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Boise
State University
Teacher
Education Course Syllabus
Course: Methods of Teaching ESL: Maximizing Innovative Pedagogical
Approaches to Teaching ESL (3-0-3) Course Number: ED BLESL
502 Schedule: (F/S)
Twin Falls: 9/5-6, 9/26-27, 10/10-11-Nampa:
10/24-25, 11/7-8, 12/5-6. Instructor: Roberto Bahruth
Office Hours: 1/2 hour before or after class or by appointment
Email: RobertoBahruth@boisestate.edu Phone:
426 3680
Conceptual Framework:
The Professional Educator
Boise
State University strives to develop knowledgeable educators who integrate
complex roles and dispositions in the service of diverse communities of
learners. Believing that all children, adolescents, and adults can learn,
educators dedicate themselves to supporting that learning. Using effective
approaches that promote high levels of student achievement, educators create
environments that prepare learners to be citizens who contribute to a complex
world. Educators serve learners as reflective practitioners, scholars and
artists, problem solvers, and partners.
Standards and Assessments
| Standards/Indicators
Addressed |
Assessment Method |
| Standard 1
2 The teacher knows the key linguistic structures, articulatory
system, and vocabulary of the English language |
Focused academic dialogue
journals/learner's log; attendance; class participation; presentations,
synthesis paper |
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Standard 2
1 The teacher
understands the process of language acquisition and development, and the
role these processes play in students’ educational experiences
Disposition
1 The teacher respects
linguistic and dialectical differences
2 The teacher appreciates the important role of a first language
and how it interacts with and influences the process of learning a new
language
Performance
3 The teacher encourages
students to use their first language as a resource to promote academic
learning
4 The teacher uses strategies and approaches that promote
biliteracy, and ultimately, English language acquisition.
|
Focused academic dialogue
journals/learner's log; attendance; class participation; synthesis paper |
Course Description: Pedagogy
of teaching ESL that will maximize language and literacy acquisition. Students
will learn how to develop content subject material that is pedagogically
responsible to English language learners and culturally diverse students by
learning pedagogical scaffolds that place students at the center of the learning
process.
Course
Objectives
- To understand theoretical
foundations of language acquisition and authentic assessment practice
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To understand the language/concepts of testing and language proficiency
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To understand the role of the educator to increase pedagogical validity.
Texts
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Selected reading provided by the instructor SET 1:DIN IN THE HEAD (Krashen),
SKILLS (Hansen), WHAT IS GOOD EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH? (Hostetler)
ECOLOGICAL EDUCATION (Bahruth, Lea)
SET
2: !2 Easy Ways; How Education;
Joining the Literacy Club (SMITH).
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Using the Natural Approach using the New Oxford Picture Dictionary. ENG Jackson,
Utilizando el metodo natural, EPN Jackson
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The New Oxford Picture Dictionary (English/Spanish) Gaitan
Grading
Procedures:
Project
20%: In groups of two or three, develop a learner-centered,
multilayered lesson centered on a theme to be implemented in class demonstrating
the Pedagogy of Language concepts discussed. PROJECTS SHOULD REFLECT
UNDERSTANDING OF COURSE OBJECTIVES.
Attendance
& Participation 20%: Class participation requires all of us to
give our undivided attention to each speaker throughout the course. Part
of my responsibilities is to ensure that we all respect the right of a speaker.
My ongoing assessment includes monitoring this point. If you want to
comment to a neighbor, write down your comments and share them after class.
Attendance, punctuality, attentiveness to others count. We all have an
obligation with a reciprocal interaction format.
Homework
20%: Academic dialogue journals are
a standard requirement to be exchanged at each class meeting. Each writing
partner must provide a journal so a two-way exchange is possible. Each
entry in these journals must be dated, written in black ink, and both partners'
names should be on the covers. These journals will be evaluated by the
instructor at the end of the course for quantity & quality (analysis,
synthesis, application, questioning & responding).
Final
Reflection Paper 40%: An analysis, synthesis, application paper
focusing on major concepts and issues raised during class discussions, projects,
and in readings which demonstrates comprehension of course objectives.
Schedule
Session
1:
Introductions,
orientation to the program, orientation to the class, Unified Theory of Language
Acquisition, Contextualized language lessons in Spanish “de Colores”.
Discussion of Din in the Head, Strategic Competence, Skills, Grammatical
Input based upon learner output. Independent
learners. Montessori’s
“flexibility of thought/developmentally appropriate pedagogy”; Piaget’s
“disequilibrium/moderately novel stimuli”; Vygotsky’s “zone of proximal
development”; Freire’s “word-world”; Greene’s “aesthetic
education”;
Session
2:
Thematic
Units, multilayered lessons, literature-based lessons, psycholx guessing games. Demonstration lessons in math, (cortagalletas - probabilidad
e estimación – tiro a la canasta). Montessori’s
Categorization – synthesis activity.
Session
3:
Twin
Falls: Presentation by Dra. Viviana López “Media Literacy” -
Presentations of Multilayered, learner-centered Lessons by Cohort.
Critiques and Comments. Evaluations.
West
Campus: Presentations by Elva Reza-López: Nepantlando
A
note on Academic Dishonesty: It is
the responsibility of each student to ensure that all references are properly
recognized and that all sources are fully documented.
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