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David Irwin Language Development Opportunities

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1 David Irwin Language Development Opportunities
Co-Teaching for ELLs with Academic Conversation and Collaborative Expertise David Irwin Language Development Opportunities

2 Success Criteria (Language)
Targets (Content) Participants will review essential components of academic conversation Review essential components of co-teaching, 7 models and dual teacher roles Learn effect sizes of common educational factors (Hattie) and how they apply to our practice Success Criteria (Language) Apply the essential components of AC to an up-coming lesson or series of lessons (IRLA?) Review and create self-assessment tool for co-teaching Apply components of Collaborative Expertise (Hattie) an up- coming co-taught lesson of choice

3 What are our goals here? I have some but I’d like to hear yours first, Federal Way Secondary. Learn co-teaching strategies Understand how to share course load between co-teachers How to discover the model that works best for me/us How to work through early conflicts How we identify a good fit in co-teacher match What are the pros & cons of this model v. ELL content classes How to balance needs of all ELLs – co-teaching only gets to a limited number What’s the impact on how we would plan/strategize Understand how co-teaching can be an effective approach in your school Gain an overview of the seven co-teaching models from Honigsfeld & Dove Make a plan to use one of them in your setting before the next session (Dec 6/Jan 27) Make a plan to use one more of them in your setting AND/OR modify and adapt one before the third session (Mar 7/Mar 10)

4 What are our goals here? I have some but I’d like to hear yours first, Shelton: How to really teach the ELLs without interrupting the primary teacher How to not distract the gen ed students while I teach the ELLs Make sure I can support my students and colleagues by understanding the models as well Learn strategies to differentiate in the classroom, including supporting both teachers and academic language support Understand what co-teaching means Learn where sample lessons are for the teacher Common planning time Understand how co-teaching can be an effective approach in your school Gain an overview of the seven co-teaching models from Honigsfeld & Dove Make a plan to use one of them in your setting before the next session ( Make a plan to use one more of them in your setting AND/OR modify and adapt one before the third session

5 What are our goals here? Understand how co-teaching can be an effective approach in your school Gain an overview of the seven co- teaching models from Honigsfeld & Dove Make a plan to use one of them in your setting before the next session (Dec 6/Jan 27) Make a plan to use one more of them in your setting AND/OR modify and adapt one before the third session (Mar 7/Mar 10) I have some but I’d like to hear yours first, Federal Way Elementary?. Increase ELPA skills while also increasing content Clarification regarding our use of IRLA in push-in co-teaching Communication to classroom teachers around expectations of co-teaching/push-in models at the same urgency as specialists Ways to plan and collect data in co-teaching and push-in Learn and try out different models Unpack ELA curriculum and look for ELL support opportunities Break-out groups based on experience Strategies for making push-in more effective. Co-teach with second grade teacher daily: shared, guided, one-on-one setting Establish a planning time with my co-teacher; plan/teach at least one lesson a month together Honor “sacred planning time,” start and end on time each time we plan each week. Co-teach with fourth grade teacher (IRLA support) Get familiarized with IRLA and how to support my co-teacher Work with new teachers Collaborate with teachers during planning time Co-plan/ teach in at least 2 classrooms every 6 weeks then switch. Build relationships with multiple teachers. Try out co-teaching with at least 1 or 2 teachers. Focus on intentional planning. To build on improving student talk in small groups. I will try out co-teaching this year, Encourage teachers to try co-teaching; foster relationships. I will be consistent, Impact students all year. Regular weekly planning with co-teacher to co-teach GLAD Familiarize with IRLA to support co-teacher. Lucy Calkins Units of Study! Build strong, fluid, co-planning relationships with co-teacher. Build systems/structures support for class and ELL. Find time for co-planning ELL district-wide strategy-sharing around our shared curricula to make co-planning more efficient Time! Systems to support teachers and students.

6 The tight/loose of AC Tight --- the parts that make the car run
Partners Norms Time Signal Specific directions for input and it’s chunked (content) Specific directions for conversations including frames (language) Loose --- the options you add to make the car your own How you do each of the “tights” in your room, for your lesson Frequency Assessment

7 Partners Example Class: How to break students into precision partners:
1. Esme (highest) 11.Eduardo (middle) 2. Rogelio 12. Ben 3. Guillermo 13. Roberto 4. Maria Tomas 5. Roberto 15. Jose 6. Katie 16. Gloria 7. Alex Patrick 8. Ryan Sarah 9. Tina Nikita 10. Teo (middle) Jose (lowest) How to break students into precision partners: List students in order from (with 1 being the highest and the last student being the lowest in a skill/language ability) Cut the list in half, match the middle student with the highest student. The middle students will be matched with the lower students. Modify as needed

8 3 Partners 2 & 3 talk 1 checks 2 3 & 1 talk 2 checks 3 1 & 2 talk

9 4 Partners 1 A 1 B 2 A 2 B First round: A & B talk Alternate:
Check First round: A & B talk Alternate: 1 & 2 talk

10 4 Partners scoring 1 A 1 B 2 A 2 B First round: 1’s talk; 2’s score
Check First round: 1’s talk; 2’s score Second Round: A’s talk; B’s score

11 Norms We listen to each other We share our own ideas and explain them
We respect another’s ideas, even if they are different We let others finish explaining an idea without interrupting We take turns and share air time

