Hypothesis 2: Developing oral language through short high-interest topics and real-life experiences, with a focus on intensive oral language acquisition, will create an environment of language in abundance.
Our Junior Team has been fortunate enough to enlist the help of Dr Jannie van Hees to help us develop an effective intensive oral language programme throughout our Junior School.
Our Goal: For our children to have a large vocabulary and to be able to express their ideas in detail fluently.
Jannie has delivered both an initial theory session and workshop to train teachers and teacher-aides to conduct a hands-on language experience session which will become the basis for a three-day oral language intensive programme. The programme is designed to be used in small groups of 6-8 children.
Key Points from Dr Jannie van Hees Sessions which we will implement within our oral language programme:
- Tell the children why we are doing this and what it's about. Create a culture of talking in the classroom so that children understand that in our classroom we use lots of words.
Example:
“Our brain needs to be used, your voice and brain need to talk with each other - In our safe place, we push ourselves to talk because talking is your job. We need to push ourselves to use our brain and talk and to value that of others." -Jannie
"You have a clever brain. You need to think and think but there is something else you need to do and that's talking." - Jannie
- Give the meaning of new vocabulary.
Example:
"You are gardeners. Gardeners are people that grow and care for plants."
- Repetition! Students repeat new phrases and vocabulary multiple times over multiple days. This is the uptake. They need to hear it multiple times and use it multiple times for uptake to happen. Students are doing something with the new vocabulary pushing them to extend their language. Repetition and recycling of new words and phrases pushing them to the edge using complex language that they don't hear at home.
- Do it and say it. Children use new phrases and language in a hands-on context. Foster and encourage self-talk. Self-talk is a safe place to try out the language.
Example:
The children put on each other's gardening aprons to get ready to do gardening explaining what they are doing as they are doing it. The teacher models "Here is your apron. I'm going to put it over your head. I'm going to flatten out the front and tie it at the back" The children then copy the teacher 'doing it and say it' to their partner. The teacher insists that they talk as they do it.
- Insist on connected speech. Many of our students don't use connected speech. They don't have the word groups (also illustrated through our work with PELP), students are used to using cryptic talk. Supporting them to use connected speech through gifting, modelling then insisting they use complete sentences is really important. They are used to using a few words then letting us complete their sentence. If we don't insist on them using connected speech they will continue to get away with broken speech patterns. This may feel extremely uncomfortable for the student and the teacher as it doesn't feel natural.
Example:
Teacher models: We need the...(bean seed)...to put in the ...(soil)...so the seed can grow into a ...(little bean plant).
Students: Each student has a turn in saying the sentence. They repeat it with help until they are able to say it fluently.
- No questions from the teacher, no hands up.
Example:
Students choose equipment to use for planting seeds.
Teacher: "We are all going to pick something and say what it is and say why it is important."
Teacher models: "I'm going to pick a pair of scissors because we may need to cut something."
"We are going to give it a go and if you don't have the words we will help each other."
"Ben you go first."
How and why will this changed practice impact the specific learning outcome?
It is believed that this intervention will give our students the vocabulary and sentence structures that will allow them to express their ideas in detail fluently. We hope that this will transfer into reading and written language.
What is different from what we were doing before?
Personally, although I have always tried to explain the meaning of new vocabulary and given them hands-on activities to connect new language to, I have not insisted on them using connected speech. I have modelled how complete sentences would sound but not insisted that they repeat it back or use it multiple times. As a teacher you are always in a rush to move on, slowing it down and taking the time to get students to talk in complex sentences is going to mean letting go of the rushing. Finishing students sentences or accepting broken speech is also something I need to let go of and accept that it is going to feel uncomfortable 'discomforting' the students through pushing them to extend their language instead of jumping in to save them.
Tasks are going to have to be thought out ahead of time and well planned. Instead of giving children a hands-on activity to explore away from the teacher, with the notion that students will share their ideas, knowledge and vocab with each other, activities will need to be done with a teacher and expected vocabulary and prepositional noun groups will have to be anticipated, planned for and modelled. This is far more teacher-directed than the 'play-based learning' approach I have used in the passed.
How will we monitor the effects of our changed practice?
Each teacher will take notes anecdotally on the oral language uptake of their students. The combi list and ELLP forms will be a way of recording progress made by students and teachers will reflect on their own teaching of this programme in terms of what is working and what needs tweaking. These aspects will be shared at team meetings.
Hi Jo,
ReplyDeleteThis is a great constructive reflection! Thank you for sharing these very helpful notes from the sessions we had with Dr Jannie van Hees; very well summarised! I agree with you, and believe that we are learning to change our strategies and approach as we teach students to enrich their oral language. Look forward to making progress in this journey together as a team!
Great summary Jo! Thanks for putting these notes together as it is really good to share and reflect on our time with Jannie. She has wonderful ideas on how to engage our children with oral language and having these notes is a valuable tool when trying to emulate her ideas in the classroom. Thanks again Jo!
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