Demystifying "Academic" Language:: Supporting Candidates and Colleagues in The Everyday Events of School
Demystifying "Academic" Language:: Supporting Candidates and Colleagues in The Everyday Events of School
Demystifying "Academic" Language:: Supporting Candidates and Colleagues in The Everyday Events of School
edTPA Conference
November 2, 2013
University of San Diego
Goals and Orientation
• We will approach AL from a contextual point
of view rather than a linguistic one, identifying
it and defining it by the tasks we ask students
to do in school.
When/
Where/ Context Fluency
Who?
Structures of Form
How?
language
•For example:
–discussing ideas and asking questions,
–summarizing instructional and disciplinary
texts,
–giving instructions,
–delivering to a mini-lesson,
–explaining thinking aloud,
–sharing behavioral expectations (“raise your
hands”)
Laura Hill-Bonnet, STEP (Stanford Teacher
Education Program), 11/2/13
TCs are asked to:
• Consider language demands associated with content
understandings in the learning segment. These include the
oral and written academic language that students will need
to understand or produce in your learning segment.
Language Functions
(what we ask students to DO in those
challenging components)
Language Forms
(linguistic structures of those
functions)
• CA H/SS 10.5.4
– Understand the nature of the WWI
– Content-specific vocabulary
• Prepositions:
– (divided) into, divided by,
– 2 multiplied by 6 and X exceeds 2 by 7
• Passive voice:
– X is defined as a number greater than 7.
• Lee, O., Quinn, H., & Valdes, G. (2013). Science and Language for
English Language Learners in relations to Next Generation Science
Standards with Implications for Common Core State Standareds for
English Langauge Arts and Mathematics. Educational Researcher
http://ell.stanford.edu/sites/default/files/3_EdResearcher%2011%2
0April%202013%20Lee_Quinn_Valdes%20copy.pdf