[EnglishLanguage 2375] Re: advancing competencySheryl Rogel srogel at bates.ctc.eduMon May 12 11:51:11 EDT 2008
Thank you. I had a vague notion such as you described; however, your words create a scene for me that is most helpful. In fact, today I will start working just as you described with one of the adult students in our college prep writing course. Thanks so much. Sheryl Rogel English Instructor Bates Technical College 1101 Yakima Ave S Tacoma, WA 98498 253-680-7267 "Every study of young writers I've done in the last twenty years has underestimated what they can do; in fact, we know very little about the human potential for writing." Donald Graves ________________________________ From: englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov [mailto:englishlanguage-bounces at nifl.gov] On Behalf Of Holly Dilatush Sent: Friday, May 09, 2008 2:24 PM To: The Adult English Language Learners Discussion List Subject: [EnglishLanguage 2366] Re: advancing competency Hello Sheryl, all, a quick response now, maybe more later -- But setting written specific goals and then developing a rubric (with input from learner and facilitator/instructor on observed error/challenge patterns) -- then ensuring that the rubric is understood, then editing paragraphs with a focus on ONLY one rubric item at a time, repeatedly -- challenge the learner to take one paragraph, edit it looking ONLY for ONE of the errors she/he is trying to correct, then have it reviewed by instructor, then edited / perfected again for that ONE error only. Then repeat with another paragraph and another and another until learner feels more confident in that skill (this may be a day, days, weeks; varying per learner), then POST a written dated track record of progress, and tackle the next item -- I've noticed in informal research that this method yields positive results, measurable results, and is a motivator, and often rapid incremental progress noted, with fewer backslides than other approaches. must dash, hope this makes some sense and is helpful in some way -- will try to post/share a sample rubric later, Holly On Fri, May 9, 2008 at 3:29 PM, Sheryl Rogel <srogel at bates.ctc.edu> wrote: Greetings. I am new to this blogging world; thus, I may be not applying this form correctly as I am just 'replying to all' via my email. I am quite interested in the how teachers advance the language of higher level learners of English. In my regular college prep English courses, I work with a few students each quarter at this level, and in the last week I have been introduced to two young, 14 year old, Chinese students attending a local private school who want to advance their English this summer. They have been excellent students in their Chinese schools and their thinking shows depth and much of their speaking and writing in our language is delightful --- similar to our high school and adult students. However, their writing also reflects a variety of misunderstandings about sentence structure and verb and preposition choices, as well as a lack of depth in vocabulary, i.e. overuse of words such as 'good' - 'nice' - words that appear in primary school readers. They are asked to write page+ long assignments and the misunderstandings continue to pile up until we must ask, "Where do we start?" Any suggestions focusing on strategies, lessons, and/or ideas that have been successful in advancing English competency would be welcomed. Thank you. Holly (Dilatush) holly at dilatush.com (434) 960.7177 cell phone (434) 295.9716 home phone [OK to call 7:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m. EST / GMT -5 time] "As soon as we begin to generalize, we fail to have meaningful dialogue." (Katherine Mercurio Gotthardt, 2008) "Live with intention. Share inside~out smiles, inspire hope, seek awe and nurture in nature." www.tales-around-the-world.blogspot.com www.abavirtual-learningcenter.org -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: http://www.nifl.gov/pipermail/englishlanguage/attachments/20080512/1c4a77eb/attachment.html
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