Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

May 6, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

April’s Best “Tweets” — Part Two (A Few Days Late)

Every month I make a short list highlighting my choices of the best resources I shared through (and learned from) Twitter, but didn’t necessarily include them in posts here on my blog. Now and then, in order to make it a bit easier for me, I may try to break it up into mid-month and end-of-month lists.

I’ve already shared in earlier posts several new resources I found on Twitter — and where I gave credit to those from whom I learned about them. Those are not included again in this post.

If you don’t use Twitter, you can also check-out all of my “tweets” on my Twitter profile page or subscribe to their RSS feed.

Here are my picks for April’s Best Tweets — Part Two (not listed in any order):

“Natural Disasters from 1900-2008 Infographic”

Your Credit Score Demystified Infographic

“The Journey Of A Successful Blog Post” Infographic

World Population & Ownership of Global Assets Infographic

How soap operas could save the world, Boston Globe

8 moments that shaped the environmental movement, slideshow

NPR on teacher tenure

“No Value Added: The Mismeasurement of Teaching Quality” by David Cohen

Fun Analogies and Metaphors Found in High School Essays

Teaching: No ‘Fallback’ Career, NY Times

Stanford charter school and ‘confirmation bias’, Wash Post

Can Messy Be A Sign Of Brilliance?

How Long Does It Take To Become a “Good” Teacher? Larry Cuban

You might also be interested in seeing a list of favorite tweets at Shelly Terrell’s blog.

May 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Some Final Resources On Cinco de Mayo

Here are some final additions to The Best Sites For Teaching & Learning About Cinco de Mayo:

Why Do We Celebrate Cinco de Mayo is a CNN video.

President Obama Celebrates Cinco de Mayo is a video of the celebration at the White House.

Cinco De Mayo History: 7 Must-Know Facts About The Annual Celebration is a slideshow from The Huffington Post.

Cinco de Mayo goes hip is a slideshow from The Orange County Register.

May 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Some More Great Resources On The Oil Spill

Here are some new additions to The Best Sites To Learn About The Gulf Oil Spill:

In Deep Water is an infographic from Information is Beautiful.

Oil Spill Map: Hard hit and waiting for another blow is a graphic from The Washington Post.

The Drill on the Spill: Learning About the Gulf Oil Leak in the Lab are lesson plans from the New York Times.

Gulf Oil Spill Could Be Most Damaging in History is a PBS News Hour classroom lesson.

Putting A Lid On The Leak is an interactive from MSNBC.

May 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Some Excellent New Oil Spill Resources

Here are some more additions to The Best Sites To Learn About The Gulf Oil Spill:

Spill Effects Underwater is a NY Times graphic.

U.S. Oil Spill explained is an excellent animation from Al Jazeera English. Unfortunately, though, it’s hosted on YouTube, so may not be accessible to schools.

Animation of Oil-Spill Cleanup Methods is a video from The Wall Street Journal.

The Chicago Tribune has a ton of resources on the spill, including many graphics (scroll down to the bottom of the page).

May 5, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Latest Oil Spill Update

Here are today’s additions to The Best Sites To Learn About The Gulf Oil Spill:

Oil Spells Trouble For Oystermen is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

Oil Lurks Off The Gulf Coast is a series of photos from The Sacramento Bee.

Here are some images and a description of the concrete containment zone they want to put over the leak. If scroll down near the bottom of this MSNBC page, you’ll see another diagram called “Putting A Lid On The Leak.”

The Shrimper Survivor is a New York Times video on a Vietnamese immigrant working in the Gulf.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

“How Americans See Europe”

How Americans See Europe is a funny, accurate (in the sense that I believe it reflects what many Americans believe), and very sad map showing the stereotypes that many people in the United States have about Europe.

My first thought was that it would be great to help teach Perception in my International Baccalaureate Theory of Knowledge class. And I do think that’s still a good idea.

But then I got to wondering if there was any way I could use it with my English Language Learners.

I don’t think the map itself would be very accessible to them. However, I could adapt the idea.

I’ve written in my book, English Language Learners: Teaching Strategies That Work, about having my Hmong refugee students share the stories they heard in the Thai camps about the United States (we ate people, etc.). It would be interesting to do a more in-depth lesson with ELL’s sharing the perceptions they think people in their country have of the U.S.– and why. Then they could share if they’ve found any to be true. In addition, they could share what perceptions they think people here have of their native country, and why.

