Larry Ferlazzo’s Websites of the Day…

…For Teaching ELL, ESL, & EFL

February 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
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Social Skills Training Report Is Even More Interesting Than I Thought…

Earlier today I posted the press release announcing a new study identifying substantial student academic gains from an intentional effort to implement social emotional learning (SEL).

Since that time, Ed Week has come out with a more extensive analysis of the report, as well as the link to the study itself.

Here’s one particularly intriguing point — Researchers found having simple lessons incorporated by teachers in their classroom were more successful than larger “multi-component” efforts that included school and community-wide programs. They attributed this to the fact it was just easier to implement more effectively and likelier to use more effective and consistent teaching methods. That makes sense to me, though I don’t think it has to be either/or — some of the “SEL” style lessons shared in my upcoming book, Helping Students Motivate Themselves: Practical Answers To Classroom Challenges, are classroom-based and provide for connecting to parents and outside communities.

I especially like the timing of the report, coming just prior to the publication of my book :) . As regular readers know, the book’s focus is using classroom lessons to connect literacy with developing life skills around topics like life skills, perseverance, personal responsibility, and goal-setting.

February 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

“Social and emotional learning programs found to boost students’ skills”

A major new study just came out reaffirming what most teachers already know — that helping students develop their capacity for self control and to identify positive goals helps them be more successful academically. Coincidentally, that’s the topic of my upcoming book — good timing :)

Here’s the press release about the study:

Being successful in school requires a combination of social, emotional, and academic competencies. A new analysis of more than 200 school-based social and emotional learning programs has found that such programs improve students’ attitudes and behaviors, and in some cases, even boost academic performance.

The study appears in the January/February issue of the journal, Child Development. It was conducted by researchers at Loyola University Chicago and the University of Illinois at Chicago.

In the first large-scale meta-analysis of school programs that enhance students’ social and emotional development, researchers reviewed 213 school-based, universal social and emotional learning programs involving more than 270,000 K-12 students. (Universal programs are offered to all students in participating classes or schools rather than to select groups.)

These programs aim to promote students’ abilities in one or more areas, including recognizing and managing emotions, establishing and maintaining positive relationships, setting and achieving positive goals, making responsible decisions, and constructively handling interpersonal situations. The programs examined included classroom-based instruction by teachers, classroom-based instruction by others (such as university researchers), and comprehensive programs featuring a combination of classroom-based teaching with additional programming at school or in families.

The researchers found that, compared to students in the studies’ control groups, students in the programs that were considered showed significantly improved social and emotional skills, caring attitudes, and positive social behaviors. In addition, students’ disruptive behavior and emotional distress declined. In the small group of studies that examined academics, the researchers found that students performed better on achievement tests, tantamount to an 11-percentile-point gain in achievement.

Programs were effective for students of all ages and from different ethnic groups, regardless of whether their schools were in urban, suburban, or rural areas, the analysis found. And not surprisingly, the researchers found better results in programs that followed recommended practices for training school personnel in promoting skills among children than in those that didn’t follow these practices.

“The findings highlight the value of incorporating well-designed and carefully conducted social and emotional learning programs into standard educational practice,” according to Joseph A. Durlak, emeritus professor of psychology at Loyola University Chicago, the study’s lead author. “Such programs do not detract from but can enhance academic achievement, while providing students with stronger skills in areas that are important to their daily lives and future functioning.”

February 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Talking To Students About Their Reading (& Their Data)

As regular readers know, our school works closely with Kelly Young from Pebble Creek Labs on our curriculum and instructional strategies. One of the  Pebble Creek-designed assessments we use in our English classes is having students complete the same two clozes three times each year — September, January, and June — to assess reading comprehension and vocabulary development. In addition, we have students read to two passages for one minute each to us during the same three times during the year in order to measure reading fluency. You can see The Best Resources For Learning About Formative Assessment for more information about these assessments.

But these assessments, especially the one for reading fluency, is about much more than data. Those few minutes are also opportunities for us to check-in with students to find-out how they’re doing. In addition, individual conversations teachers have with each student after the results of the assessments are known are good times to converse about their future hopes and goals (see My Best Posts On Students Setting Goals). These conversations help us connect genuinely useful data to genuine student self-interests. This, in turn helps students develop intrinsic motivation to achieve goals that they set for themselves — with some teacher assistance. I write more about this process in my upcoming book, Helping Students Motivate Themselves: Practical Answers to Classroom Challenges.

This week I’ve been talking with my ninth-grade students about their fluency scores (next week we’ll be having similar conversations about their cloze assessments, and they’ll be using them to complete goal sheets and actions plans for the semester).

Here is how I talk with them about their reading and their data, especially mid-year — all in short, private conversations:

First, I begin by telling them I’m going to ask them a question, and that I’m going to ask them to answer it honestly. I promise I won’t react negatively to anything they say, and there won’t be any grade consequences at all. “How much time to read each night?” I ask (students are supposed to read for 1/2 hour each night). Almost universally, I’m convinced that students answer candidly.

