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Charts and Diagrams Stanley A. Lucero 1 Charts and Diagrams Contents Language Acquisition in the First Language.................................................................................................. 2 Language Acquisition in Second Language ................................................................................................... 3 English Language Development Proficiency Levels [ELD for L2] ................................................................... 4 Key Ring Vocabulary Cards............................................................................................................................ 5 Sentence Strips: word-picture-sentence ...................................................................................................... 6 Four Domains of Language ........................................................................................................................... 7 Stages of Cognitive Development – Jean Piaget ........................................................................................... 8 Piaget’s Cognitive Development Stages........................................................................................................ 9 Stages of English Language Development .................................................................................................. 10 Limbic System ............................................................................................................................................. 11 Brain Activity in bilinguals ........................................................................................................................... 12 Common Underlying Proficiency ................................................................................................................ 13 The Effects of Bilingualism .......................................................................................................................... 14 Jim Cummins’ Grid ...................................................................................................................................... 15 Transfer of Metalinguistic Knowledge in Spanish/English Biliterate Students ........................................... 16 New Bloom’s Taxonomy ............................................................................................................................. 18 Language Structure ..................................................................................................................................... 19

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  • Charts and Diagrams

    Stanley A. Lucero

    1

    Charts and Diagrams

    Contents Language Acquisition in the First Language .................................................................................................. 2

    Language Acquisition in Second Language ................................................................................................... 3

    English Language Development Proficiency Levels [ELD for L2] ................................................................... 4

    Key Ring Vocabulary Cards ............................................................................................................................ 5

    Sentence Strips: word-picture-sentence ...................................................................................................... 6

    Four Domains of Language ........................................................................................................................... 7

    Stages of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget ........................................................................................... 8

    Piagets Cognitive Development Stages........................................................................................................ 9

    Stages of English Language Development .................................................................................................. 10

    Limbic System ............................................................................................................................................. 11

    Brain Activity in bilinguals ........................................................................................................................... 12

    Common Underlying Proficiency ................................................................................................................ 13

    The Effects of Bilingualism .......................................................................................................................... 14

    Jim Cummins Grid ...................................................................................................................................... 15

    Transfer of Metalinguistic Knowledge in Spanish/English Biliterate Students ........................................... 16

    New Blooms Taxonomy ............................................................................................................................. 18

    Language Structure ..................................................................................................................................... 19

  • Charts and Diagrams

    Stanley A. Lucero

    2

    Language Acquisition in the First Language

    The four language domains are

    developmental, sequential stages of

    language development in children.

    Listening [begins in the womb when baby reacts to sounds]

    Speaking [begins about age 1 year]

    Reading [begins when child recognizes print: signs and symbols]

    Writing [begins when child begins to draw/scribble]

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    3

    Language Acquisition in Second Language

    Second language acquisition follows the same

    sequence as first language acquisition. Second

    language acquisition begins when the child is

    continually exposed to a second language. As a

    general principal, the stronger the first language

    skills, the more rapid are the acquisition of the

    second language skills. [Cummins: Threshold

    Proficiency]

    Listening [0-6 months]

    Speaking [6 months - 1 year]

    Reading [1- 7 years; depending on L1 transferrable skills]

    Writing [1-7 years; depending on L1 transferrable skills]

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    4

    English Language Development Proficiency Levels [ELD for L2]

    As English Learners acquire their second language [English], they

    progress from no knowledge of English to mastering English [listening,

    speaking, reading, and writing] and functioning at grade level

    academically in English to the level of their native-English speaking

    peers. [For example: Sixth grade English Learners must be at or near

    sixth grade academic proficiency levels.]

    English Learners will usually be at different proficiency levels for each of

    the four language domains.

    Sample listening/speaking questions and approximate time frame taken from Classroom Instruction

    That Works with English Language Learners Facilitators Guide by Jane D. Hill and Cynthia L. Bjork.

    http://www.ascd.org/publications/books/108052/chapters/The-Stages-of-Second-Language-Acquisition.aspx

    Preproduction [0-6 months]

    "Show me the wolf."

    "Where is the house?" Stage 1

    Early Production [6 months - 1 year]

    Did the brick house fall down?'

    "Who blew down the straw house?" Stage 2

    Speech Emergence [1-3 years]

    "Explain why the third pig built his house out of bricks."

