Thursday, May 2, 2013
gate city paricipat with students on poster

Natalie LaFlamme has taught sixth grade math for 27 years and for the first 20 years she had just one minority student. That鈥檚 all changed. Now the students in LaFlamme鈥檚 Nashua middle school classes come from all over the world, and they speak many languages. More than 50 languages are spoken by students in the Nashua School District, with Spanish second only to English. Students hail from 80 different countries, including the Dominican Republic, Brazil, India, Puerto Rico, Mexico, and Ukraine. In the last five years, the district has seen a 28 percent increase in students actively receiving English language learner (ELL) services.

Some are just learning to speak English. When the opportunity to participate in a 易胜博官网 program known as GATE CITY to become certified as an ESOL teacher, tuition paid for, LaFlamme and two other teachers in her school promptly enrolled. They began the first course in January. Already, the course has prompted the veteran teacher to make significant changes in the way she teaches.

children in the classroom with their hands up

In the classroom

LaFlamme鈥檚 sixth-grade math class at Fairgrounds Middle School has a pleasant but brisk tempo. The students follow LaFlamme鈥檚 every move and intonation.

鈥淥k, let鈥檚 look at the bar graph. Don鈥檛 over think it. What is the average women鈥檚 shoe size for this store?鈥

By now a third of the class have their hands up. Still she waits.

Now the hands are waving. Finally, she lets someone answer.

Then she has the class graph the number of pets in their households by putting stickers on a poster board.

鈥淣o,鈥 says LaFlamme to one student. 鈥淵ou can鈥檛 count your sister鈥︹ 鈥淲hat about my dad?鈥

LaFlamme gives him 鈥渢he look鈥 and everyone laughs. After all this is middle school.

Later she talks with another student and asks, 鈥淚n Mexico do they teach long division differently?鈥

Immediately, several students correct her. 鈥淗e鈥檚 from Honduras Mrs. LaFlamme!鈥

鈥淥h that鈥檚 right,鈥 says LaFlamme, resuming the lesson without missing a beat.

LaFlamme has worked hard to create a classroom culture where her students don鈥檛 feel anxious about their ethnicities or their various levels of English fluency.

All around the room, posters and signs point to this goal. On the front white board is a list of English and Spanish mathematical terms, e.g., rate=tasa, ratio=proporci贸n, and working together=trabajando juntos. High on the front wall of the classroom is an inspirational poster: 鈥淵ou cannot choose your circumstances, but you can choose to overcome them.鈥 Prominently displayed as well are posters of the Common Core Standards and the expected grade-level competencies, which students will be tested on.

What is the GATE CITY program?

LaFlamme and her fellow teachers are part of the first 40-teacher cohort in the Nashua School district, kicking off what鈥檚 officially known as 鈥淕ATE CITY: Getting All Teachers ESOL Certified in Two+ Years.鈥 In January 2015, a second cohort of 40-teachers will begin, bringing the total to about 80 teachers who will have certification for English to Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL).

The program, a partnership between 易胜博官网 and the Nashua School District, is funded by a $1.8 million National Development Grant from the U.S. Department of Education鈥檚 Office of English Language Acquisition. Its goal is to increase the academic achievement of English learners in the Nashua public schools, particularly in math and science.

Project director Judy Sharkey, associate professor and associate director of teacher education at 易胜博官网, has a good track record of providing ESOL training, having just completed a similar five-year project, focusing on English language learning that resulted in 40 ESOL-certified teachers in 易胜博官网.

鈥淭he idea behind the GATE CITY program is to have more mainstream teachers be dual certified,鈥 says Sharkey. 鈥淲e want the person who鈥檚 expert in math, social studies, and history to also be able to work with English language learners.鈥

The program is also based on an adult learning model. Teachers in their schools comprise learning groups and as Wendy Perron, the project manager and lead instructor in the program explains: 鈥淭his model honors the expertise of these veteran teachers. They can learn new teaching concepts and strategies to build on the good foundation they already have.鈥

New ways of teaching

During the course of her career, LaFlamme has successfully mastered No Child Left Behind, the Common Core Standards, and other curricula innovations. During her half-hour lunch break, LaFlamme reflects on what she鈥檚 learned.

鈥淏efore this year, I never knew that I should encourage communication in other languages,鈥 says LaFlamme. 鈥淚 don鈥檛 know why I didn鈥檛 know that. I was just鈥斺榃e鈥檝e got to do English.鈥 I didn鈥檛 realize what a fallacy that is.鈥

What LaFlamme has learned is that her English language learners (ELL) pick up 鈥渃onversational鈥 English in about a year, but to learn 鈥渁cademic鈥 English takes about five years. It鈥檚 the difference between talking in the halls and deciphering a mathematical word problem or between texting and writing a research paper.