Next, I take one of three tacts — depending on their fluency scores (of course, it’s not always as clear-cut but, for the sake of this post, you’ll get the idea):

IF STUDENTS HAVE NOT MADE MUCH PROGRESS: When this is the case, almost always students have answered my question by telling me they don’t read much. I tell them that it shows in their scores. They’re going to have to do a lot of reading in high school, and it’s going to be hard to keep up if they can’t read faster — homework will take a lot longer. The student and I might take a few seconds to calculate how much faster they could read a text if they are able to increase their reading by ten, twenty, thirty and even forty words a minute, and how much time they would be able to save. I know the interests of each student, and what they say they want to do after high school, so I might ask them how much reading they think they’ll have to do to study for that profession or to actually do the profession. I’ll ask if they are having a hard time finding a book they find interesting, and we’ll discuss ways to find one. I’ll end my asking them to think about what they want their fluency goal to be at the end of the year so they can be prepared to complete their goal sheet next week, and ask them to think about specific things they can do to achieve it.

IF STUDENTS HAVE MADE GOOD PROGRESS, BUT ARE STILL NOT READING AT THE LEVEL THEY NEED TO BE: When this is the case, I’ll tell them that the average student increases their reading fluency by ten words per minute in a full year, and that they’ve exceeded that goal in five months. After that pat on the back, I’ll say something like, “Boy, if you were able to make that amount of progress in half a year by reading _______ minutes each night (whatever amount they told me initially), imagine the progress you could make if you increased that amount — even a little bit — or read a little more challenging book?” Then we’ll have a conversation similar to the one I recounted in the first instance — doing a little calculation, talking about it’s impact on their future, asking them to think about their goal and action plan.

IF STUDENTS HAVE MADE PROGRESS & ARE ALREADY READING WELL: When this is the case, I’ll tell them that I’m going to be honest with them — they’re doing fine and will do fine in school. I’ll also ask them if they want to settle for “fine” or do they want to go for “great”? We’ll then have a conversation about their hopes for the future. I’ll tell them that one thing they need to remember, though, is that it can sometimes take more work to go from reading 190 words per minute to 200 than to go from 100 to 110. It’s like a competitive runner — it can be harder for someone to go from running a four minute mile to someone running a 1:55 mile than someone going from a ten minute mile to running a mile in nine minutes. A person might go from 100 to 110 words per minute reading a Goosebumps book for 30 minutes a night, but it’s unlikely someone is going to go from 190 to 200 by doing the same thing. They’d need to look at reading more challenging books and for reading for a longer time.

The backdrop for these conversations are multiple life skill lessons we’ve done (and which you’ll find in my book) on the effect of learning on the brain, how perseverance and self-control affect future success, and on the importance of taking personal responsibility. Of course, another key element is the relationship I’ve built with each student.

Contrast how we use data with students — authentic assessments, personal conversations & relationships, connections to student’s future hopes, and self-selected goals — with how data might be used in schools. In fact, I’ll end this post with a video showing one of those other ways.

But before you watch it, please take a minute to think of any suggestions you might have on how I can improve the quality of my “data-informed” conversations with students. I’m all ears….

February 4, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

The Most Popular Stories On NPR

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 talk about National Public Radio or NPR (though I believe they may officially only be called NPR now). You can find the most viewed, most commented, and most recommended stories over the previous 24 hours at their Most Popular page.

February 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

Lots Of New Lessons & Resources On Egypt Protests

Here are the newest additions to The Best Sites For Learning About The Protests In Egypt:

Protests Sweep Middle East is a page of resources from Scholastic.

Teaching About Events in the Middle East: Lesson Plan is from The Huffington Post.

Violent fighting breaks out in Egypt capital Cairo is a collection of resources from CBBC Newsround.

Egypt Unrest is the title of a constantly updated page on the PBS News Hour site.

Egypt News: The Protests is a constantly updated page on The New York Times website.

Here’s a photo of Christians protecting praying Muslims in Egypt.

Egyptian Teen Reports on Political Protests in Alexandria comes from the PBS News Hour.

A Closer Look at the Fighting in Egypt is an interactive from The New York Times.

February 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

For Theory Of Knowledge Teachers

In addition to teaching Intermediate English and mainstream English classes (and sometimes Social Studies classes), I also teach IB Theory of Knowledge classes and sometimes share TOK resources on this blog.

I’ve recently posted quite a few new resources on our TOK class blog related to Oral Presentations (including student examples of outlines) that TOK teachers might find useful.

Any feedback is also welcome.

February 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

A Collection Of My Most Unusual “The Best…” Lists

So far, I’ve posted 615 — yes, 615 – “The Best…” lists over the past three years, and most get continually updated and revised.

I know they’ve been useful to my students and me, and I think most have been helpful to other teachers, too.

There have been some “unusual” ones in that collection, and I thought I’d bring together the ones that I thought were the most unusual. Unusual that they may be, in most lists I describe how I use them as learning tools with my students.

Here are my choices for My Most Unusual “The Best…” Lists:

The Best Images Of Weird, Cool & Neat-Looking Buildings (& Ways To Design Your Own)

The Best Sites To Learn About Walls That Separate Us

The Best Examples Of “Unusual” Art

The Best “When I Say Jump” Online Sites For Practicing English

The Best Online Games Students Can Play In Private Virtual “Rooms”

The Best “Fun” Sites You Can Use For Learning, Too — 2010

The Best Sites For Learning About “Cool” Cars (& Designing Your Own!)

