I choose to blog on this book “Academic Language for English Language Learners and Struggling Readers: How to Help Students Succeed Across Content Areas” for two main reasons. Firstly, I like the title of the book which I need it to help Saudi students in my home context. Secondly, it is one of the only two that are available in the liberaries in Saudi Arabia.
This book has forward, introduction, and
seven chapters. I will center each blog on these nine parts before adding a
final review or summary.
I like the book
description that is written on the book cover as the following:
Teaching secondary
students in the content areas is hard enough under the best of circumstances.
When students are not well prepared academically and also lack academic
literacy skills, the challenge can seem overwhelming. Fortunately, the Freemans
help secondary content-area teachers provide these students with the academic
support they very desperately need. This is by Robert J. Marzano, a coauthor of
Building Academic Vocabulary.
Many middle school and
high school students are recent immigrants or long-term English language
learners who struggle with the academic language needed to read content-area
textbooks and write papers for their classes. Likewise, many native speakers of
English find content-area classes a challenge. Secondary teachers have little
time to teach academic reading and writing skills because they must cover a
great deal of content in their social studies, science, math, or language arts
classes.
Academic Language for
English Language Learners and Struggling Readers provides the information busy
secondary teachers need to work effectively with English learners and
struggling readers. It reports current research to answer key questions:
·
Who are our older English language learners and struggling
readers?
·
What is academic language?
·
How can middle and high school teachers help students develop
academic language in the different content areas?
This comprehensive and
readable text by Yvonne and David Freeman (authors of Essential Linguistics)
synthesizes recent demographic data on the kinds of English language learners
and struggling readers who attend middle and high schools in increasing
numbers. They flesh out the statistics with stories of students from different
backgrounds. Then the Freemans examine academic language at different levels:
the text level, the paragraph level, the sentence level, and the word level.
For each, they provide examples of academic language and specific strategies
teachers can use as they teach language arts, science, math, and social
studies. They also analyze content-area textbooks, pointing out the
difficulties they pose for students and suggesting ways to make texts more accessible
to ELLs and struggling readers.
Providing classroom
examples, the Freemans explain how teachers can motivate and engage their
students. They describe how teachers can teach language and content
simultaneously by developing both language and content objectives. Academic
Language for English Language Learners gives teachers the information and
strategies they need to help all their students develop academic language.
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