Nutta, J. W., Strebel, C., Mihai, F. M., Crevecoeur Bryant, E.,
& Mokhtari, K. (2018). Show, tell, build: Twenty key
instructional tools and techniques for educating English learners. Harvard Education Press.
Nutta, Strebel, Mihai, Crevecoeur Bryant, and Mokhtari’s book
focuses on the Academic Subjects Protocol (ASP) and the Language Arts
Protocol (LAP), developed by the authors to support K–12
educators-in-training who are preparing to teach in English learner
(EL)–integrated classrooms. The book delivers effective instructional
practices to support ELs in a manner that is both accessible and
targeted, and which is based on the best practices fundamental for
acquisition by preservice teachers. The book, Show, Tell,
Build: Twenty Key Instructional Tools and Techniques for Educating
English Learners (2018), provides teachers-in-training with
specific instructional strategies to support language acquisition by ELs
using a flexible, dynamic method that is useful at different
proficiency levels and for many different purposes. The impetus for
writing this textbook was to provide specialized, detailed, and
deliverable techniques and tools that complement the extremely effective
theory and practice described in the authors’ first book, Educating English Learners: What Every Classroom Teacher Needs
to Know (Nutta et al., 2015). The
authors are U.S. based, so the educational context for the ASP and LAP
research and subsequent applications are highly effective for use in
mainstream U.S. K–12 classrooms composed of native speakers of the
commonly shared language, while also inclusive of ELs.
Because the book helps to prepare teacher candidates to learn
specific strategies and techniques to use in adapting curriculum and
differentiating content during instruction, this book is unique from
other strategy or technique texts in that it includes adjustment of what
the authors term “the Four Ps of targeted instruction – pitch, pace,
portion, and perspective” (Nutta et al., 2018, p. 4), while
simultaneously addressing language and literacy instruction through the
WIDA framework (WIDA Consortium, 2014). The book is useful for both
elementary and secondary education courses that focus on teaching ESOL
methods and/or exploring curriculum.
The text is divided into two main sections. In Part I, 10
“show” and “tell” tools and techniques are aligned to the ASP as verbal
and nonverbal communicative skills supports. In Part II, alignment with
the LAP is achieved through “build,” specifically promoting ELs’ oral
proficiency and literacy acquisition.
Following a descriptive overview of the ASP, first explored in
the companion textbook, Educating English Learners
(Nutta et al., 2015), the four “show” and the six “tell” tools and
techniques are presented in discrete chapters. Perhaps one of the most
helpful aspects to the university educator of preservice teachers is the
extensive listing of additional resources included at the end of each
chapter, designed to extend and support the chapter’s
information.
As an example of the textbook’s thoroughly approachable
material, the “show” technique in Chapter 1, “Graphic Organizers for
Academic Subjects,” provides the teacher candidate with substantial
understanding of the value of using visual tools through a series of
concrete steps. For preservice teachers, the ability to know exactly how
to lighten the language load for beginner ELs, while still providing
higher proficiency ELs with visually based tools they can use for
expression of their ideas, is both practical and easy to
apply.
In Chapter 5, the “tell” technique of “teacher talk” capably
ensures that teachers-in-training are aware of how, and why, to model
language use in varying contexts, and through content areas. Through a
practical application sequence that builds upon Krashen’s work on
comprehensible input (1981, pp. 119-137), this chapter deftly shifts the
preservice teacher’s knowledge subset regarding teacher talk from
theory to classroom practice.
Chapter 11, “Building Comprehension at Word, Sentence, and
Discourse Levels,” is the first of the “build” tools and guides the
reader into Part II of the text. As a series of activities designed to
construct and support listening skills, these techniques move the
preservice educator through a systematic explanation of what the authors
term “The Four Ps of Targeted Language and Literacy Instruction” (Nutta
et al., 2018, pp. 111–115), previously noted. Clear, easy-to-use tables
provide teacher candidates with applicable examples of the Four Ps at
both the elementary and secondary levels.
The text remains sensitive to the varying educational
experiences of both the preservice educator and the ELs they will teach
in their future classrooms, while also combining rigor with the solid
foundation necessary for the acquisition of tools and techniques that
work. Whether used in conjunction with a different methods textbook or
in tandem with the authors’ earlier work, this textbook deserves a close
look when selecting books for use in undergraduate ESOL methods
classes.
Reference
Krashen, S. D. (1981). Second language acquisition
and second language learning. Oxford: Pergamon Press
Inc.
Nutta, J. W., Strebel, C., Mihai, F. M., Crevecoeur Bryant, E.,
& Mokhtari, K. (2018). Show, tell, build: Twenty key
instructional tools and techniques for educating English learners. Harvard Education Press.
Nutta, J. W., Strebel, C., Mokhtari, K., Mihai, F. M., & Crevecoeur Bryant, E. (2015).
Educating English learners: What every classroom
teacher needs to know. Harvard Education Press.
WIDA Consortium. The WIDA Standards Framework and its
Theoretical Foundations (2014). Available: https://wida.wisc.edu/resources/standards-framework-and-its-theoretical-foundations
[July 2020].
Anna Burnley, EdD, is assistant professor and ESOL
specialist for the Education Department at Flagler College-Tallahassee
in Tallahassee, Florida, USA. |