It could make for some interesting discussions and excellent learning opportunities.

In fact, I’m going to add this infographic and lesson idea to The Best Sites For Walking In Someone Else’s Shoes. It seems like a good fit.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Performance Assessment

Deborah Meier’s education advice to Obama is an excellent column in the Washington Post about “performance assessment” in evaluating both students and teachers. This is an excellent, and useful, alternative to the evaluative processes that are used right now in schools.

Deborah Meier writes about it in the context of students:

For our nation’s students, the evaluative process should be treated less like the part of the driver’s test where we complete a pen-and-paper exam, and more like the part where we actually get in a car and show what we can do on a real road with real traffic and real-time scenarios unfolding all around us.

She describes an assessment done at one of her former schools where oral interviews are conducted with each student twice each year. The student reads aloud and discusses the text. We do something similar at our school, where we meet with each student three times each year. The student reads two short passages to a teacher to measure reading fluency, and each time the student completes two clozes (fill-in-the-gap) to measure reading comprehension and vocabulary development.

This is how she describes performance assessment for teachers:

For our nation’s teachers, we need to allocate time in the school day for educators to meet with their students and colleagues to revise plans, provide feedback, and make mid-flight corrections based on evidence.

Teachers need to be observed by their colleagues on a planned basis as part of a peer review system. And schools need external reviewers to look over student work and classrooms in a non-punitive environment that lets educators focus less on hiding their weaknesses, and more on listening for helpful advice.

She goes on to describe  what parents and the public deserve:

We need to provide publicly available, easily accessible information regarding all of these interdependent processes: Who is involved, how often do student, teacher and whole-school assessments occur, and how have educators responded to the information they’ve acquired in order to improve the learning conditions for children?

It all sounds good to me….

For more information on performance assessment, please read an earlier post.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

“Most Highlighted Passages of All Time”

As I’ve explained in earlier pieces, I periodically post “most popular” lists of websites (and books) that I think educators might find useful. Of course, there are a number of ways to gauge “popularity.” I just view these lists as opportunities to check-out some new sites and resources, and find it interesting to see which ones might be particularly “popular.”

Today, I’d like to point out a feature from Amazon called “Most Highlighted Passages Of All Time.”

Here’s how Amazon describes it:

The Amazon Kindle, Kindle for iPhone and Kindle for iPad each provide a very simple mechanism for adding highlights. Every month, Kindle customers highlight millions of book passages that are meaningful to them.

We combine the highlights of all Kindle customers and identify the passages with the most highlights. The resulting Popular Highlights help readers to focus on passages that are meaningful to the greatest number of people. We show only passages where the highlights of at least three distinct customers overlap, and we do not show which customers made those highlights.

It’s pretty interesting.

Thanks to Interesting Pile for the tip.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Times Square Bomb Update

Here are the newest additions to The Best Sites To Learn About The Times Square Car Bomb:

The New York Times has an impressive graphic on the event.

The Slogan That Saved the Day: ‘See Something, Say Something’ is a Wall Street Journal article.

MSNBC has a number of updated videos on this page.

The Associated Press has an interactive on the bomb.

Times Square bomb suspect arrested ‘at last second’ is a video from CNN.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Runt.ly

Runt.ly is a very easy web application where you can write (or copy and paste) and/or grab images off the web (or upload them) and immediately create a webpage out of them. You don’t have to register to use it, but if you don’t register your pages are deleted after 30 days.

If it’s not blocked by content filters, and other apps are, it might be worth considering using with students to post some of their work.

I’m adding it to The Best Places Where Students Can Write Online.

May 4, 2010
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Interview Of The Month: Mary Ann Zehr From Education Week

Each month I interview people in the education world about whom I want to learn more. You can see read those past interviews here.

Mary Ann Zehr is an assistant editor at Education Week covering, among other topics, English Language Learner issues. She writes a must-read blog for Ed Week titled Learning The Language.

What led you to covering the English Language Learner “beat” for EdWeek?

At age 25, when I came back to the United States after teaching English in China for two years, I was torn between going to graduate school to get a master’s in journalism or a master’s in TESOL. I chose the journalism degree. But then when I started working for Education Week in 1997, it was natural for me to take an interest in English-language learners. For two years, I specialized in writing about technology in schools. I expressed an interest to my editor that if the ELL beat was ever free, I’d love to have it. The beat did become free and I got what I had asked for.

