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A few ways to reach Long-Term ELs…

As we continue to look at our targeted students in culturally responsive teaching, we have to look at a population where the gap is growing significantly – our Long Term English Learners.

These are the students who have been in the US longer than 6 years, but haven’t exited the EL program, and there are all kinds of problems that come with this. I wrote a blog last year on this, but I wanted to revisit it, and added a few specific strategies.

I was discouraged today. And bored.  I sat in an ELA classroom of 11th graders, and was bored.  So were the kids.  They weren’t challenged.  They didn’t learn.  They weren’t disruptive.  But they were bored.  They were on their phones.  They were sleeping.  They were copying.  But they weren’t learning.

And then there was Jose.  He was the only English Learner in the class, and he was bored.  And unmotivated.  And copying. And listening to music on his headphones.  And the gap in his learning, both in language and academics, was growing.  I watched him shut down.  Then I watched him copy the notes off of his neighbor’s paper, turn it in, and probably earn a 100 for doing and learning NOTHING.

How do we stop this? While this problem runs deep, here are 3 ways to hit this problem head on…

  1. Engage – The learning must be on the student.  In a student-centered classroom, students carry the cognitive load.  The students are expected to inquire, struggle, and ultimately – learn! Here are some ideas!
    1. Ask good questions.
    1. Give wait time.
    1. Let the students work cooperatively (but with structure, so these students can’t hide – we’ll talk about some structures next week!)
    1. Make the content relevant – don’t rely on grades as the leverage point.

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