The Best Places To Learn About (And View Video Clips Of) Teachers In The Movies

The Best Resources For Learning About Handwriting & Learning

My Best Posts On Helping Students “Visualize Success”

A Collection Of The Best “Laugh While You Cry” Videos — Contribute More!

The Best Sites For Walking In Someone Else’s Shoes

The Best Sites For Learning About Weird-Looking Creatures (And For Making Your Own!)

The Best Tools For Creating Fake “Stuff” For Learning

The Best “I Spy” (Hidden Object) Games For Vocabulary Development

The Best Places For Students To Learn About…Their Names

The Best Images Of Scary Views

The Best Sites That Show Statistics By Reducing The World & The U.S. To 100 People

The Best Collections Of Funny Signs (For Use In English Classes)

The Best Online Personality, Career, Political & Just Plain Fun Quizzes

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the over 600 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

February 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

The Best Sites For Learning About The “Blizzard Of Oz”

The “Blizzard Of Oz” is the name some in the media are giving the monster storm hitting the Midwest and Northeastern United States this week. I thought readers might find it useful for me to bring a few multimedia resources on the event together for a “The Best…” list.

I’ll also be adding a link to this list to The Best Sites For Learning About The Winter Season.

Here are my choices for The Best Sites For Learning About The “Blizzard Of Oz”:

Record storm dubbed ‘the Blizzard of Oz’ plagues the Midwest and Northeast is a series of photos from The Los Angeles Times.

Huge Winter Storm Moves Across the US are photos from The Denver Post.

Midwest buckles under storm are photos from The Sacramento Bee.

Believe It Or Not: Snow Again! is a slideshow from TIME Magazine.

Monster Storm Moves East is a video from CNN.

Blizzard cuts power as deep freeze hits Midwest contains several multimedia features from MSNBC.

Huge Storm Moves East is a Wall Street Journal slideshow.

Winter Storm Disrupts Much of Country is a New York Times slideshow.

Readers’ Storm Photos is another New York Times slideshow.

And, as a “bonus” here’s a slideshow on the 7 biggest snowstorms of all time.

Top 10 Big, Bad Blizzards is a slideshow from TIME.

Additional suggestions are welcome.

If you found this post useful, you might want to consider subscribing to this blog for free.

You might also want to explore the over 600 other “The Best…” lists I’ve compiled.

February 3, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
1 Comment

Check Out These Awards For “disingenuous education reports produced by think tanks”

“The Bunkum Awards highlight nonsensical, confusing, and disingenuous education reports produced by think tanks. They are given each year by the Think Twice think tank review project to think tank reports judged to have most egregiously undermined informed discussion and sound policy making.”

This is the description given by the National Education Policy Center, University of Colorado of their “awards” program. They just announced their winners for 2010.

You can access their archives from previous years at the same link.

February 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
5 Comments

The Arrogance Of Bill Gates — Part Two

Late last year, I wrote a post titled The Arrogance of Bill Gates. It was a commentary about his attack on Diane Ravitch in Newsweek by saying that since she didn’t agree with him than she must be for the status quo.

He’s at it again.

Here are a few comments he made when he visited the Washington Post yesterday:

“There’s almost no profession that you could say that the 2011 practitioner may not be any better than the 1920 practitioner, and teaching I think is the only profession you can say that about. …

On tenure, Gates said he understood why it was needed for college professors. But he said he was perplexed by tenure laws and rules that provide school teachers with significant due-process protections in personnel cases after they pass a probationary period.

“The idea that this one shouldn’t be about what goes on with the kids always seemed a little unusual,” he said. “You know, maybe we should try tenure in other professions. Just, you know, mix it up a little bit. Pay newspaper editors by seniority. Have tenure for them and see how that works. Try it for hot-dog making or restaurants.”

It’s absolutely mind-boggling…

February 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
0 comments

New Resources On Groundhog Day

Today’s Groundhog Day, and I’ve just made these new additions to The Best Resources For Groundhog Day:

CNN has several Groundhog Day related videos.

Groundhog Day: Can Groundhogs Really Predict Spring? is a video from How Stuff Works.

Can our furry friends really forecast? is a short, accessible article at MSNBC.

Education World has a simple Internet Scavenger Hunt about Groundhog Day.

February 2, 2011
by Larry Ferlazzo
2 Comments

Just When I Thought English Central Couldn’t Get Any Better….

English Central is, in my mind at least, clearly the most useful site for English Language Learners that’s on the Web. It’s on a zillion of “The Best…” lists, usually ranked number one. It was really difficult to believe that they could get any better.

But they just did.

Thanks to David Deubelbeiss, I learned they’ve added a whole new vocabulary building component to the site. My students use the site twice each week, but I hadn’t noticed the addition.

So, now, I’m adding English Central to another “The Best…” list — The Best Sites Where ELL’s Can Learn Vocabulary.