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Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V: Writing Across the Content Areas Rebecca Curinga, PD Coordinator Ingrid Heidrick, PD Facilitator PD Session #5 April 4, 2014 The CUNY Graduate Center, Room C201

Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V: Writing Across the Content Areas

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Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V: Writing Across the Content Areas. Rebecca Curinga , PD Coordinator Ingrid Heidrick , PD Facilitator PD Session #5 April 4, 2014 The CUNY Graduate Center, Room C201. Agenda. 8:45 Review of concept m aps and vocabulary - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part

V: Writing Across the

Content AreasRebecca Curinga, PD CoordinatorIngrid Heidrick, PD Facilitator

PD Session #5April 4, 2014The CUNY Graduate Center, Room C201

Page 2: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Agenda

8:45 Review of concept maps and vocabulary9:15 Becoming a writer and a framework for

writing using bilingual approaches10:30 Break

10:45 How the 7-week Bridges Curriculum cycle supports writing

12:00 Lunch1:00 Practicing writing activities across content

areas using the Bridges Curriculum2:30 Wrap-Up, homework and evaluation 2

Page 3: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

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Activity 1:Review from last session

Page 4: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

HW Assignment Review

•Create a Concept Map for a Tier 2 or Tier 3 word.

•Develop at least two word play activities for related Tier 1 and Tier 2 vocabulary.

You have 5 minutes to discuss and present. 4

Page 5: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

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Page 6: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

What does it mean to know a word?

I never heard it hemiola

I have a sense of it

ubiquitous

I know it

fruit6

Knowledge of a word is incremental!

We know approximately 20, 000 word families. We use about 10% of our vocabulary very

frequently, but the majority of words we know are low-frequency and comprise a wide range of topics.

Our knowledge of all words is not the same:

Page 7: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

What does a monolingual’s vocabulary look like?

7

semantic: an edible part of a plant,

usually fleshy and containing seeds;

banana, apple, orange;

vegetables, dairy, meat

collocations/idioms: bear

fruit, forbidden fruit, fruits of one’s labor

frequency: 43 times per million

words; easily accessible

phonological: [fru:t], [fru:ts], [fru:te]

rhymes with suit; sounds like fresh,

friend, front

morphological:fruit-s, fruit-y

syntactic: (noun) a, the fruit; fruit

pragmatic: general term;

no specific context

fruit

Page 8: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

What does a bilingual’s vocabulary look like?

8

fruit, fruto/fruta

phonological: [fru:t], [‘fru:to] [‘fru:ta]rhymes with suit; bruta; sounds like fruto/a, frente, frío, fresh, friend, front

morphological:fruit-s, fruit-y

fruto-s, fruta-s

syntactic:el fruto; la fruta

pragmatic: general term;

no specific context

semantic: an edible part of a plant,

usually fleshy and containing seedsbanana, apple,

orange; vegetables, dairy, meat

collocations/idioms:bear fruit – dar fruto

forbidden fruit – fruta prohibida

fruits of one’s labor – frutos de su trabajo

frequency: fruit: 43x pmwfruto: 18x pmwfruta: 24x pmw

Page 9: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

How does this translate into what we read?

980%

20%

Frequency of words in text

High Frequency (but, so, because, man woman)

Low Frequency (ancestors, melanin, absorb)

(Nation, 1993)

10%

90%

Frequency of oral vocabu-lary

High Frequency (but, so, because, man woman)

Low Frequency (ancestors, melanin, absorb)

Page 10: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Summary of vocabulary knowledge

• Complex network of interrelated knowledge• Continues to change and grow throughout the

lifespan • Takes years of wide-spread exposure to a language to acquire a “native-like” lexicon

A bilingual is not the sum of two monolinguals!

10

(Grosjean, 1989)

Page 11: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

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Today’s Goals

To be able to:•Learn the process of becoming a writer and

understand a framework for writing development with a bilingual approach.

•Recognize how the 7-week cycle of the Bridges Curriculum supports writing.

•Practice developing writing activities across the content areas using the Bridges Curriculum.

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Goal 1:What is the process of becoming a writer? How can we teach writing using a bilingual approach?

Page 13: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Four Language Abilities

Listening Speaking

Reading Writing

13

ORAL

LITERACY

RECEPTIVE PRODUCTIVE

Page 14: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Connecting Reading to Writing

•Build on oral language

•Expand students’ language abilities

•Connect to the curriculum

•Model using published books•Highlight text structures and vocabulary in class

readings as examples for writing14

Page 15: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Process of Becoming a Writer

•Approximately TWO DECADES of schooling to develop writing skills!

•Writing develops higher order thinking skills necessary to succeed academically.

•Writing requires a substantial amount of executive functioning.

