
Maha Abdelkader |

Laura Hook |
As student diversity increases in public schools, teachers are
exploring ways to differentiate their instruction to meet the academic,
linguistic, and cultural needs of the students while simultaneously
keeping every student constructively engaged in rigorous academic
content. Teachers share a strong commitment to making a difference in
the lives of their students. However, each teacher often maintains a
different perspective about how to best meet the instructional needs of
students to promote their academic growth. Such a variation in
perspectives and approaches can sometimes create confusion and
frustration or increase instructional gaps for students who work with
multiple teachers. In order to create alignment of services, it is
crucial to build a collaborative community of teachers to best provide
instruction to students, including English learners. Data gathered from
shadowing students can be utilized to help create this community of
teachers.
The creation of an instructional gap partly due to a lack of
alignment in services was the case for Usman. A third-grade English
learner, Usman worked with content instructors, teachers in the program
for English for speakers of other languages (ESOL), and reading teachers
to increase his reading proficiency. As Usman’s progress reached a
plateau, each teacher had vastly different views about what he needed to
be more successful with comprehension and demonstrating this when
speaking and writing. As a result, each teacher focused on a different
objective related to reading and implemented incongruous instructional
approaches.
Each teacher was committed to helping Usman reach his academic
potential. As this team of teachers rallied around him to promote
success in reading, they struggled to engage in productive dialogue
about his areas of strength and areas in need of strengthening. Each
teacher had a different perspective about Usman as a learner and how to
create an instructional match that would improve his reading
comprehension. Team members advocated for a myriad of changes to his
instructional program. When consensus regarding how to best address
Usman’s instructional needs was not reached, the team of teachers sought
additional support.
ESOL resource staff met with the teachers and listened as the
team shared information about Usman’s needs, about how such needs had
already been addressed instructionally, and about the varying
perspectives on accelerating his growth in reading. The teachers’
passion regarding the needs of the student was redirected, and the
conversation shifted from advocacy of individual perspectives to inquiry
related to an instructional match for the student in all classroom
settings. The teachers were encouraged to be transparent about their
assumptions and to be open to ideas and outcomes that challenged those
assumptions. The team of teachers and resource staff focused the
dialogue on the following questions:
- Throughout the day, what opportunities did Usman have to
engage in academic discourse to explain his thinking or ask
questions?
- What were the language demands imposed on Usman as he moved
from class to class and received instruction in various content
areas?
- What balance existed between content and language instruction throughout Usman’s day?
- How motivated was Usman and what, if anything, reinforced his effort?
- What listening, speaking, reading, and writing skills did Usman implement consistently?
- What instructional supports existed to facilitate Usman’s
learning as he bridged the gap between what he could do and what he
needed to do with language?
When these questions were discussed, much variation was evident
and there was little consistency among the teachers’ responses. Each
teacher expressed a view of Usman based on the specific time he spent in
that one particular class and focused on one content area. The team
inquired about the need for a more global understanding of Usman’s needs
and learning preferences.
In order to get a peripheral perspective on Usman’s
instructional experience, the team decided for a resource staff member
to shadow him for an entire school day. Shadowing the English learner
assisted in determining the application of academic language, listening
comprehension skills, interaction, motivation, and so on. Shadowing was
selected in order to gather data to inform instruction for positive
student outcomes regarding Usman’s performance and needs across all
school settings. The resource staff spent the day with him and followed
him from class to class to observe instruction and interaction.
Selective scripting was utilized to capture what Usman said and did as
well as each teacher’s instruction that influenced his
actions.
The information gleaned during shadowing revealed that Usman
spoke only a few sentences for the first half of the day. He
participated actively in a science experiment, engaged in problem
solving during math, and played the cello in music class. During all of
this time, he uttered only two or three phrases. Instruction throughout
the day was content heavy, whereas instruction on language skills was
very limited. At the same time, the linguistic complexity, vocabulary
usage, and language control that Usman needed to access the content were
well beyond his language proficiency level.
With regard to effort and motivation, Usman seemed eager to
participate and to earn rewards and praise in the form of stickers,
stamps, and prizes from all his teachers. He received targeted reading
instruction in which strategies were modeled and vocabulary was
scaffolded. However, the linguistic complexity of the text was beyond
his reach due to his present level of control of language structures.
Usman also was not able to actively apply language learning strategies
such as mimicking or asking clarifying questions to help him access
texts.
The team and resource staff met again to discuss the data
gathered during the shadowing and to determine strategies for increasing
Usman’s academic success. The selective scripting from the shadowing
provided more information about Usman’s use of language and about his
current instructional program. The meeting focused on the inquiry of
using the data to provide a match between his present level and
instruction and to better align services. The group began to lay out the
desired state for instruction and made a plan outlining roles and
responsibilities for implementing that plan. The team settled on the
following priorities for Usman:
- Increase opportunities to use oral language
- Provide Usman with direct instruction on language control using a gradual release model
- Continue teaching targeted reading comprehension strategies
while increasing his exposure to text in and out of school
- Support his effort and motivation by modeling language and self-correction strategies
The team of teachers transformed from having their diverse
perspectives to having a more common instructional vision for the
student. Collectively, this team had the skills and knowledge to address
the challenge and to provide Usman with great instruction.
Collaboratively, they created a shared instructional plan and identified
roles and responsibilities for every team member to ensure that
instructional practices were consistently in place to promote student
growth. The instruction of all teachers was valued in the process and
plan. Shadowing Usman helped generate the information that this team
needed to engage in productive dialogue about increasing academic
achievement through greater alignment of services and
instruction.
Maha Abdelkader is a member of Maryland TESOL. She
works as a resource teacher in the Howard County Public School System,
designing and delivering professional development for staff working with
English learners. She has taught elementary English learners in Howard
County. Her other experiences include curriculum writing and serving on
advisory councils for the Maryland State Department of Education to
promote the academic achievement of English
learners.
Laura Hook is the Maryland TESOL president. She serves
the Howard County Public School System as the ESOL program coordinator.
She taught students with special needs and English learners prior to
becoming a resource teacher and coordinator of the ESOL
Program. |