Duke Student Project Intends to Enhance Latino Students' English Skills
Led by their professors, a
team of undergraduate students at Duke University is working
on a project that aims to improve professional development for North Carolina
elementary
school teachers whose students lack essential English language skills.
The premise of the project,
known as Developing Consultation and Collaboration
Skills (DCCS), acknowledges
that the most popular English as a Second Language (ESL) model in
recent years
has been the "pull-out" model, in which students are pulled out of
their
regular classes for additional English language instruction. The
problem with
that model, according to Assistant Research Professor Leslie Babinski
of Duke's
Sanford School of Public Policy, is that students miss out on the
classroom
instruction others are receiving when they are pulled out.
At the same time, Babinski
pointed out, the model ignores the fact that all students in
kindergarten
through second grade are language learners.
"Our idea was that you can
leverage the work of what's happening in the regular classroom to
support
language learning," she said.
The DCCS professional
development program, which was incorporated into four school districts
— urban,
suburban and rural — throughout North Carolina beginning in fall 2015,
has four
components:
- A week-long Summer Institute
for classroom teachers during which they can develop collaboration
skills
needed to increase the command of English for their students,
incorporate
Latino family culture into the classroom and learn about high-impact
instructional skills;
- Weekly collaboration meetings
between ESL and classroom teachers;
- On-site coaching sessions;
and
- Learning modules that the
teachers can incorporate into their classrooms.
While it is too early to have
data on the DCCS project's success, Babinski said, "It's really
encouraging to
see that people feel like they're getting a lot out of it."
About the Author
Michael Hart is a Los Angeles-based freelance writer and the former executive editor of THE Journal.