•Academic writing requires the student to use his/her own ‘voice’ to distinguish his/her own thoughts and arguments from others. 15

(Kellogg, 2006)

Page 16: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Stages of cognitive development in writing skills – monolinguals

Writer is able to visualize the reader’s

representation, as well as his/her own and the

text’s. Example: Novel

Knowledge-Crafting

Writer is able to make the text comprehensible

to other readers.Example: High school

or college research paper

Knowledge-Transforming

Acquiring alphabetic and print knowledge.

Focusing on meaning to put ideas into print for

the first time.Content limited to narratives; writer

unaware of text representation.

Example: Elementary school essay

Knowledge-Telling

16

(Adapted from Kellogg, 2006)

Page 17: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Stages of cognitive development in writing skills – Bridges students

Writer is able to incorporate 6+1 traits

and differentiate writer’s/text’s

representation. Example: Writing

project, immigration stories

Knowledge-Crafting

Writer is able to make the text

comprehensible to other readers.

Representations in long-term memory are

shaped by writing process; it’s not just

retrieval. Example: LEA writing

activity

Knowledge-Transforming

Developing alphabetic/print

knowledge in English; HL.

Focusing on meaning to put ideas into print

for the first time.Bridges writers are

cognitively more advanced than young

childrenExample: Sentence

using compare-contrast, claim –

evidence, etc.

Knowledge-Telling

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Page 18: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

•Need to see themselves as

Authors not just people who know how to

write•Drawing as early writing•Personal stories based on life

experiences

•No one is a “native speaker of writing”

How do Bridges Students Become Writers?

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(Cloud, Genesee & Hamayan, 2009)

Page 19: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

What steps do you take in your writing process?

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Pre-writing

• Ideas / Content

• Voice

Drafting

• Organization

Revising

• Sentence Fluency

• Word Choice

Editing

• Conventions

Publishing

• Presentation

Writing Cycle 6 + 1 Traits

Page 20: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Excerpts of writing from Bridges students

•In groups, compare three writing samples according to the 6+1 traits•Group 1: Ideas / Content and Voice•Group 2: Organization•Group 3: Sentence Fluency and Word Choice•Group 4: Conventions and Presentation

•Look for HL patterns•Look for areas of potential growth 20

Page 21: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Writing Sample 1

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Writing Sample 2

Page 22: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Writing Sample 3

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Page 23: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Bridges Pre/Post English Writing Level Results (2012-13)

only HL literacy

low beginner

mid beginner

high beginner

low intermediate

0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20

1

6

15

9

2

7

12

13

1

0

Pre-writing Post-writing23(n=33)

Page 24: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Post-Writing

Sample 1

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Page 25: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

A bilingual approach to writing

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Page 26: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Who are the Bridges students?(Years 1 & 2)

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Bridges

Students

(<2 yrs in US)

Age Range(13-18 yrs)

Home Languages

(10+)

Home Countries

(12+)

HL Literacy Level

(0 – 4th gr)HL Math Level

(0 – 3rd gr)

Dominican RepublicEl Salvador

Honduras

Guatemala

Mexico

Puerto Rico / USA

Bangladesh

Yemen

Senegal

Guinea

Gambia

Ivory Coast

SpanishBangla

Arabic

Wolof

Soninke

Mandingo

French

Fulani

Dioula

Garifuna

Kiché

Page 27: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Translanguaging: What is it and why is it important for teaching Bridges students how

to write?

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Definition: the act performed by bilinguals of accessing different linguistic features….in order to maximize communicative potential.•It’s natural! It’s what bilinguals do. •It makes sense! Why use only one resource

to help them to learn to write when you can use two?

Page 28: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Assumption: Monolingualism is the rule, bilingualism is the exception.

Multiple official languages Single official language, functionally multilingual No official language, functionally multilingual Unknown

Page 29: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Assumption: English is the only language of the United States

Page 30: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

How can translanguaging help Bridges students learn how to write?

•Provides a way to make rigorous content instruction comprehensible. •Reduces the burden on the executive

functioning necessary for learning how to become a writer and uses students’ cognitive energy to focus on learning how to write in English. •Develops academic skills that transfer to

English. Also develops metalinguistic skills. 30

Page 31: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

How can translanguaging help Bridges students learn

how to write?

•By finding their voice as academic writers.•By enabling language acquisition to

take place in the classroom without having for the teacher to assume a direct role.

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Page 32: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Concerns about using translanguaging in the classroom

•Using the HL in the classroom will delay or prevent ELLs’ acquisition of English. •Using the HL in the classroom is confusing,

for both the students and the teacher.•How can a teacher use translanguaging

when he or she doesn’t speak the student’s HL?

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Page 33: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Common translanguaging strategies for writing

•Form a group by HL for interactive writing. •Brainstorm ideas using HL.•Write in both English and HL.•Use alphabet chart in student’s HL for those

who can’t write. •Drawing/labeling•Translating•Create an oral product alongside the

written. 33

Page 34: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Translanguaging Activity

•Pre-writing: brainstorming, generating ideas and content, developing voice

•Think about when you’ve moved from one place to another•Describe it with a drawing•Label drawing in any language•Share your ideas / experience

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Goal 2:How does the 7-Week Bridges Curriculum cycle support writing?

