ARGENTINA TESOL (ARTESOL)
Reading Research Paper Abstracts: What Do the Rhetorical Sections Communicate?
Silvia Benson, sbenson@faa.unicen.edu.ar
Universidad Nacional del Centro
Jorge Sanchez, jorgealsanchez@hotmail.com
Universidad Nacional de Cuyo
English is the world language of scholarship and, for this
reason, the bulk of scientific knowledge is basically produced in
English nowadays. Besides, scholarly journals specify in their editorial
policies that an abstract in English should accompany all papers. An
abstract allows readers to have an overview of the content of the
research. However, readers, particularly those whose first language is
not English, may have limitations in understanding the rhetorical
information included in an abstract. In order to overcome this problem,
we propose a set of reading tasks systematically designed to help
Spanish-speaking advanced graduate students and scholars optimize their
reading skills of empirical research paper abstracts in applied
linguistics.
The main objectives of the workshop are (a) to raise
participants’ awareness of the importance of the abstract as an academic
discourse genre; (b) to assess the applicability of international
models in the reading of research article abstracts in applied
linguistics as well as in sociology; and (c) to grasp the rhetorical
information included in the abstracts by means of different reading
comprehension tasks. Throughout the whole workshop participants will
work in pairs or in groups on these tasks. The definitions of ESP and
abstract will be addressed to set a common ground. We shall look at the
rhetorical sections an abstract includes and find the communicative
purpose of each. Groups will be assigned different models and will be
asked to analyze and evaluate their abstracts.
After focusing on linguistic exponents or signals, participants
will work on completing abstracts and matching sentences. Finally, they
will be provided with abstracts from the field of sociology and asked
to apply to this field what they did with the applied linguistics
abstracts. Similarities and differences between the disciplines will be
drawn.
Presenter Bios
Jorge Sanchez teaches ESP at Universidad Nacional de Cuyo and Universidad del Aconcagua.
Silvia Benson teaches ESP at Universidad Nacional del Centro.
ENGLISH LANGUAGE TEACHERS’ ASSOCIATION (ELTA)
Dialogue Journal Writing in the Internet Era
Jelena Danilovic, jelenadanilce@gmail.com
University of Kragujevac
Jovana Dimitrijevic Savic, j.dimitrijevic.savic@gmail.com
University of Kragujevac
Marta Dimitrijevic, marta.dimitrijevic@gmail.com
University of Nis
Dialogue journal writing (DJW) is a teaching tool devised in
ELS classes in the United States of America as a means of improving
communication between teachers and their students. It encompasses a
regular, private conversation between the two parties by means of a
notebook, that is, a journal, in which students write as much as they
want and about whatever they are interested in. These underlying
principles differentiate dialogue journal writing from other writing
assignments students might be expected to do; because the focus is on
communication, no grading or correcting is involved, which minimizes
students’ anxiety and fosters the development of a personal relationship
between the two sides in the dialogue, helping the teacher adapt the
teaching process to the needs and interests of his or her
learners.
Our presentation will show how DJW was implemented and
facilitated by means of technology-aided practice in the form of e-mails
over a period of an academic year in a B2-oriented English course with
the first-year students of Spanish, French, German, and Serbian at the
Faculty of Philology and Arts in Kragujevac, Serbia. First of all, we
will present the basic tenets of DJW, explore its potential for various
classroom settings, and show how we adapted it for use with our students
and what insights we gained. Second, we will underscore the feasibility
of technology-based DJW and its benefits for both students and
teachers. Finally, we will exemplify this practice and its outcomes by
providing authentic data about the interaction and wrap the story up by
giving details about the logistics needed for DJW.
Presenter Bios
Jelena Danilovic, BA, is English language instructor, Faculty of Philology and Arts, Kragujevac, Serbia.
Jovana Dimitrijevic Savic, PhD in sociolinguistics, is Faculty of Philology and Arts, Kragujevac, Serbia.
Marta Dimitrijevic, MA, is a lector of English, Faculty of Philosophy, Nis, Serbia.
INDIANA TESOL (INTESOL)
Inviting ELL Students into Critical Literacy
Katie Brooks, kbrooks@butler.edu
Butler University
Maggie Robillard, mrobilla@butler.edu
MSD Pike Township
Educators often expect English-language-learner students to
succeed in the classroom without considering the ways in which the
students’ experiences, cultures, and languages shape their schema
(Cummins, 2001). Rather than recognizing culture and language as
essential to English-language-learner students’ connections between
their schema and essential content-area concepts, educators frequently
view these languages and cultures as deficits to be overcome (Neto,
2002). In highly effective multicultural and multilingual classrooms,
teachers, English-language-learner students, and native-English-speaking
students negotiate their identities as they learn about each others’
cultures (Cummins, 2001; Van Sluys & Reinier, 2006). Integrating
immigrant and globally themed literature into ESL and content-area
classes has the potential to reframe the languages, cultures, and
experiences of English-language-learner students as personal and
classroom assets in our increasingly global society.
