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Oregon State University
News & Communication Services
A416
Kerr Administration Bldg.
Corvallis, OR 97331 2124
"OSU Programs help Oregon educators understand ESL students"
By Robert Hood
February 28, 2002
CORVALLIS
It's a difficult task trying to teach children who do not have a
grasp of the English language. But with the help of Oregon State University's
English Language Institute, elementary and middle school teachers in Oregon
have a better understanding of how to approach the task.
Two federal grants are making this possible. The U.S. Department of Education
Office of Bilingual Education and Minority Languages Affairs has provided a
three year, $240,000 grant to provide professional development opportunities
designed to assist classroom teachers, bilingual assistants, and English for
Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) resource specialists at the elementary and
middle school levels. The focus of the project is to create a community of
ongoing support for educators through workshops and to help ESOL assistants
with their coursework to become full fledged teachers.
"Moving ESOL assistants into teaching positions helps to provide students
with positive role models," said Rachel Powell, an ELI instructor and
director of the OBEMLA grant.
The Eisenhower Grant, funded through the State of Oregon, provides $65,900
a year to help bring together classroom teachers and ESOL/bilingual professionals
in the elementary and middle school levels to develop tools for effective instruction
of English language learners. The focus is on math and science instruction
in particular. The workshops serve teachers from the Corvallis, Lebanon, Lincoln
County, Albany, and Springfield school districts.
The ELI has received the Eisenhower Grant the past three years.
"It's amazing what happens at these workshops," said Maria Dantas
Whitney, ELI instructor and director of Eisenhower ELI activities. "Teachers
talk with each other and discover that they are facing the same problems and
concerns."
Marianne Clausing Lee, ESL coordinator for the Corvallis School District,
said OSU is providing staff development for teachers, teaching assistants and
other staff that work with students that would be unavailable otherwise.
"We don't have the money in our district to have this level of staff
development," Clausing Lee said. "We can't bring this caliber of
presenters to the district because of the cost. This type of training really
helps teachers and students."
Dantas Whitney said workshops are held in the school districts at least twice
a year and teachers from the five participating districts are invited to campus
three times a year for larger workshops.
Attendance at the workshops often tops 90 teachers. In addition, education
students from OSU and the University of Oregon participate in the workshops.
Five teachers from each district also conduct classroom based research to
better understand English language learners and share their findings.
"They study how they are impacting students and making a difference in
the classroom," Dantas-Whitney said.
Clausing Lee said the teaching strategies and information presented at the
workshops helps more than just ESL students.
Used with permission of Oregon State University News & Communication Services.
This file was updated on November 8,
2003
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