12 K-1 Norms at Camelot Green level voice Eyes on the speaker
Answer the question Talk one at a time Listen to your partner Use silent signals (talk moves) Stay on topic Retell what you heard Create norms that fit your class

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14 Time Structured at first Looser as your class gets the hang of it
Must talk to your partner for 15 seconds, then it’s their turn for 15 seconds (30, 40, etc) Stop and check that each partner actually did talk, and used the language skill Looser as your class gets the hang of it Listen to the tone rather than use a timer If there’s a good academic buzz, let it continue When it drifts, do the signal Check in as to what was discussed Partners tell partners Numbered heads report out

15 Signal Make sure students know how you will get them to stop the conversation Audible or silent?

16 Chunks Measure the input Reading Visual Oral GLAD 10/2
Draw lines, mentally or physically, at sentences or paragraphs Visual Stop the video at key points Oral Plan your oral presentations to students with specific stop and talk points with questions GLAD 10/2 no more than 10 minutes input, 2 minutes conversation

17 Frames Language skills are taught through practice
Language learners need to practice the skills with specific language at first Post them somehow Tents available at 27 versions Download/modify for your own use Frames match the lesson you’re teaching You’ll have to make your own  Be creative!

18 Partners 1 A 2 B 3 A 4 B Assign Random (milling) Hybrid, in case…
A/B heterogenous 1/2 homogenous Random (milling) Hybrid, in case… 1 A 2 B 3 A 4 B Talk Check

19 Precision Partners Example
How to break students into precision partners: List students in order from 1-20 (with 1 being the highest and the last student being the lowest in a skill/language ability) Cut the list in half, match the middle student with the highest student. The middle students will be matched with the lower students. Example Class: 1. Sue (highest) Ed (middle) 2. Jeff Ben 3. Bill Rob 4. Maria Tom 5. Bob Jose 6. Katie Brock 7. Alex James 8. Steve Sarah 9. Tina Nikita 10. Ted (middle) Joe (lowest)

20 Ensure the conversation
Set chunks in the visual, oral presentation or reading Timers, per student’s turn Specific question and answer frames More complex frames as we go progress Move away from supports when possible and successful

21 Assessment Mill around with clipboard tallying skills heard
Conversation counter Class-made rubric Video your stars Class analyzes the conversation Record or video, make a transcript of linguistic structures EL shadowing

22 Frequency How much is reasonable for your class?
Sample: Students engaged in academic conversation 2-3 days a week, 3-4 times per period AC doesn’t fit every day for every activity. When does it work the best for you?

23 Where are you now and where do you need to go next with academic conversation?
With a partner, rank yourself on a 1-5 scale on each of the “tights” Partners Norms Time Signal Specific directions for input and it’s chunked (content) Specific directions for conversations including frames (language)

24 Where are you now and where do you need to go next with co-teaching?
We are going to determine the “tights”! With a partner, design a rubric to include essential components of a well taught co-taught lesson. A few samples are available, but it’s important that your team think it through --- you will be using this tool to score colleagues.

25 Coaching questions Like this Open ended
Like this Open ended Tell me about your teaching experience. What do you think about…? Invitational It would be great to hear about… Would you consider…? Specific How often does she/he…? What does it look like when…? Evocative What might this mean? Let’s speculate about… Positively or neutrally biased What might you learn from this? Tell me what you were thinking. Challenge What evidence do you have? How could that be interpreted differently?

26 Facilitative Coaching questions
Like this Paraphrasing In other words… You’re saying that… Clarifying To what extent… Tell me what you mean when you… Mediation What’s another way we might…? What would it look like if… Summarizing Let’s review the key points… Can you describe the next steps?

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28 The Buckets of Agreement
Me Co-teacher Planning Materials management Behavior management Active engagement Equity Mutual respect

29 Assessment: How do I know it’s working? Homework!
Look at page 85: Target an area of focus for assessment Teach at least one co-teaching lesson; bring stories Bring back your Plan Year-at-a-glance Book Classroom materials -- IRLA

30 What are the essential components of a great co-taught lesson?
List here…

31 Observation tool In teams, create an observation tool to use in co-teaching What are the essential components How will you know when you see them Can be a rubric Samples available but try writing one first

32 Hattie’s Visual Learning
A list of over 800 meta-analyses of educational factors Effect sizes show impact on achievement Effect size of >0 shows positive effect on scores > .40 shows a year’s growth Let’s check out a few samples… html

33 A few others… Collective teacher efficacy (1.57)
Teachers working together to evaluate their impact (Collaborative Expertise) (0.93); Classroom discussion (.82) Reciprocal teaching (.74) Building trust and welcoming errors as opportunities to learn (0.72); Using the Goldilocks principles of challenge (the challenges must be not too big, not too small but just right); and using deliberate practice to attain these challenges (0.60).

34 Read the first two tasks in Collaborative Expertise.
Discuss how they can apply to your co-teaching work.

35 So…here we go! Form teams of four, 2 sets of co-teachers
Each set plan a lesson that the other set can observe and rate with one of the tools we developed Lesson plan templates available COLO Build background Ensure engagement Infuse academic conversation with tight/loose guidelines – not required but highly recommended Assessment Plan a time to observe, rate and debrief with each other (not one of these training days, but could be, and we’ll all watch) Teach the other set’s class, not your own – better practice Thoughts, ideas, questions?

36 Dates & times Please schedule yourselves and let Elizabeth know.
This will be awesome!!


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