Gespeichert in:
Bibliographische Detailangaben
1. Verfasser: Wrigley, Pamela
Format: Recurso educativo Open Access
Sprache:en
Veröffentlicht: 2000
Schlagworte:
Online-Zugang:https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED469542
Tags: Tag hinzufügen
Keine Tags, Fügen Sie den ersten Tag hinzu!
_version_ 1867181894429310976
author Wrigley, Pamela
author_facet Wrigley, Pamela
Wrigley, Pamela
collection Education Resources Information Center
contents The Challenge of Educating English Language Learners in Rural Areas. Wrigley, Pamela Administrator Role Cultural Awareness Cultural Isolation Educational Change Educational Environment Educational Strategies Elementary Secondary Education English (Second Language) Hispanic Americans Immigrants Language Minorities Limited English Speaking Multicultural Education Principals Rural Schools School Districts Staff Development Rural school districts are experiencing an influx of language minority students. Rural communities generally have little experience with people from other cultures and have fewer resources and bilingual people. At the district level, leaders who view the influx of immigrants in a positive light are more likely to prepare a well thought out plan for serving their English Language Learners (ELLs). An example shows the steps taken in a rural Virginia district to implement a well-researched program that set the district on the right path for years to come. Although the district provides structure and guidance, it is the school principal who ensures that programs are properly implemented and maintained. Schools that are successfully helping their ELLs have principals with positive attitudes towards their new population. Successful principals arrange training sessions for all staff on cultural awareness, schedule ongoing training sessions for mainstream teachers on English-as-second-language (ESL) strategies, actively recruit ethnically diverse teachers and staff, encourage collaboration between mainstream and ESL teachers, support extended-day opportunities for ELLs, purchase classroom and library resources that broaden student understanding of different cultures, and reach out to parents using their native language. The increased emphasis on standards and high-stakes testing and related questions about fair treatment of ELLs can support rural district efforts to obtain additional funding. The Department of Education provides free technical assistance, and there are often community resources and volunteers that can be tapped. (TD)
format Recurso educativo Open Access
id eric_ED469542
institution ERIC Institute of Education Sciences
language en
publishDate 2000
record_format eric
spellingShingle The Challenge of Educating English Language Learners in Rural Areas.
Wrigley, Pamela
Administrator Role
Cultural Awareness
Cultural Isolation
Educational Change
Educational Environment
Educational Strategies
Elementary Secondary Education
English (Second Language)
Hispanic Americans
Immigrants
Language Minorities
Limited English Speaking
Multicultural Education
Principals
Rural Schools
School Districts
Staff Development
The Challenge of Educating English Language Learners in Rural Areas. Wrigley, Pamela Administrator Role Cultural Awareness Cultural Isolation Educational Change Educational Environment Educational Strategies Elementary Secondary Education English (Second Language) Hispanic Americans Immigrants Language Minorities Limited English Speaking Multicultural Education Principals Rural Schools School Districts Staff Development Rural school districts are experiencing an influx of language minority students. Rural communities generally have little experience with people from other cultures and have fewer resources and bilingual people. At the district level, leaders who view the influx of immigrants in a positive light are more likely to prepare a well thought out plan for serving their English Language Learners (ELLs). An example shows the steps taken in a rural Virginia district to implement a well-researched program that set the district on the right path for years to come. Although the district provides structure and guidance, it is the school principal who ensures that programs are properly implemented and maintained. Schools that are successfully helping their ELLs have principals with positive attitudes towards their new population. Successful principals arrange training sessions for all staff on cultural awareness, schedule ongoing training sessions for mainstream teachers on English-as-second-language (ESL) strategies, actively recruit ethnically diverse teachers and staff, encourage collaboration between mainstream and ESL teachers, support extended-day opportunities for ELLs, purchase classroom and library resources that broaden student understanding of different cultures, and reach out to parents using their native language. The increased emphasis on standards and high-stakes testing and related questions about fair treatment of ELLs can support rural district efforts to obtain additional funding. The Department of Education provides free technical assistance, and there are often community resources and volunteers that can be tapped. (TD)
title The Challenge of Educating English Language Learners in Rural Areas.
topic Administrator Role
Cultural Awareness
Cultural Isolation
Educational Change
Educational Environment
Educational Strategies
Elementary Secondary Education
English (Second Language)
Hispanic Americans
Immigrants
Language Minorities
Limited English Speaking
Multicultural Education
Principals
Rural Schools
School Districts
Staff Development
url https://eric.ed.gov/?id=ED469542