Enjoy
Thursday, April 21, 2016
The Importance of 4K Bilingual Education for English Learners
Enjoy
CCSS Spanish-Wide Reading Across Genres
Wide Reading Part Two:
The books shown above all deal with the topic of "the other", and differences and how to classify things and people in ways that "make intuitive" sense. In Tili y el muro by Leo Lioni, all of the rats are afraid of what is on the other side of the wall. As a result of hearing how terrible it is, and how the "other" is different and thus wrong or worse, Tili becomes curious and decides to go over the wall. La otra orilla is another text with a similar story line. A mother tells her daughter not to go across the water because different and "other" people live over there. The girl does go across the water, makes a friend and learns about humanity, joining her village to her new friend'svillage. The book, Pero, ?Donde esta ornicar? is about trying to classify a platapus (un ornicorico) because he is a mammal who lays eggs, he is neither like a bird nor like a mammal, so where does he fit? Finally the book "No te metas conmigo" talks about bullying at school and using differences not as strengths but as sources for division and misunderstanding.
Students, a traves de estos libros, can develop a sense of purpose behind our need to classify ourselves into groups of like and different, as well as our unity as living things, and as humanity.
All of these books are in your CCSS collection in your library. Ask Marlene at Banting how she plans to use them :)
D
Monday, April 11, 2016
The power of WIDE READING Across the Curriculum
The Power of WIDE READING.
By D
All Schools have in their Spanish CCSS Reading Libraries the following texts Querido Salvatierra by Simon James and La historia del Rainbow Warrior por Kalandraka. Both texts can be developed as a study of relationships, social justice, change and point of view. Querido Salvatierra is about a little girl who suspects that she has a whale in her kiddie pool so she and "greenpeace" (aka. Salvatierra) write letters back and forth about whether this could be possible and if it were how to care for the creature. Amos y Boris by William Steig addresses a friendship between a raton and a whale. The raton is naufrago and the whale saves him to land only later to become beached and need the raton's help to get to sea. Both stories are also about love and letting go, but from surprising scientific perspectives. The Rainbow Warrior text is about social action to save the lives of marine life, but especially of mammals hunted for their fur. It tells the story of how people can create social action and bring change and policy. These three texts paired with and online article about a whale who got lost in the Hudson River and was saved by the community (remember Henry se equivoca) and also addresses the biological needs of whales, with human action to preserve, revere and act to create optimal conditions for their welfare and survival.
Reading WIDELY across the curriculum helps to support making connections between texts for common themes, relationships to social and scientific action and building a deeper body of knowledge for our linguistically talented students. I encourage you all to read widely and to look out/ask your effectiveness coaches about incoming authentic Spanish texts that are FANTASTIC!!! Start a little read around reading club-it is good stuff!
Study Finds More Evidence of Racial Bias in Teachers' Expectations for Students
Study Finds More Evidence of Racial Bias in Teachers' Expectations for Students
By Elisha McNeil March 31, 2016
White teachers are less likely to expect academic success from black students, especially black boys, according to a new Johns Hopkins University study.
Published in the journal Economics of Education Review , the "Who Believes in Me?" study was compiled to investigate how teachers form expectations for students, whether those expectations are systematically biased, and whether they are affected by racial differences.
The findings are based largely on data from the Educational Longitudinal Study of 2002, an ongoing study following 8,400 10th grade public school students. For the survey, two different math or reading teachers, who each taught the same student, were asked to guess how far that one student would go in school.
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The findings show that with white students, evaluations from both teachers were about the same. But for black students, white teachers had lower expectations than black teachers.
"What I would like to do is make teachers aware of biases," said co-author Nicholas Papageorge, an assistant economics professor at JHU's Krieger School of Arts and Sciences, according to the Huffington Post. "Racism is alive and well. I'm sure when people look at a black young man they have certain views, and they might not realize they have these views, and that's really dangerous."
Researchers found that, compared to black teachers, white teachers were about 30 percent less likely to predict the same student will attain a four-year college degree and 40 percent less likely to expect their black students will even graduate high school. By contrast, black female teachers were 20 percent less likely than white teachers to predict their student wouldn't graduate high school, and 30 percent less likely to to make that prediction than black male teachers.
White teachers low expectations for black students could affect the performance of students, especially disadvantaged ones who lack access to role models who could counteract a teacher's low expectations, Papageorge said in a Johns Hopkins release. For example, for black students, data showed that having a non-black teacher in a 10th grade subject made them less likely to enroll in similar classes.
"If I'm a teacher and decide that a student isn't any good, I may be communicating that to the student," Papageorge said. "A teacher telling a student they're not smart will weigh heavily on how that student feels about their future and perhaps the effort they put into doing well in school."
The study also found that white and other non-black teachers were 5 percent more likely to predict that their black male students would not graduate high school compared to their black female students, whom white male teachers were 10 to 20 percent more likely to have low expectations for.
The research adds to a growing number of studies indicating that race can shape how teachers see and treat their students. For example, a 2010 Georgia Southern University study found that 342 students reported they had experienced a type of microagression, such as a teacher assuming a black student was poor without asking, at least once during high school. A 2015 American University study found the likelihood of boys of color being suspended or missing class in elementary school rises significantly if assigned to a teacher of another race. According to a Stanford University study in 2015, students of color are disciplined and taken out of class at higher rates than their white peers.
"While the evidence of systematic racial bias in teachers' expectations uncovered in the current study are certainly troubling and provocative, they also raise a host of related, policy-relevant questions that our research team plans to address in the near future," said Seth Gershenson, a co-author of the Johns Hopkins study and an assistant professor of public policy at American University.