In LaFlamme鈥檚 class, there is a lot of instruction that is conversational, so her ELL students follow along pretty well. And there are many effective teaching strategies to help ELL students with the academic English.

For example, other students who are bilingual can help out ELL students. Sometimes LaFlamme will give an ELL student class notes in Spanish and also translate tests into Spanish. What鈥檚 critical is that the ELL student continues to learn the subject matter and progress.

鈥淚 don鈥檛 worry about the kids learning English. They鈥檙e very social and will learn it, but my job is to teach them sixth-grade math,鈥 says LaFlamme.

When LaFlamme describes the 77 sixth-grade students she teaches, it鈥檚 clear that she loves numbers. She notes that of that group probably 20 students are bilingual and fluent; they are not ELL students. Many speak more than two languages. There are students who speak Spanish, of course, but there are also those who speak Arabic, Nepali, Korean, Portuguese, Ukrainian, and African dialects. Students who are learning English participate in the ELL class. Some of those students have been at the school for a year, and others have just moved to the U.S. and speak little, if any, English.

鈥淭he course has helped me as a middle school teacher to affirm that knowing the kids and understanding their biographies is key,鈥 says LaFlamme. 鈥淭his helps me to create an environment where they are able to take risks and learn.鈥

This summer LaFlamme plans to take Spanish. Her students know this. And when LaFlamme or a student doesn鈥檛 know a word, the class jumps in to help. As LaFlamme says, 鈥淚t鈥檚 not that we didn鈥檛 appreciate diversity before, we just didn鈥檛 celebrate it and now we do.鈥

LaFlamme acknowledges that incorporating these new teaching strategies can be tricky. 鈥淚 have decades of curricula materials. I鈥檝e already created my tests. And, I鈥檝e had success,鈥 says LaFlamme. 鈥淔or a new teacher, adding this piece is challenging, but the goal is to help these students succeed.鈥

As GATE CITY project director Sharkey notes: 鈥淎ffirming the students鈥 cultural, linguistic assets and increasing access to content expertise and experiences will open a range of career opportunities for our learners.鈥

Feeling at home

The Census Bureau projects that by the year 2030, school-age children whose first language is not English will comprise an estimated 40 percent of K-12 population in the U.S. Understanding how to work with English language learners (ELL) is critical.

And there鈥檚 another concern: the 鈥淯-curve.鈥 Studies have shown that when students first come to the U.S., there鈥檚 often a honeymoon period. Many are excited to be in a new country. But other young students have arrived due to adverse circumstances. In any case, the challenge of adjusting to a new culture and language can result in a student鈥檚 becoming withdrawn and feeling a great sense of loss. This difficult and complex emotional phase is called, for efficiency鈥檚 sake, the 鈥渟ilent鈥 period.

If a student can progress to learn conversational English and develop skills for learning academic English, the likelihood is that he will develop some humor about learning and soon feel at home. That student will probably graduate from high school. But many ELL students tend to drop out before high school.

In Veronica Bodden鈥檚 ELL classroom, a map of the world has pins identifying the many countries that individual students come from. As students filter into the classroom, Bodden, who is also enrolled in the GATE CITY program, talks to a parent on the phone in Spanish. The students chat and relax. This classroom is their home base at school, and Bodden, their teacher, is their emotional support.

Today in class they read a book about jellyfish. These ELL students love nonfiction, plus Bodden knows that they鈥檒l love learning about a sea wasp whose sting can kill someone in three minutes. She鈥檚 not mistaken. Also, they love big dramatic words such as 鈥減redator,鈥 鈥減aralyze,鈥 鈥渢entacles,鈥 and 鈥減oison.鈥

As they read and discuss the book, there is a stark contrast between their conversational chatter and their hesitant reading aloud. One student does not want to read aloud at all.

鈥淢aria鈥檚 only been in this country for three weeks,鈥 Bodden says. 鈥淪o, I can understand her trepidation.鈥

Often Bodden asks, 鈥淲hat does this text mean? What are they saying? Connect the dots for me!鈥

One student who鈥檚 been in this class for about a year, engages immediately, responding in English and then quickly in Spanish. This learning process is additive rather than subtractive.

Later Bodden explains, 鈥淚n Spanish, he just wants verification that he understands the English, and he does.

鈥淟ast year he entered the 鈥榮ilent period.鈥 He told me recently how hard it was for him. 鈥 He thought he鈥檇 never learn English.鈥

But today as he gathered up his books to head out to his next class, there was un aire de confianza y alegr铆a en su paso (a sense of confidence and a spring in his step).

Originally published by:

, Newletter for the College of Liberal Arts

  • Written By:

    Staff writer | Communications and Public Affairs