National Institute for Literacy
 

[SpecialTopics 834] Re: check lists for students

Cheryl Thornett cherylthornett at hotmail.com
Fri Feb 29 15:35:22 EST 2008


Anyone who is interested can look at the online version of the UK National
Curricula for ESOL, Literacy and Numeracy, with some associated material and
support for teachers, including the competencies for each skill at each
level.

http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_esol/
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_literacy/
http://www.dfes.gov.uk/curriculum_numeracy/

Cheryl Thornett
ESOL tutor
Birmingham UK Adult Education


----- Original Message -----
From: <selover200 at comcast.net>
To: <specialtopics at nifl.gov>
Sent: Friday, February 29, 2008 5:28 PM
Subject: [SpecialTopics 831] Re: check lists for students



> Greetings to all--

>

> I have not had a chance to read all of the postings yet, but as a new

> teacher of ESL, I have been searching for checklists of standards or

> competencies so that my students can document their own progress, and to

> encourage them to take a more active roll in their own education, such as:

> What do I need to learn next?

>

> Since most of the ESL courses in the country have similar competencies or

> standards, do we not have these checklists in place??

>

> With adults, learner persistence needs to come from within the students.

> We cannot require them to attend.

> Many of our adult learners were not successful as students the first time

> around, or they never had the opportunity to continue their education

> beyond 3rd to 6th grade. Therefore, they do not always know how to direct

> their own education or how to learn.

>

> Many of them view education as something that is done to them, rather than

> something that they are able to and need to actively pursue and work on.

> They do not know how to educate themselves, therefore, it is our job to

> teach them how to actively learn English and what ever else they want to

> learn.

>

> Recently, I took a course that made me realize that assessments were

> necessary to guide our instruction appropriately, beyond the quarterly

> CASAS tests. Formative assessments can be both a teaching mechanism as

> well as an assessment that guides both the student and the teacher.

>

> For new teachers, more explicit guidelines and examples of how to design

> formative assessments within lesson plans are needed.

>

> If you or your schools have existing plans that have formative

> assessments, I would love to hear more about them. I currently teach a

> Mulit-level ESL class, with most of my students in the Beg. Literacy to

> low Intermediate levels.

>

> Thank you for the great discussions.

> Linda Selover

>

>

>

>>





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