CONNECTING ESL Learners through
Digital Storytelling
By Dr. Rose Reissman
By Dr. Rose Reissman
ESL, ELA,
and SS educators have always faced challenges in engaging students in activities
to build first language content and skill expertise, so that they may transfer that content learning
to English Language mandated learning.
Currently,
though, Chromebooks, or similar connected devices, are very commonly available
for classroom instruction. With these, this difficult challenge may be tackled
easily and successfully by offering second language learners, and their native
speaker peers, activities that are rich and enjoyable. The key to this is
Digital Storytelling and many free and highly effective resources to support it
are available on the web.
Many
educators rush to purchase special ESL learner specific software and texts, as
well as online programs for reading comprehension. These, of course, are often exclusively used
with ESL learners even in a mixed classroom where they study alongside American born
peers. Ironically, even with all the
differing levels of English language reading, speaking, listening, and product
creating ability in a mixed learner class, one resource set is already available
in the school that can immediately connect ESL and American peers
in literacy learning and sharing. That
tool is a Chromebook or laptop or tablet that can connect students to web-based
resources guaranteed excite all learners in the guise of stories heard, stories
told and stories produced.
Want a look at this dynamic digital story highway? Go
to *’Digital
Storytelling Site’ for a page of curated ESL Storytelling Resources.
https://sites.google.com/site/digitalstorysite/training/resources-esl
You'll find a curated list of ESL, ready-to-peruse and select, grade, age, topics, lessons and methods, plus step-by-step project instructions. Much of this can serve
as a quick ESL tutorial or differentiation practicum for the educator who is
new to ESL students. It can also serve the ESL educator who is eager to infuse peer
ESL language learner materials into his or her teaching.
Literacy learning involves listening skills which are required for all and that develop as they hear native English spoken. This is especially
needed for ESL students, Unfortunately, this is something which
for many students, including a sizable percent born in the USA, does not happen
at home where their native languages are spoken. The resource, Digital Storytelling Site provides both ESL
teachers and teachers who have ESL students in their content classes with an
array of free resources that provide good-to-go storytelling lessons on
different ESL levels that will help their students get over this hurdle.
Teachers,
even those who do not teach ESL students at all, will benefit from the extended
body of ready ESL learner samples and the techniques mapped out from multiple
respected sources such as those found at TESOL Journal https://www.tesol.org/read-and-publish/journals/tesol-journal.
Even
better, the students – ESL, and those who can benefit from ESL emphasis on
vocabulary, which will include many American natives, can immediately explore such resources as their teachers
observe, and through the audio, manage learner responses and note individual
listening strengths and deficits.
The connected
device, will help ESL, ELA and SS teachers to differentiate use of resources to
best support individual learner vocabulary, conversation and comprehension of
English, while allowing the teacher to maintain privacy of individual learner
progress. All learners -ESL and American
born- become part of the classroom Storyteller circle on the connected device
platform.
Instantly
available, is audio of ESL stories to listen to, learn from, read along with,
and react to. One good source for these is: Fluent U English Education Blog http://www.fluentu.com/english/educator/blog/esl-audio-short-stories/
For
teachers, who want to engage students in
listening to short timed stories from 1.5 minutes to 4 or 5 minutes there is an
array of stories for this purpose complete with music and special effects,
plus: detailed descriptions for the teacher to examine, topics relevant to
curricula, exercises included to test comprehension, transcripts of printed
texts for students to use as they listen (or to use as printed texts for
teacher questions after listening), interactive reading (some of these stories
can be read interactively by the students) which can be recorded for further
fluency practice, and on some stories, there is a translation button which can
translate a word into many native student languages.
This plethora of ready to use items can inspire not only the target ESL learners but everyone in the class or grade to be part of the listening and reacting audience for storytelling. You’ll find some great ideas at sites like ESL Language Learner http://digitalstorytelling.coe.uh.edu/archive/esl.html
This plethora of ready to use items can inspire not only the target ESL learners but everyone in the class or grade to be part of the listening and reacting audience for storytelling. You’ll find some great ideas at sites like ESL Language Learner http://digitalstorytelling.coe.uh.edu/archive/esl.html
Of
course, the end product of all literacy learning and evidence of second language
acquisition plus writing skills is the creation, by the student learner, of a product,
like a memoir or reflection or narrative story.
For American natives this is a challenging ladder of literacy. But ESL
learners often have even more difficulty because they are navigating a second
language
In
addition, while their print textbooks offer artificially constructed,
grammatically correct models, rarely are these contemporary, actual ESL learner
digital stories. However, using connected
device resources, ESL learners can listen to peer Spanish or Turkish or other
language ESL students sharing real ESL stories in their own voices. These
models officiated through the digital platform of the Chromebook truly inspire and concretize the literacy
skills of second language within the context of first language experience and
expertise for the ESL students.
With all
these actual ESL learner generated and native language spoken content plus
translation and music choices available, connected device use also makes
literacy skills learning culturally consonant for ESL learners, plus adds
cultural depth to the literacy studies of their classroom Chromebook connected
American native peers. Of course, those
educators wanting to take additional coursework in ESL methods or buy print and
software specifically designed for ESL learners to enrich the resources they
offer students can and should do so. But
in the here and now of next period’s literacy class storytelling and story-authoring
experiences for ESL learners and American natives to share together, the
connected device can all of them onto the universal digital circle of
storytellers and listeners.
Making
this competencies connection as one community is the ultimate goal of ESL second
language acquisition!! Why should
connected device storytelling collections and activities be limited to ESL
students only?? In this instance
American born natives can join the circle as well! This use of technology
converges cultures while concretizing unique cultural and community experiences
through digital storytelling.
*Digital
Storytelling Site is a page from Dr.
Helen Barrett's Site on Digital Storytelling in ePortfolios https://sites.google.com/site/digitalstorysite/
Dr. Rose Reissman is the founder of the Writing Institute,
now replicated in 145 schools including the Manchester Charter Middle School in
Pittsburgh. She is a featured author in New York State Union Teachers Educators
Voice 2016 and was filmed discussing ESL student leadership literary strategies
developed at Ditmas IS 62, a Brooklyn public intermediate school. roshchaya@gmail.com
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