American College of Education (ACE)
Dr. Landa
December 10, 2018
ABSTRACT
This
paper describes the situation about academic language and what it is. Then it describes the whole project step by
step. Finally the inception of the
project is described dating back to 2015.
Finally the appendices are the written descriptions and the actual
activities and the power points presentations with the cartoons, questions and
activities.
Keywords: Academic language, BICS, CALP, cartoons,
comics, accountable talk stems
Introduction
What
is academic language? Academic language
is a modern education term to classify certain words, regardless of the content
area, needed in school throughout middle school and high school no matter the
students’ English levels. This kind of
language is “situation specific” (Reiss 2008) and used specifically in a
classroom situation. However, academic
language is not particular vocabulary pertaining to a specific subject, for
example: atoms for science, peninsula for geography. Academic language is a large list of words
that if you know a handful of the words on the list, if one can use them in
daily conversation, not only will it make you sound educated but it will also
mean that the student has moved from the basic interpersonal communication
skills or BICS (Cummins 2000) to cognitively academic language proficiency or
CALP. If these words are learned,
studied and used, the students will have the tools for academic discussions,
understanding teacher talk and be ready for college. But for ELLs using academic language is not
going to be easy. Cummins (1980) tells
us it will take 5-7 years for ELLs to fully develop academic language and
Thomas and Collier (1995) say 10 years depending on their schooling and
development of their first language. Snow
(2010) tells us there is no single list of academic language just as there is
“no single variety of educated American English.” Non-academic language often “resembles oral
language forms.” (Klinger, Boardman
& Eppolito 2012) There are numerous
lists of academic words all over the internet, books and academic journals
however there is no way to systematically introduce these words into students’
lexicon that is both fun and systematic, until now.
Who needs academic language?
All
students need academic language. A
massive list of academic terms used by teachers in schools is vitally important
if students are to succeed in high school and college. Often- times researchers lament about ELLs
not knowing enough academic language and therefore taking many years to gain
parity with students in their grades.
But all students need academic language.
Even if the meaning and definitions are known by the students, the
activities in this project would allow the students to practice the terms and
proper use in class. They also would change
according to the dates used and therefore would create new and fresh word
learning for all students. In
particular, ELL (English Language Learners) are in desperate need to know
academic language throughout their middle school and high school academic
life. With a lack of pull out classes in
some school or a lack of identification of ELLs in some schools, how would
these students identify the words they need to know and then use them in a real
life situation in classes? For schools
who have good identifications regimes and enough pull outs for those ELL
students, academic language is equally if not more important. Teachers can use this in any class since the
words are universal and not bound to a specific discipline.
Figure 1 Example of a comic that goes with the academic
language "abbreviate." Notice
the obvious school setting and creative and funny way to use the word
abbreviate.
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Explanation of the Project
Figure 2 Another example of the comic included in the
activity. This time for the academic language of ANTICIPATE. As a result,
student know clearly what the meaning of the word is.
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Step by step use of project.
Step
1. Rip today’s paper off the top stack (see Appendix 4 for the original full
page PDF). Go to copier and make copies
according to the number of students in class. (5 minutes)
Step
2. Class begins. Do now activity. Students laugh at comic, fill in blanks. (3
minutes)
Step
3. Teacher roams around helping students. Particularly ELLs. Students who
finish first can assist others. (5 minutes)
Step
4. Students wrap up the work and if not done, students can do the rest for
homework.
Step
5. Accountable talk discussion using this word.
Students who logically use the new academic language properly in the
accountable talk, teacher writes down later gets a praise point. (5-10 minutes)
Origin of the project.