    "What does the wolf want?" Stage 3

    Intermediate Fluency [3-5 years]

    "What would happen if the pigs outsmarted the wolf?"

    Why could the wolf blow down the house made of sticks, but not the house made of bricks?" Stage 4

    Advanced Fluency [5-7 years]

    Ask students to retell the story, including main plot elements but leaving out unnecessary details. Stage 5

    Fluent English Proficient [FEP]

    English Learner has been reclassified as FEP after meeting multiple criteria demonstrating his/her ability to function at or near the level of native-English speaking peers in all 4 language domains and at or near grade level in academic content areas. Reclassification

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    5

    Key Ring Vocabulary Cards

    Sample based on sky words.

    Sun El sol Lub hnub

    Moon La luna Lub Hlis

    Stars Las estrellas Cov hnub qub

    Clouds Las nubes Cov Huab

    Rain La lluvia Los Nag

    Materials needed

    5 blank index cards

    new envelope

    key ring

    five new vocabulary words to

    learn

    markers or crayons

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    Sentence Strips: word-picture-sentence

    Sun El sol

    The sun is yellow. El sol esta amarillo.

    Moon La luna

    The moon is bright. La luna esta brillante.

    Stars Las estrellas

    There stars are in the sky. Hay estrellas en el cielo.

    Clouds Las nubes

    The coulds are foating. Las nubes estan flotando.

    Rain La lluvia

    The rain is falling. La lluvia esta cayendo.

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    Four Domains of Language

    Listening

    Speaking

    Reading

    Writing

    Listening

    Sound patterns

    Understanding meaning

    Understanding vocabulary

    Speaking

    Sound production

    Using spoken vocabulary

    Talking for communication

    Reading

    Sound-symbol relationships

    Converting print to sounds

    decoding

    For new knowledge

    For pleasure

    Writing

    Converting sounds to symbols

    encoding

    communicate ideas

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    8

    Stages of Cognitive Development Jean Piaget

    SOURCE: Learning and Teaching: Piaget.

    http://www.learningandteaching.info/learning/piaget.htm

    Ages 0-2

    Sensorimotor stage

    Differentiates self from objects

    Ages 2-7

    Preoperational stage

    Learns to use language and to represent objects by images and words

    Ages 7-11

    Concrete Operational stage

    Can think logically about objects and events

    Ages 11 years and up

    Formal Operational stage

    Can think logically about abstract propositions and test hypothesis systemtically

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    9

    Piagets Cognitive Development Stages

    SOURCE: LetsHarEkNowLedGEs

    http://letshareknowledges.blogspot.com/

    Jean Piaget

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    Stanley A. Lucero

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    Stages of English Language Development

    SOURCE: http://www.rohac.com/images/sdaie_photos/Image1.jpg

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    Limbic System

    SOURCE: The Brainwaves Center

    http://www.brainwaves.com/brain_new.html

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    Brain Activity in bilinguals

    Brain activity recorded from Spanish-English bilinguals while they read words in their native Spanish and their second (and less proficient) language, English. The green arrows show areas

    in the brain that have larger responses to English, possibly reflecting the greater effort involved

    in understanding words in the second language. (Sinz, 2010]

    SOURCE: Study looks at the bilingual brain by Pablo Jaime Sinz. 2010. La Prensa San Diego.

    http://laprensa-sandiego.org/featured/study-looks-at-the-bilingual-brain/

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    13

    Common Underlying Proficiency

    SOURCE: Is bilingualism a problem? From Language Enhancing the Achievement of Pasifika.

    http://leap.tki.org.nz/Is-bilingualism-a-problem

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    The Effects of Bilingualism

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    Jim Cummins Grid

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    Stanley A. Lucero

    16

    Transfer of Metalinguistic Knowledge in Spanish/English Biliterate

    Students

    Source: Mora, J.K. (2001). Learning to spell in two languages: Orthographic transfer in a transitional Spanish/English bilingual program. In P. Dreyer (Ed.), Raising Scores, Raising Questions: Claremont Reading Conference 65th Yearbook, 64-84. Claremont, CA: Claremont Graduate University.

    The alphabetic principle and Spanish orthography

    The alphabetic principle and English orthography

    There are 29 alphabet letters that

    represent 24 phonemes. There are 26 alphabet letters that

    represent from 40 to 52 phonemes. 20

    English phonemes have spellings that are

    predictable 90% of the time and 10 others

    are predictable over 80% of the time.