In this workshop, participants will be introduced to critical
literacy through a read-aloud. Then they will sample a critical literacy
invitation that will help them to explore a social issue addressed in
the read-aloud book. Finally they will brainstorm their own critical
literacy invitation based on a piece of literature that they currently
teach or a picture book available in the workshop.
Presenter Bios
Katie Brooks is an assistant professor of secondary education
in the College of Education at Butler University.
Maggie Robillard is a doctoral candidate in language education at Indiana University.
THREE RIVERS TESOL
Using Technology to Enhance and Expand ELL Instruction
Mahmoud Amer, m4her1@yahoo.com
Clarion University of Pennsylvania
Janet Pierce, jpierce494@comcast.net
Franklin Regional School District
The presenters will offer information on how to use PPT,
WORDLE, and TAGUL to enrich ESL/EFL instruction at K-12 and adult
levels. Participants will be given the theoretical constructs for using
these technological tools as well as demonstrations of how to use the
tools. Handouts will explain the process so participants can return to
their own classrooms and use these tools to enhance and expand their
ESL/EFL instruction.
Many of the available and accessible technological tools today
are undervalued as means to helping English language learners in K-12
and adult learning settings. For example, though most educators are
familiar with Microsoft’s PowerPoint (PPT) as a tool for presentations
and slideshows, PPT can be used to help English language learners
develop advanced reading skills. PPT can be used to create interactive
reading passages that offer English language learners plenty of
opportunities to not only learn reading skills but also take an active
role in how the story is structured. Readers become characters in the
story who make decisions and, based on those decisions, the story lines
change. It helps them understand concepts of voice and gives them
control of the story and their learning. Interactive reading passages
can be designed in a variety of ways. Designing these stories does not
require advanced knowledge of PPT. In addition, sites that allow
students to use words, such as WORDLE and TAGUL, offer students
reinforcement with spelling, prompts for speaking, and summarizing
tools.
Presenter Bios
Mahmoud Amer is a professor at Clarion University, Pennsylvania.
Janet Pierce is the ESL K-12 Instructor/ELL Coordinator at
Franklin Regional SD. Both are board members of Three Rivers
TESOL.
VIRGINIA TESOL (VATESOL)
Welcoming Newcomers to Your Classroom and Community
Elisa Tucker, elisa.tucker@lcps.org
Loudon County Public Schools
When people think of teaching English language learners, they
often think of this special group―students who have recently arrived in
the United States and have little to no English language vocabulary or
skills. The presenter has taught newcomers for several years, primarily
through a pull-out program in a public elementary school in Virginia
(with an English-language-learner population of approximately 20%). This
presentation offers elementary teachers a variety of tools and
techniques for instructing newcomers by combining language-learning
research with best practices. We will consider newcomers’ motivations
and concerns as the basis for beginning instruction and then establish
an understanding of expectations by reviewing WIDA’s CAN DO Descriptors
for beginning language learners. We will explore how to incorporate
themes, skills, and grade-level content into instruction while making
the language-learning process fun. We will discuss involving the school
community and setting up a welcoming environment as two methods to help
lower the affective filter of newcomers. We will discover the importance
of promoting literacy skills and incorporating a balanced reading
program from the very first day. Practical tips on engaging learners
through a variety of modalities will be shared. We will cover how to
schedule and manage classroom tasks and develop appropriate assessments.
Last, we will discuss a school-related curriculum for language minority
parents, the Parents as Educational Partners (PEP) program.
Presenter Bio
Elisa Tucker received an MEd from George Mason University and
is an elementary English-language-learner teacher and mentor in
Virginia. She was honored as a teacher of the year in 2007.
VENEZUELA TESOL (VenTESOL)
Powerful Web 2.0 Tools for the ELT Classroom
Evelyn Izquierdo, izquierdo_evelyn@yahoo.com
Universidad Central de Venezuela
The use of the new information and communication technologies
(ICTs) has speedily increased during the past 20 years. They have led us
to a new global citizenship, a new way of thinking, and even a new way
of behaving, which have influenced all knowledge fields, including
education. As a matter of fact, UNESCO’s ICT Competency Standards for
Teachers (2008) recently pointed out that both students and teachers
must utilize technology effectively in order to live, learn, and work
successfully in an increasingly complex information-rich and
knowledge-based society. Students have new ways to access information
and learn; they have naturally developed cognitive skills that make the
use of digital technology much easier. Thus, they are called “the net
generation” or “digital natives,” people who have grown up with
technology, mainly the Internet (Prensky, 2001). Consequently, teachers
have to develop digital competences to satisfy the demands of that new
generation. Making the teaching-learning process more effective,
interesting, dynamic, updated, and adapted to the new learning times is a
must for us. This presentation will offer an overview of digital
literacy and a basic training on powerful Web 2.0 tools (blogs, wikis,
podcasts, social networking, etc.) to enhance ELT teaching
practice.
Presenter Bio
Evelyn Izquierdo, MS in EFL, is an ESP teacher at Universidad
Central de Venezuela, e-tutor, Web 2.0 trainer, president of Avealmec,
Webhead, e-moderator of social networks, and VenTESOL communications
coordinator. |