Back
in 2015, two years before starting my education at ACE (American College of
Education) I had a number of ELL students who I felt could not participate well
in academic discussions that my school just started using. Their English levels were not low but at the
same time going over simple vocabulary was not that useful. Therefore, I developed an idea about Academic
Language that became the inception of this project. For four years in the making, this project
was tested with students, shared with colleagues and reviewed by a department
chair. All gave valuable insight and
recommendations to make the project better and more useful for students. I originally started with a half sheet, with
the same image on the top and bottom. After copying a couple copies I would cut
them in half. Distributed to the
students I could see the annoyance that it was a paper they had use pen or
pencil to write something. But when they
saw the comics their guard went down. I
tried to make the comics funny and sometimes brash and borderline inappropriate
to interest the students. (Inappropriate
means saying “shut up.” Nothing
more.) We shared our answers and then I
collected them. The students often asked
if I had drawn the pictures but I never divulged that information to them. Skip a year later when our school introduced
Accountable talk stems. This was an
ingenious way to get students to talk with each other and not talk over each
other. (Examples: “I agree with _____
because…” or “I would like to piggy back on what ________ said and say…”) If you walk into a room and you hear
accountable talk, you would be shocked and pleasantly surprised that students
patiently wait for others to talk and then mention their names when discussing
the ideas further. I decided in preparation
for rolling this idea out that I would add accountable talk stems that use the
academic language or demand students use the academic language in their
answer. This would add additional time
to the lesson or part of the lesson, but teachers can easily adapt when they do
the accountable talk and since academic language goes well with so many topics
and subjects they can do the accountable talk anytime or just use the academic
language in whatever accountable talk they have that day in class. There is still room for improvement and this
is what I was working on for a long time and wanting to develop. Even at the beginning of this journey with
ACE during the very first Capstone project piece, I made this project as one of
my goals. Here is the quote from the
personal education philosophy profile specifically mentioning this project:
Goal
statement two
I will complete
and compile the work I started of the complete list of academic vocabulary
comics. Using my artistic talents and a
list of academic vocabulary compiled, defined and sourced by Jim Burke (2014) I
will illustrate funny and engaging comics using those words in context for
teachers to use and students to learn by the beginning of 2019. The two-fold purpose is to further my career
as an educational comic artist and assist teachers to use academic language
with my ELLs and other students. (Larsen
2017)
Figure 3 Email to my ELA Department Chair about this
project in October 2018
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Conclusion.
The idea of creating an original project without prior supervision or
guidance through the whole process was liberating and daunting at the same
time. It was liberating because I could
literally choose to do anything, daunting because with an imagination like
mine, the possibilities were endless.
Thankfully there was a project that I had from 2015 that I dusted off
and developed over the last two years.
It culminated when I talked with my English language arts department
chair who gave me some very good feedback and direction for the project. (See
Figure 3) This is my addition and
contribution to my ELLs academic development.
Doing this in any of their core classes will not only make their native
speaking classmates improve but also the ELLs will greatly improve their
academic speaking, writing, listening and reading abilities.
Sources.
Burke,
J. (2014, February 14). Jim Burke's Academic Vocabulary List. Retrieved March
31, 2015, from https://www.vocabulary.com/lists/388513
Cummins,
James (1981) The role of primary language development in promoting educational
success for language minority students. In California department of Education Schooling and language minority students: a
theoretical framework (pp. 3-49) Los Angeles: Evaluation, Dissemination and
Assessment Center, California State University
Klingner,
J. K., Boardman, A. G. & Eppolito, A. M. (2012). Supporting adolescent
English language learners' reading in the content areas. Learning Disabilities:
A Contemporary Journal, 10(1), 35-64.
Larsen,
Clifford (2017) Individual Student
Profile Philosophy of Learning. ACE paper for Foundations of ESL and Bilingual
Education.
Reiss,
Jodi (2008) 102 Content Strategies for English Language Learners: Teaching for
Academic Success in Grades 3-12. Merrill Prentice Hall Teaching Strategies
Series. Florida International University
Snow,
C.E. (2010) Academic language and the challenge of reading for learning about
science. Science 328, 450-452. April
23, 2010.
Thomas,
W.P, and Collier, V.P. (1995) Language minority student achievement and program
effectiveness. California Association for
Bilingual Education Newsletter, 17(5) 19, 24
Appendix 1: Activity list for bottom
half of sheet for the first two weeks of the activity.
Appendix 2: Two more weeks of words and activities in a planning stage. The words are included and the notes are
there for a basic idea of the activity and the accountable stem is there but
the ideas have not yet been developed as of yet.
Appendix 3: Examples of the first 2 weeks of the project as it would be displayed on
the smart board in class. These were
taken from the Power Point and can easily be projected onto a smart board as
students prepare for the accountable talk.
Appendix 4: The following pages are
the actually PDF of the project. Each
page can be printed out for however many students you have in class.