(This is Part Five in an ongoing series responding to specific teacher questions related to remote learning. You can see Part One , Part Two , Part Three , and Part Four .)
Note: In addition to a recent and offering advice to educators making the transition to remote learning, and a offering advice to parents (along many more upcoming related posts鈥攍ook for a multipart series at the end of this month in which both teachers and students will be reflecting on their first five weeks of distance learning), I鈥檝e begun a series of short posts .
dealt with
was on .
Part Three shared .
Part Four focused on .
Today鈥檚 question comes from :
I鈥檓 concerned about English-language learners misunderstanding directions and not having a good way to help them. They may not turn in work because they don鈥檛 know what to do. This happens often in school but can be fixed by walking by and checking in. What can I do?
Innovating and Connecting is Communicating ...
Sarah Said currently leads a multilingual learning program in an EL education school in a suburb 30 miles west of Chicago:
Yes, we worry about our language-learners struggling with directions via distance learnings. It鈥檚 difficult when we can鈥檛 walk over to a desk and redirect a student鈥檚 interpretation of our assignment. What do we do? It鈥檚 like taking a puzzle piece and flipping it around multiple times until you figure out the right fit. Yes, that鈥檚 what we need to do, we need to think and innovate until we can connect with our students. That鈥檚 how we can communicate.
In these times, understanding the teacher鈥檚 instructions is not going to be easy for many students, not just your language-learners. This post will give you some tips and tricks that will help you better innovate and connect for communicating with students about the directions of your assignments from a distance.
Catch Their Attention
Whether you are using technology to deliver instruction or you are having to send paper materials, you still need to find a way to connect with students by catching their attention鈥攋ust like you would need to in the classroom. A handout with a bitmoji of you doing a silly dance can go a long way. ... But really, when the presentation of the material is attractive, not too busy with a thousand fonts and graphics, and interesting, a student is more likely to attempt to read it. It鈥檚 kind of like being in the classroom and having to find a way to relate to them in person. Now, you have to do it from a distance. So, whether it鈥檚 a Google slide or handout, make it look like something that they would want to read at their age level. It鈥檚 a way of connecting with them. If they want to look at it, they will want to read it.
Make Sure You Are Communicating the End Goal to Your Assignments
As you would in a classroom, you still need to have targets and objectives of what you want students to achieve within your assignments. Find a way, either in pictures or video, to break down these targets for them. If students understand the purpose of the work you are giving them, it will give them a clearer vision of the expectations of them. This still needs to be conveyed from a distance.
Watch Your Language Usage
Whether you are writing a document or creating videos of your instruction, use language that you know your students will understand. If you have to use an academic word that your students may not know within directions, you need to still utilize comprehensible input by explaining what these terms mean within their social language. If in a video, you can use Total Physical Response (TPR) in order to convey meaning. On paper, use visuals or simple examples to explain the contents of the directions. If students are literate in their native language, do what you can to support native- language directions in their home language. Technology may not be perfect, but it鈥檚 better than not having anything.
Model... Model... Model
Whether it is done by paper example, on Seesaw through a series of photos, through a Zoom screen share, or a video recording, you still need to model how to complete the assignment. Modeling is critical when you are teaching from a distance, more than it is in person. A Zoom chat is ideal for practicing and applying content with students. Using screen-share features and allowing them to complete content with you is ideal. However, if you don鈥檛 have this resource at hand, you can text photos of examples through the Talking Points app or make a phone call.
Be There Emotionally ...
Through Zoom casts of support I have given multilingual students over these days and family story night Zoom casts I do every Thursday, I have seen inside more people鈥檚 houses ever than within my 17-year career. I鈥檝e gotten to know my students and their families more this way. Through those connections, I have been able to academically and emotionally support students and families. When students know that you will be 鈥渢here鈥 to answer questions and guide them through the work they are completing at home, they are more likely to try to reach you to ask questions. Knowing that you are 鈥渢here鈥 to help gives them the confidence to ask for help. Empathy will go a long way with supporting students academically.
Thanks to Lynn for her question and to Sarah for her answer!
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