers, he’s looking at maybe doing some like boxing stuff next year. So like just kind of fun things, because you’re on pace, so it’s not a whole elective course for it. But during that PLT time you can work on something else.

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Real-Time Interventions During Reading Fluency Practice at Lindsay

Teacher Marla Earnest explains how daily reading fluency works benefits English language learners.

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Transcript: Marla Earnest: The way our classroom works in a day is we have a reading fluency that we do in every class. It’s really nice that ELD learners get that extra time to work on their reading because many of them need it. So we start with 20 minutes of reading time. We have a couple programs that we use. We use Reading Plus; we use Lexia for our learners who are a little bit lower, and our newcomers use DuoLingo. Because as they’re working the data is populating I am able, in the moment, to see what a learner needs. And I have one-on-one conversations with them so I’m not disrupting the reading of the whole room.

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Overview of Empower at Lindsay

Teacher Marla Earnest explains how she uses the learning management system, Empower, to track student progress and provide support.

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Transcript: Marla Earnest: It’s a progress monitoring system, and the way that it works is it allows me to see, as learners are working, as I’m inputting data, as they’re turning in work that’s personalized to their levels I’m able to see each day what group of kids still needs instruction in a particular learning target. So I can pull up Empower, there’s a note there for kids who’ve not mastered this particular learning target. I know I can pull them out and I can work with them in a small group.

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