    There is a high level of correspondence

    between most Spanish letter-sound

    relationships and their English

    equivalents.

    The spelling of words can be derived by

    listening for its component phonemes and

    writing the corresponding letter. There is

    only one correct spelling for every word.

    We know how to pronounce every word

    we read based on its spelling.

    Segmenting words into sounds provides

    clues to their spelling most of the time.

    However, spelling in English also varies

    according to the position of the sound in a

    syllable, what sounds come before and

    after a given sound and the morphological

    structure of the word. Occasionally, a

    spelling will represent more than one

    word (read-read) so we have to use

    meaning as a clue to recognize the word.

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    Some phonemes are spelled using more

    than one letter (ch, ll, rr). Other than these

    cases, if a letter is doubled, both letters

    are pronounced (leer).

    Many letters in English are used as

    markers that signal the sounds of other

    letters. These letters have no direct

    relation to the sounds in the word.

    Doubled letters may be part of a spelling

    pattern and frequently represent only one

    phoneme.

    There are 5 vowel letters and 5 vowel

    sounds that are consistent. They are

    always spelled the same, except for i

    which is sometimes spelled with a y (i

    griega) such as in soy, voy, y.

    There are five vowel letters and 15 vowel

    sounds in English. There are many

    different patterns used to spell these

    vowel sounds.

    A few phonemes can be spelled in more

    than one way (/h/= g or j as in jirafa,

    girasol; /s/ as in cita, sitio; /k/= c & qu as

    in casa, queso).

    There are 19 consonant phonemes that

    are sometimes spelled using more than

    one letter.

    Dividing words into syllables is helpful in

    knowing how to pronounce and spell

    them. Syllabification rules are regular.

    Syllables either contain a single vowel

    and or a diphthong. Diphthongs are a

    combination of a weak vowel (i, u) with a

    strong vowel (a,e,o) or two weak

    vowels. When we can pronounce words

    and break words into syllables and apply

    certain rules, we know how to place

    written accents correctly.

    Dividing words into syllables is helpful in

    knowing how to pronounce and spell

    them. There are six different types of

    syllables: open, closed, vowel-consonant-

    e, etc. Syllabification often depend on

    word meaning and origins, so we must

    use such word parts such as prefixes and

    suffixes for correct division and spelling of

    syllables.

    Parts of a word (morphemes) can be

    added or changed to change the meaning

    of the word. The meaning changes

    include verb tense, number and gender

    and agreement in number and gender,

    size and affection (-ito, -n).

    Parts of a word (morphemes) can be

    added or changed to change the meaning

    of the word. Many parts of words in

    English do not change the way they are

    required to in Spanish.

    SOURCE: Metalinguistic Transfer in Spanish/English Biliteracy by Jill Kerper Mora. San Diego State

    University. http://moramodules.com/MoraModules/MetalingTransfer.htm

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    New Blooms Taxonomy

    Remembering: can the student recall

    or remember the information?

    define, duplicate, list, memorize, recall, repeat,

    reproduce state

    Understanding: can the student

    explain ideas or concepts?

    classify, describe, discuss, explain, identify, locate,

    recognize, report, select, translate, paraphrase

    Applying: can the student use the

    information in a new way?

    choose, demonstrate, dramatize, employ, illustrate,

    interpret, operate, schedule, sketch, solve, use, write.

    Analyzing: can the student distinguish

    between the different parts?

    appraise, compare, contrast, criticize, differentiate,

    discriminate, distinguish, examine, experiment,

    question, test.

    Evaluating: can the student justify a

    stand or decision?

    appraise, argue, defend, judge, select, support, value,

    evaluate

    Creating: can the student create new

    product or point of view?

    assemble, construct, create, design, develop, formulate,

    write.

    SOURCE: http://www.odu.edu/educ/roverbau/Bloom/blooms_taxonomy.htm

    Creating

    Evaluating

    Analyzing

    Applying

    Understanding

    Remembering

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    Language Structure

    SOURCE: Based on Chapter 2: Learning about Language Structure. Diaz Rico, 2010. The Cross-Cultural,

    Language, and Academic Development Handbook. Pearson Education Incorporated, Boston.

    Language Structure

    Phonology

    Morphology

    Syntax

    Semantics

    Pragmatics

    Nonverbal Communication