Gershenson says the research team is currently studying the long-term impact of these biased teacher expectations on students beyond the education system—including educational attainment, labor market success, and interaction with the criminal justice system.
Chart Source: Johns Hopkins University
More on racial bias in the classroom:
Why Talented Black and Hispanic Students Can Go Undiscovered
Why Talented Black and Hispanic Students Can Go Undiscovered
APRIL 8, 2016
Public schools are increasingly filled with black and Hispanic students, but the children identified as “gifted” in those schools are overwhelmingly white and Asian.
The numbers are startling. Black third graders are half as likely as whites to be included in programs for the gifted, and the deficit is nearly as large for Hispanics, according to work by two Vanderbilt researchers, Jason Grissom and Christopher Redding.
New evidence indicates that schools have contributed to these disparities by underestimating the potential of black and Hispanic children. But that can change: When one large school district in Florida altered how it screened children, the number of black and Hispanic children identified as gifted doubled.
That district is Broward County, which includes Fort Lauderdale and has one of the largest and most diverse student populations in the country. More than half of its students are black or Hispanic, and a similar proportion are from low-income families. Yet, as of 10 years ago, just 28 percent of the third graders who were identified as gifted were black or Hispanic.
In 2005, in an effort to reduce that disparity, Broward County introduced a universal screening program, requiring that all second graders take a short nonverbal test, with high scorers referred for I.Q. testing. Under the previous system, the district had relied on teachers and parents to make those referrals.
The economists David Card of the University of California, Berkeley, and Laura Giuliano of the University of Miami studied the effects of this policy shift. The results were striking.
The share of Hispanic children identified as gifted tripled, to 6 percent from 2 percent. The share of black children rose to 3 percent from 1 percent. For whites, the gain was more muted, to 8 percent from 6 percent.
Why did the new screening system find so many more gifted children, especially among blacks and Hispanics? It did not rely on teachers and parents to winnow students. The researchers found that teachers and parents were less likely to refer high-ability blacks and Hispanics, as well as children learning English as a second language, for I.Q. testing. The universal test leveled the playing field.
Multiple factors could be at work here: Teachers may have lower expectations for these children, and their parents may be unfamiliar with the process and the programs. Whatever the reason, the evidence indicates that relying on teachers and parents increases racial and ethnic disparities.
The gifted program was not a panacea. The researchers found that the district’s specialized classes had little effect on the academic achievement of students who had been specifically identified as gifted, through I.Q. tests. They are not sure why. In Broward County, as in many other places, classes for the gifted use the same curriculum and textbook as other classes. Teachers in the classes for the gifted were required to have a special certification and were encouraged to supplement the curriculum.
But the separate classes did produce enormous, positive effects for children who were high achievers but did not qualify based on the I.Q. test. A quirk in the rules helped these children: Broward requires that schools with even one child who tests above the I.Q. cutoff devote an entire classroom to gifted and high-achieving children.
Since a school in Broward rarely had enough gifted children to fill a class, these classrooms were topped off with children from the same school who scored high on the district’s standardized test. These high achievers, especially black and Hispanics, showed large increases in math and reading when placed in a class for the gifted, and these effects persisted.
What is more, while many children in the gifted program gained enormously, Mr. Card and Ms. Giuliano found no negative effects for those who remained in regular classes. Yet all of these gains came at little financial cost. The enhanced classes were no more expensive than the standard ones. They were the same size as regular classes, and teachers in the classes for the gifted were paid no more than others.
This story has twists, though.
Despite these positive results, Broward County suspended its universal screening program in 2010 in a spate of budget cutting after the Great Recession. Racial and ethnic disparities re-emerged, as large as they were before the policy change. In 2012 the district reinstated a modified version of universal screening, but it has not achieved the same results. Using data from the Florida Department of Education, I calculate that 8 percent of white students in Broward County are classified as gifted. That is twice the rate for Hispanics and four times the rate for blacks, much higher ratios than under universal screening.
One problem with the new screening program is that the previous nonverbal test, which psychologists say they believe to be culturally neutral, has been replaced with one that relies more on verbal ability. Another is that Broward parents and teachers can still influence whether children are selected. While school psychologists test students at no cost, parents can hire a private psychologist to test a child, at a cost of $1,000, and are allowed to pay for multiple tests, should a child not meet the I.Q. requirement on the first try. Mr. Card and Ms. Giuliano found evidence suggesting that private testing gives an advantage to upper-income families, who tend to be white.
Many researchers worry that I.Q. tests are biased against low-income and nonwhite children, and some recommend a more holistic approach that includes teacher referrals. But referrals produce biases, too. Matthew McBee, a psychologist who edits The Journal of Advanced Academics, which focuses on gifted education, recently called referrals “the elephant in the room,” a largely unexamined source of racial and ethnic bias in the identification of gifted children.
Given these problems, we might be tempted to abandon these programs for gifted and high-achieving children entirely. After all, distinguishing between gifted students and everybody else could lock some children, especially disadvantaged children, into a long-term track with low expectations that, too often, are self-fulfilling.
But without some method of identifying talented students, disadvantaged children may fall even further behind those from affluent families, whose parents can afford niceties like private tutors, Kumon math courses and coding camps. Low-income parents just can’t afford these extras.
That’s why the research in Broward County is so important. It shows that there is a fairer way to identify gifted children, and that placing each school’s gifted and achieving students in advanced classes can shrink, rather than expand, racial and ethnic differences in achievement. Universal screening, with a standardized process that does not rely on teachers and parents, can reveal talented, disadvantaged children who would otherwise go undiscovered. Challenging classes for these children can help them to reach their full potential.
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