1 / 16

ELLs and Secondary Mathematics

ELLs and Secondary Mathematics. Examining the Convergence of Mathematics and Language. Connecting Mathematics and Language. In one word, state what comes to mind for most people when you say “mathematics.”. Connecting Mathematics and Language.

Download Presentation

ELLs and Secondary Mathematics

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. ELLs and Secondary Mathematics Examining the Convergence of Mathematics and Language

  2. Connecting Mathematics and Language In one word, state what comes to mind for most people when you say “mathematics.”

  3. Connecting Mathematics and Language Imagine you are a sophomore taking the TAKS and you come upon problem number 14. Solve it and discuss with others at your table. 14) Find the ugloft of a bipkad if the rexnuza is 20.

  4. Find the ugloft of a bipkad if the rexnuza is 20. You look on the information sheet of the TAKS test and see the following: • ugloft = area • bipkad = circle • rexnuza = diameter Now solve the problem. What made the difference?

  5. Kiplinger, Haug, & Abedi (2000) 1) The Kiplinger study investigated and evaluated mathematics ability rather than reading ability on a mathematics test at the 5th grade level. 2) Researchers gave 3 versions of a mathematics test: • Original English, no changes • Simplified English version, with changes to linguistic structure and non-math vocabulary • Original test, with glossary of non-math vocabulary

  6. Kiplinger, Haug, & Abedi (2000) • Students performed at the lowest level on the original English test. • Students performed better on both the simplified English version and the test with a glossary. • Conclusion: Academic achievement for ELL students on a mathematics test is directly related to proficiency in reading English.

  7. Mathematics and Language What does the research say? • You should each have a handout titled SixKey Discoveries in the Research. • Read the contents of your table’s assigned research summary, then discuss with colleagues at your table, and note one or two key points.

  8. Mathematics and Language Research Summary • Total isolation of mathematics and language arts • Learning of vocabulary is part of the learning • The difficulty of the English language itself • Mathematical terms are rarely used outside of the mathematics classroom • Abstract nature of many mathematical terms • Ambiguity

  9. Mathematics and Language Mathematics and Language It is not an ELL problem. (ELL students) It is an ALL problem. (ALL students!)

  10. Ambiguity 1) Which is larger? 354

  11. Ambiguity 2) Which number is larger? 354

  12. Ambiguity 3) Which numeral is larger? 354

  13. Ambiguity • Which is larger? • Which number is larger? • Which numeral is larger? An example of • how language details are important and • there is ambiguity withinmathematics.

  14. Difficulties in Addressing Problems in Mathematical Language • What is a cognate and how is that used as an ELL strategy? • How could that be used to address teaching the concept of number? • Based on what you learned previously, would that strategy be enough to address the concept of number for ELL students?

  15. Difficulties in Addressing Problems in Mathematical Language Most dictionaries and texts will not do a good job of clarifying the meaning for teachers. http://www.teachers.ash.org.au/jeather/maths/dictionary.html • Defines “numeral” as a symbol used to represent a number • Defines “digit” as a symbol used to show a number

  16. Difficulties in Addressing Problems in Mathematical Language • Mathematical language is usually slighted in state standards. http://www.tea.state.tx.us/rules/tac/chapter111/index.html • A search (using the “find” feature) in the on-line TEKS for “numeral” yielded no occurrences.

More Related