
In an effort to address reduced enrollments, many
intensive English programs have had to offer mixed-level classes. We were
tasked with designing an effective dual-level curriculum for our program’s top
two levels (CEFR
B2; B2+/C1).
Selecting an Effective Approach
Having regularly used teaching materials that we
created ourselves, we found that the tenets of cognitive
load theory (Sweller, 1988; Sweller et al., 2011) allowed us to
design differentiated instruction for combined levels while maintaining
elements of our typical teaching approach. We modified our single-level
instructional sequences to include differentiated materials and assessment
delivered simultaneously in parallel fashion to two
levels. For both, materials and activities address objectives for reading,
writing, listening, speaking, vocabulary, and grammar—for virtual,
face-to-face, or hybrid delivery.
It is more challenging—and more
work—to create parallel materials because you are designing two sets of
materials. However, you’ll find it easier to teach two groups of students if
they are engaged in thematically related parallel activities; in contrast, you
might find it harder to teach the same class with materials covering different
themes. Teaching all students during the same class period in the same
classroom with unrelated content is not effective for achieving learning
outcomes.
The challenge in creating different, but parallel,
materials is that you are not just preparing separate materials for two
different courses independent of each other; you need to design tasks so that
they can be completed by students in the same timeframe,
and students at both levels can progress through the course at the
same pace. Despite variations in tasks, your selection of themes and
materials and the joint progression through the dual-level courses enables
students to feel a sense of class community.
Structuring Single-Level Task Sequences
In a single-level course, we used the following
task sequences for our Reading/Writing
(R/W) course:
-Reading Task 1
(text accompanied by
pre-/during-/postreading activities)
-Vocabulary
quiz
-Reading Task 2
-Vocabulary quiz
-Grammar structure review and practice
-Grammar quiz
-Source documentation discovery and
practice
-Discovery of writing genre
(e.g., summary, short
response, essay)
-Writing Task Draft 1
-Writing Task Draft 2
See Appendix A for a typical unit sequence for
Listening/Speaking upper level.
Each task sequence within a unit is based on two
text sources (in R/W) and two recorded sources (in Listening/Speaking [L/S]) on
the same theme. In R/W, each text is accompanied by a detailed reading task.
The first text is followed by a vocabulary quiz and another reading task on the
same theme. We then review and practice relevant grammar structures, and follow
up with a grammar quiz. The next element within each unit addresses source
documentation issues and provides practice with in-text citations and
end-of-text references. After that, we introduce the specific writing genre of
that unit through samples from previous students; learners discover the
organization and specific features of that genre, and they produce two drafts.
In L/S, the course is also arranged by units, which
typically begin with a group discussion designed to activate students’
background knowledge while introducing them to the theme and relevant
vocabulary. This discussion is followed by the first of two video talk or
lecture viewings with related activities. In each unit, students complete
individually recorded independent listening and response tasks and group
discussions for formal assessment. Each unit culminates in individual or
collaborative presentations on content-related themes.
Planning Parallel Task Sequences
The higher level materials are a good starting
point for dual-level courses (for us: CEFR B2+/C1), which you can adapt for the
lower level (for us: CEFR B2). You can use the same content topics to minimize
intrinsic load for both levels and focus the differentiation on similar core
materials after engaging both levels in selected anchor tasks, which are the same for both levels. Anchor tasks are followed by
different, but parallel, practice tasks; specifically, both levels follow the
same activity sequence (see the Table).
Table. Adapted R/W Unit Sequence With Parallel
Activities
Lower Level (CEFR B2) |
Higher Level (CEFR B2+/C1)
|
Anchor task: same reading text/task [B2],
Topic 1 |
- Lower level
vocabulary quiz
- Lower level next reading text/task [B2], Topic
1
- Vocabulary quiz [B2]
|
- Higher level
vocabulary quiz
- Higher level next reading text/task [B2+/C],
Topic 1
- Vocabulary quiz [B2+/C]
|
Anchor task: grammar
review |
- Lower level
grammar practice
|
- Higher level
grammar practice
|
Anchor task: in-text
citations |
- Lower level
citation practice
- Guided discovery of writing genre
- Writing task with fewer/less complex requirements
(2 drafts)
|
- Higher level
citation practice
- Discovery of writing genre
- Writing task with more/more complex requirements
(2 drafts)
|
Anchor task: same reading text/task [B2],
Topic 2
(new topic cycle begins) |
See Appendix B for an adapted Listening/Speaking
unit sequence with parallel activities.
Reading/Writing
Same Task: In an R/W course,
begin with an anchor text for the unit theme, which is the same for both
levels. You should identify anchor texts at appropriate levels; the complexity
of the higher level text is reduced if the text is relatively short or on a
familiar topic.
Differentiated Tasks: After
the initial same task for both groups, have the students complete separate
tasks in parallel fashion.
-
Both groups have a vocabulary quiz, but the
complexity is reduced for the lower level.
