The California ELD Standards Companion, Grades 3-5. Jim Burke
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2 Interacting with others in written English in various communicative forms (print, communicative technology, and multimedia). This standard is specific to collaborating through written English (e.g., passing notes, written feedback, collaborative group writing/multimedia projects, collaboration using technology) but also includes word-level processing, such as decoding and spelling. It also includes recognizing the organizational features of different academic texts so that students can better comprehend and create their own written texts (Brisk 2012; Gibbons, 2008; Hammond, 2006).
3 Offering and supporting opinions and negotiating with others in communicative exchanges. Not all students come to school knowing how to engage in collaborative discussions with others. Recent research has shown that ELLs can learn how to do this by being “apprenticed” through scaffolded interactions in classroom discussion settings (Gibbons, 2009; Walqui & van Lier, 2010).
4 Adapting language choices to various contexts (based on task, purpose, audience, and text type). Choosing the right language depends on what is happening (the content), who is communicating and their relationship (e.g., peer to peer, student to adult), how the message is conveyed (e.g., written, spoken), and whether the communication is formal or informal (Schleppegrell, 2012). Student success with adapting language choices grows with student ability to increase vocabulary, recognize and use appropriate register, use more complex sentence and clauses, and use connecting/transitioning words to convey meaning (O’Dowd, 2010; Schleppegrell, 2004).
In The California ELD Companion, the section on What the Student Does provides specific descriptions of competence with each of the Collaborative standards at the appropriate grade range and proficiency level. Similarly, the section on What the Teacher Does provides specific strategies for developing competence with each of the Collaborative standards at the appropriate grade range. And the last section, Vignettes and Snapshots, offers classroom level descriptions of what each standard looks like in practice.
Source: California English Language Development Standards, K–12 (2012). Chapter 4, “Theoretical Foundations and the Research Bases of the CA ELD Standards,” provides an excellent summary of the research used in developing the four Collaborative standards in Part I, A.
Standard 1: Exchanging information and ideas
ELD Standard 1 Organized by Grade Level and Proficiency Level
Emerging
3 Contribute to conversations and express ideas by asking and answering yes-no and why questions and responding using short phrases.
4 Contribute to conversations and express ideas by asking and answering yes-no and why questions and responding using short phrases.
5 Contribute to conversations and express ideas by asking and answering yes-no and why questions and responding using short phrases.
Expanding
3 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, and adding relevant information.
4 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, and adding relevant information.
5 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, and adding relevant information.
Bridging
3 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, adding relevant information, building on responses, and providing useful feedback.
4 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, adding relevant information, building on responses, and providing useful feedback.
5 Contribute to class, group, and partner discussions, including sustained dialogue, by following turn-taking rules, asking relevant questions, affirming others, adding relevant information, building on responses, and providing useful feedback.
Script in bold italics indicates content not found in earlier proficiency levels of the same ELD Standard.
Source: California English Language Development Standards for Grades K–12, California Department of Education (2012).
Notes
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Grades 3–5 Interacting in Meaningful Ways Collaborative Standard 1
What the Student Does
Emerging
Gist: Students contribute to discussions with others, follow norms for discussion, and stay on topic through multiple exchanges.
3 They consider:Do I contribute to the conversations and express my own ideas?Do I ask and answer yes/no questions? Who, what, when, where, why questions?Do I use short phrases to help others understand what I am saying?
4 They consider:Do I contribute to the conversations and express my own ideas?Do I ask and answer yes/no questions? Who, what, when, where, why questions?Do I use short phrases to help others understand what I am saying?
5 They consider:Do I contribute to the conversations and express my own ideas?Do I ask and answer yes/no questions? Who, what, when, where, why questions?Do I use short phrases to help others understand what I am saying?
Expanding
Gist: Students have extended conversations with classmates and adults, follow norms for discussion, build on one another’s ideas, and ask questions.