What are the stories you’ve liked writing the most and why did you like them so much?

I really enjoy writing a story that enables me to get to know students and parents from a culture that is new to me. It expands my horizons, and I hope it also expands the knowledge of EdWeek’s readers. I enjoy immersing myself in a culture other than my own. For example, a number of years ago, I wrote a story about how parents from several groups of immigrants—Hispanic Pentecostals, Russian Pentecostals, and Muslim Kurds—were concerned about the clash between their conservative values and what they viewed as more liberal values of their children’s peers and some educators in the public schools of Harrisonburg, Va. For that story, I attended a quinceanera, the traditional party for a Mexican 15-year-old. I also ate a meal seated on the living room floor of a Kurdish family. And I attended a Russian Pentecostal church service. So I got a glimpse into several cultures at the same time I learned about the school-related concerns of some immigrant parents.

I also really get excited when I have a chance to write about a school or school district that seems to truly be giving access to English-language learners to the regular curricula in schools, which is unfortunately, not always the case. I get excited when I visit a school and see that ELLs have the chance to study science and social studies, not just math and English, from the start. I found that to be true when I wrote about the Brooklyn International High School in New York City. It also was the case for a newcomer program in Columbus, Ohio, schools that I wrote about when featuring Somali refugees. It seemed that Salt Lake City schools also came a long way in giving access to the core curricula to ELLs after receiving pressure from the U.S. Department of Education’s office for civil rights. I noticed when I visited an elementary school in that district that the teachers were very aware of the needs of the ELLs in their classes.

Are there any things you can characterize as “trends” nationally in teaching ELLs?

More and more school districts are seriously trying to figure out how to teach academic content and English to ELLs at the same time. How to do so is a big trend in professional development. How to apply “response to intervention” to ELLs is a very hot topic in the field. Response to intervention, or RTI, is an approach in which educators give struggling students extra help with the aim of preventing referrals to special education. I’m noticing that how best to teach second-language learners at the preschool level is also becoming a very hot topic in education circles.

How might you characterize the positions that the Obama Administration might be taking on specific policies related to teaching English-language learners?

The Obama blueprint for ELL provisions that should be in the reauthorization of the Elementary and Secondary Education Act (now called No Child Left Behind) doesn’t have a lot of details.The key components for ELLs are that states should establish an evaluation system on the effectiveness of programs for ELLs and that states should standardize their criteria for identification of ELLs and for their readiness to leave special programs.

I haven’t heard any word from the Obama administration, for instance, on whether it would support making the category for ELLs stable for federal accountability purposes, so that school districts and states get credit for ELLs’ performance on tests after they no longer are getting special help to learn the language. Now, students’ test scores can be counted in the ELL category for two years after they are deemed fluent in English. Researchers from the Working Group on ELL Policy are pushing for this change in the law. At the same time, I’ve talked with at least one state education official that doesn’t like the idea.

During the presidential campaign, the Obama platform said it endorsed “transitional bilingual education.” But I haven’t heard the president mention these words since he was elected. I don’t know of any instance in which U.S. Secretary of Education Arne Duncan mentioned bilingual education. In general, I haven’t heard much from this new administration about instruction of ELLs. The U.S. Department of Education has hosted a forum on how best to assess ELLs. Mr. Duncan has also talked publicly about the need for better assessments for ELLs.

Are you working on any particularly interesting future stories?

I’m always looking for school districts, rather than just individual schools, that have been successful with ELLs. I also would like to be able to feature high schools that are implementing promising practices for ELLs. It’s not easy to find them. I haven’t yet had a chance to visit a school district to write about Burmese refugees, the 2nd-largest group of refugees now being settled in the United States. I’m not sure if our news priorities will permit that in the next school year. Right now, Iraqis are the largest group of refugees coming to the United States. Bhutanese rank third. I’ve had an opportunity to write about both of those groups.

Is there anything you’d like to share that I haven’t asked you about?

I meet many English-language learners whom I find to be inspiring. I’m particularly impressed by students who have missed years of schooling and come to this country and take advantage of whatever opportunity they have to learn. I’ve met students who have learned to read for the first time IN ANY LANGUAGE when they were teenagers. That can’t be easy. I think their stories should be told.

Thanks, Mary Ann!