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Agriculture Content and Technology in an ESL Classroom

Agriculture Content and Technology in an ESL Classroom. Rosita L. Rivera, Ph.D. Catherine M. Mazak , Ph.D. University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez. Overview. The Context The Problem The Project Pedagogical Implications. The Context. University of Puerto Rico in Mayaguez

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Agriculture Content and Technology in an ESL Classroom

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  1. Agriculture Content and Technology in an ESL Classroom Rosita L. Rivera, Ph.D. Catherine M. Mazak, Ph.D. University of Puerto Rico, Mayagüez

  2. Overview • The Context • The Problem • The Project • Pedagogical Implications

  3. The Context • University of Puerto Rico in Mayaguez • Agriculture and Engineering Campus • Graduates are hired by federal and local agencies (USDA/NRCS) • Two different student populations • Bilingual students (usually from private schools) • Students who struggle with language learning (usually socially and economically disadvantaged) • We are preparing students for bilingual academic study

  4. The Project • Problem • Agriculture majors over-represented in low-level English basic track courses • One-size-fits all ESL curriculum • High failure rate lengthens time to degree • Solution • Content-based curriculum • Technology-enhanced classroom • Cohort of students moves together through intensive summer, fall, and spring courses • Authentic Materials and Assessment

  5. Agriculture Students in Remedial English Courses

  6. Using Technology to Advance English Language Learning for First Year Agriculture Majors USDA/CSREES Hispanic Serving Institutions Education Grants Program $240,000 for two years USDA Funding

  7. Research Questions • What is the relationship between language, content, strategy, and technology learning in a university-level content-based, computer-mediated English classroom? • How does technology use enhance English language learning? • How does access to technologies facilitate content-based language learning?

  8. Data Collected • Focus groups with students • Technology use surveys • TA reflections • External observers focus groups and reports • Ethnographic fieldnotes (one semester) • Blog entries • Course work

  9. Participants

  10. Technology in the Classroom

  11. Technology Used • Electronic whiteboard • PC laptops • Online dictionary • www.merriam-webster.com • PowerPoint • Word (conceptual maps) • Blogs • www.wordpress.com

  12. Content Based Instruction (CBI) • “Dual commitment to language- and content-learning objectives.” (Stoller, 2004) • Reinforces vocabulary, grammar, and discourse structures common in a specific discipline. (Brinton, Snow & Wesche, 1989)

  13. Computer Mediated Instruction • Three roles of the computer: • Tutor • Tool • Medium • “There is consensus in CALL research that it is not technology per se that affects the learning of language and culture but the particular uses of technology.” (Kern 2006)

  14. Modified CALLA Model CALLA, Chamot and O’Malley (1987, 1994)

  15. Example II: Learn Animal Science Vocabulary

  16. Example III: Genetically Modified Foods • Understanding the text (content) • Scanning/skimming for information (strategy) • Graphically organize information from the reading (strategy—learn to represent information from a reading first and then also use this graphic representation of data in the presentation) • Reporting data (language—90% said that…) • Recontextualize the information by applying it to their own presentation

  17. Example from students’ projectsWhat do people prefer to eat?

  18. Example from students’ presentationsFast food Preference and gender

  19. Blog

  20. Carmen “The blog because at the same time that we use the internet we would learn about grammar because we would have to be writing everything, the errors and all the horrors that we would commit, well, we would learn to correct them and to write better and at the same time we were interacting with something different and it wasn’t the same thing all the time, reading and writing, read and write, read and write.”

  21. Giselle “What I liked was how I did the blog and the comments because it was all in English and everything, and everything that it said was in English, the information that it asks of you and everything is in English… Well, you practice writing the comments and reading , whatever thing you don’t understand you would ask a teacher or you would look in the very same internet in the dictionary and everything and it gave you access to everything and you could do it yourself.”

  22. Dictionary

  23. Ferdinand “Truthfully I liked the dictionary too. I had never used an online dictionary where you write a word and it comes up really fast and not like in the paper dictionary.”

  24. Carmen “I liked that [the technology use] a lot because apart from taking the English class, well, it’s like experimenting more with the field that we are going to study here. I am sure that the great majority (of students) entered the department and they didn’t have any idea what was going to happen or with what they were going to work and, I don’t know, really, at least for me it opened my eyes…now I have , like, more security to decide in what I’m going to stay and in what I’m going to work.”

  25. Kristen “It’sreallyverygood, thetechnology and English—orthat’stosay, it’ssomethingthatyouhaveto use and so, well, (youhave ) tolearnto use thetwothings at thesame time and so it’slike beneficial forusnowthatwe are goingtoenterthefield in theuniversity and theagriculture.”

  26. Answers to Research Questions • How does technology use enhance English language learning? • “Everything is in English” • Improved motivation • Easy, student-empowering online dictionary • How does access to technologies facilitate content-based language teaching? • Students made link between tech and university life (EAP) • Students made link between tech and content-based language learning

  27. Pedagogical Implications • Technology promotes the integration of strategy, content, and language learning in the classroom. • Integrating technology facilitates students’ success in other academic contexts. • Technology motivates students to learn content and language. • Technology offers opportunities for individual empowerment and learning.

  28. Issues • Students can depend too much on having materials posted to the blog (especially PowerPoint). • Modeling takes a substantial amount of teaching time. • Technical assistants are needed. • Routines for technology use need to be established. • Blogs can be accessible to everyone. • Curricular development takes more time.

  29. Contact Information Personal Info: • cathymazak@mac.com • http://academic.uprm.edu/cmazak Project Info: • http://academic.uprm.edu/usdaenglish • http://usdaenglish.wordpress.com • http://esltraining.wordpress.com

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