Page 36: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Writing Outcomes in Bridges

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6+1 traits across

Bridges Units

Page 38: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

UNIT 3: JOURNEYSContent Area Search Activity

Find and HIGHLIGHT the following methods in your content area in the Unit 3 Weekly Lesson Outline:

In which week(s) do they occur?What are some interdisciplinary overlaps in concepts and

vocabulary?How might these methods scaffold writing?

•Translation of the EQ•See Think Wonder•Build an LEA text•Concept Map 38

Page 39: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Writing Project

•HIGHLIGHT the WRITING project for each content area

What is the final writing project?In which week does it occur?What are the pre-writing activities outlined in

the curriculum? In which week do they start?39

Page 40: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Journeys

40

Page 41: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Translate the Essential Question (ELA, Unit 3, Week 1, Lesson 1)

Why do people move? What are the positive and negative effects?

•Content objective: Identify ways immigrants survive in a new country.

• Language objective: Translate the EQ and respond in HL.

•Why is it important to translate this EQ to HL?•How does it support the writing project?

• Language awareness•Validation of HL skills and knowledge•Deeper understanding of unit context•Writing skills in HL transfer to English

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Page 42: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

See-Think-Wonder(ELA, Unit 3, Week 1, Lesson 2)

Who were the first people in Central America?

The Maya in the Past and the Present

•Content objective: Observe images of the first people in Central America and make inferences about the culture.

• Language objective: Observe using ‘I see_____’, infer using ‘I think’, and wonder using WH questions.

•How does this activity support pre-writing for the immigration project?• Engage, build background to content• Develop oral language related to content• Sentence level writing begins

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Page 43: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Language Experience Approach(ELA, Unit 3, Week 1, Lesson 3)

What happened to the Maya?Indigenous Ancient

• Content objective: Identify changes from Mayan life long ago to Mayan life today.

• Language objective: Describe using ‘Long ago ____. Then ___________ Now the Maya________.’

•How does this LEA support the writing project?Language structures from this LEA can be usedContent can be used for the immigration storyCan be developed into more complex sentences,

paragraph form as a model for good writing

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Page 44: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Concept Map (ELA, Unit 3, Week 1, Lesson 4)

POWERChanges in power in Mayan life

•Content objective: Identify cause and effect of changes in power in Mayan life.

• Language objective: Explain cause and effect using ‘because’ and ‘so.’

•How does this concept map support the writing project?

Language, vocabulary and sentence examplesIdea of power/powerful gives depth to their own

immigration storiesGenerate related ideas and content for pre-writing stage

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Goal 3:How can we develop writing activities that support Bridges students to become writers?

Page 46: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

What to expect in Bridges students’ writing

•It is important to get to know your students’ HL grammatical structure and writing system

•Invented spelling from HL (e.g. Spanish)•chaket for jacket from Spanish spelling•escul for school for the English pronunciation

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Page 47: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Writing Systems of Bridges Students

•Alphabetic•Latin script: Haitian Creole / Spanish / French /

English •Arabic script: Arabic / Urdu•Bengali script: Bengali (Bangla)•Pinyin: Chinese•Cyrillic: Russian

•Logographic•Chinese 47

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Bengali

Arabic

Chinese characters/Pinyin

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Application / Practice in Content Area Groups

Participants develop activities to support a writing project using Unit 3 of the Bridges Curriculum.1. Review the Bridges website to find supplemental

materials to the writing project for your content area: http://bridges.ws.gc.cuny.edu/

2. Develop three activities to support the writing project using the weekly lesson outline, or sample lessons from your content area.

3. Incorporate translanguaging strategies to enhance writing development.

4. Present your activities to the other groups.

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Summary of Today’s PD Session

•What has changed in your understanding of how Bridges students develop writing skills?

•What is one thing you will do in your classroom this week to help build writing skills in your content area?

Page 51: Building Bridges for Emergent Bilinguals, Part V:  Writing Across the  Content Areas

Homework Assignment: Writing Methods

•Adjust the Bridges Power Methods (e.g. See-Think-Wonder, LEA, Read-Retell-Respond) to become daily writing practice.

•Implement translanguaging activities with your writing lessons.

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Recommended Reading• Celic, C., & Seltzer, K. (2012). Translanguaging: A

CUNY-NYSIEB Guide for Educators. The Graduate Center, The City University of New York. http://www.nysieb.ws.gc.cuny.edu/files/2013/03/Translanguaging-Guide-March-2013.pdf

• See also: http://www.nysieb.ws.gc.cuny.edu/cuny-nysieb-publications

• Cloud, N., Genesee, F., & Hamayan, E. (2009). Literacy instruction for English language learners. Portsmouth, NH: Heinemann.