-
After that, both groups continue with a new
reading task related to the unit theme, but their texts are different and at
different proficiency levels. Because your reading tasks should follow the same
general sequence and include similar foci (e.g., pre-/during-/postreading and
vocabulary), both groups work on reading simultaneously and work side by side
on the same tasks, but each group works with different materials.
Same Task: If appropriate, you
can add a grammar review or introduction of source documentation principles,
which you could present as another anchor task to both groups concurrently.
Differentiated Tasks: Then,
add parallel practice tasks geared toward each level. For the unit writing
task, you can have students discover the organization and features of the
unit’s target genre from the same written samples, which you can scaffold
differently based on level; likewise, your expectations for writing tasks can
be scaled for learners.
See Appendix C for general R/W differentiation
principles.
Listening/Speaking
In a dual-level L/S course, you can follow a
similar approach. Identify an anchor video source for both
levels and create accompanying activities to be followed by an additional
talk/lecture on the same theme but at the appropriate level for each group. The
students complete parallel tasks for vocabulary activation, note-taking,
comprehension, and selected grammar- or pronunciation-related points.
Throughout the unit, group students in varying
combinations within and between levels to engage in discussions in which they
address the same topics, but for which they are required to employ differing
conversation strategies and vocabulary use requirements. For example:
-
You may require the higher level students to
employ a wider range and more frequent use of functions such as agreeing,
disagreeing, and clarifying.
-
You can ask students to complete independent
listening and speaking tasks to reflect on a source that they have selected.
-
You might offer the advanced group little or no
guidance in source selection and required reflection points but give the lower
group choices of sources and topics to guide their reflection.
Finally, the class gives pair, group, or individual
presentations on the same theme but with differing requirements. See Appendix D
for general L/S differentiation principles.
Evaluation
You can design different evaluation rubrics for
some task criteria by attending specifically to minimizing intrinsic load (topic
complexity) for both learner groups and reducing extraneous load (task
complexity) for the lower level. In general, require the higher level students
to perform tasks of greater complexity with more difficult source materials and
less instructor guidance; conversely, expect the lower level students to
complete slightly simplified tasks with less difficult source materials and
more instructor guidance. For example:
-
Prompt for higher level
students: Write a five-paragraph essay with three well-developed
body paragraphs. Each body paragraph should have three support points; the
support points should be based on information from sources, which you need to
cite appropriately.
-
Prompt for lower level
students: Write a four-paragraph essay with two body paragraphs.
Each body paragraph should have two support points; the support points can come
from our reading texts or be based on your own examples. Use basic citation
(author + year) for information from texts.
In contrast, your rubric for completing reading
tasks could remain the same for both levels because both groups complete the
same types of subtasks, even when the texts are not the same.
Similarly, your oral presentation rubrics can
reflect the differences in requirements for timing, content and complexity, and
source attribution. For example:
-
Task for higher level
students: Deliver a presentation of approximately 15 minutes.
Include explanations of at least two graphs with two or more variables; employ
explicit signals and paraphrasing to credit sources in presentation.
-
Task for lower level
students: Deliver a presentation of approximately 10 minutes.
Include explanation of one simple graph and credit sources of information in
presentation slides.
When explanation of data is required, have the
advanced group include at least two graphs with two or more variables, while
the lower group can use one simple graph. When referencing sources, expect the
advanced group to include explicit signals and paraphrasing to credit sources,
whereas you might ask the lower group to include source information only in
their presentation slides.
Conclusion
Interestingly, despite all the work we put into our
dual-level course planning, we did not actually teach our newly created
courses; the same forces that required us to create them subsided and enabled
us to teach single-level courses. We did use the materials that fall, but only
those that we had created for the more advanced students. However, other global
conditions may impact programs like ours in the future. We have become more
confident about dealing with the processes necessary for responding
innovatively to new curricular needs.
References
Sweller, J. (1988). Cognitive load during problem
solving: Effects on learning. Cognitive Science, 12,
257–285. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15516709cog1202_4
Sweller, J., Ayres, P., & Kalyuga, S. (2011).
Intrinsic and extraneous cognitive load. In Cognitive load
theory (pp. 57–69). Springer.
Sigrun Biesenbach-Lucas received her MAT and PhD degrees in applied linguistics from Georgetown University. She has taught ESL, linguistics, and teacher training courses, and she is currently an associate teaching professor in the Intensive English Program at Georgetown University; she has also served as a site reviewer for CEA. She regularly presents at TESOL conferences; she has published articles on email communication, and she is the coauthor of Next Generation Grammar 4.
Donette Brantner-Artenie has an MA in linguistics from Ohio University and is an associate teaching professor at Georgetown University, where she teaches in the Intensive English Program. She has taught EFL at the high school level in Romania, and she has been an ESL instructor at Ohio University and Ohio State University. She has conducted teacher training workshops in the United States and internationally and is the coauthor of Next Generation Grammar 4. |