Or. Admin. Code § 584-065-0100

Current through Register Vol. 63, No. 12, December 1, 2024
Section 584-065-0100 - Knowledge Skills and Abilities for English to Speakers of Other Languages
(1) Language: Candidates know, understand, and use the major concepts, theories, and research related to the nature and acquisition of language to construct learning environments that support English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) and bilingual students' language and literacy development and content area achievement.
(a) Describing Language: Candidates demonstrate understanding of language as a system and demonstrate a high level of competence in helping ESOL and bilingual students acquire and use English in listening, speaking, reading, and writing for social and academic purposes. Candidates:
(A) Apply knowledge of phonology (the sound system) to help ESOL and bilingual students develop oral, reading and writing (including spelling) skills in English;
(B) Apply knowledge of morphology (the structure of words) to assist ESOL and bilingual students' development of oral and literacy skills in English;
(C) Apply knowledge of syntax (phrase and sentence structure) to assist ESOL and bilingual students in developing written and spoken English;
(D) Apply understanding of semantics (word/sentence meaning) to assist ESOL and bilingual students in acquiring and productively using a wide range of vocabulary in English;
(E) Apply knowledge of pragmatics (the effect of context on language) to help ESOL and bilingual students communicate effectively and use English appropriately for a variety of purposes in spoken and written language and in formal and informal settings;
(F) Demonstrate ability to help ESOL and bilingual students develop social and academic language skills in English;
(G) Demonstrate ability to help ESOL and bilingual students acquire a range of genres, rhetorical and discourse structures and writing conventions in English;
(H) Demonstrate understanding of the nature and value of World Englishes and dialect variation, and build on the language that ESOL and bilingual students bring in order to extend their linguistic repertoire;
(I) Locate and use linguistic resources to learn about the structure of English and of students' home language; and
(J) Demonstrate proficiency in English and serve as a good language model for ESOL and bilingual students.
(b) Language Acquisition and Development: Candidates understand and apply concepts, theories, research, and practice to facilitate the acquisition of a primary and a new language in and out of classroom settings. Candidates:
(A) Provide rich exposure to English;
(B) Provide comprehensible input and scaffolding;
(C) Provide opportunities for meaningful interaction;
(D) Create a secure, positive, and motivating learning environment;
(E) Understand and apply current theories and research in language and literacy development;
(F) Recognize and build on the processes and stages of English language literacy development;
(G) Recognize the importance of ESOL and bilingual students' home languages and language varieties and build on these skills on a foundation for learning English;
(H) Understand and apply knowledge of sociocultural and political variable to facilitate the process of learning English;
(I) Understand and apply knowledge of the role of individual learner variable in the process of learning English;
(J) Provide appropriate instruction and feedback;
(K) Help ESOL and bilingual students to communicate in socially and culturally appropriate ways while being sensitive to the student's native culture;
(L) Help ESOL and bilingual students develop academic language proficiency; and
(M) Help ESOL and bilingual students develop effective language learning strategies.
(2) Culture: Candidates know, understand, and use the major concepts, principles, theories, and research related to the nature and role of culture and cultural groups to construct learning environments that support ESOL and bilingual students' cultural identities, language and literacy development, and content area achievement.
(a) Nature and Role of Culture: Candidates know, understand, and use the major concepts, principles, theories, and research related to the nature and role of culture in language development and academic achievement that support individual students' learning. Candidates:
(A) Understand and apply knowledge about cultural values and beliefs in the context of teaching and learning English as a Second Language (ESL);
(B) Understand and apply knowledge about the effects of racism, stereotyping, and discrimination to ESL teaching and learning;
(C) Understand and apply knowledge about home/school communication to enhance ESL teaching and build partnerships with ESOL and bilingual families; and
(D) Understand and apply concepts about the interrelationship between language and culture.
(b) Cultural Groups and Identity: Candidates know, understand, and use knowledge of how cultural groups and students' cultural identities affect language learning and school achievement. Candidates:
(A) Use a range of resources, including the Internet, to learn about world cultures and cultures of students in their classrooms and apply that learning to instruction;
(B) Understand and apply knowledge about how an individual's cultural identity affects their ESL learning and how levels of cultural identity will vary widely among students;
(C) Understand and apply knowledge about cultural conflicts and home-area events that can have an impact on ESOL and bilingual students' learning;
(D) Understand and apply knowledge about the impact of students' socioeconomic status, native language, race, religion, class, national origin disability an gender on learning and teaching ESL; and
(E) Understand and apply knowledge of U.S. immigration history and patterns in teaching ESL.
(3) Planning, Implementing, and Managing Instruction: Candidates know, understand, and use standards-based practices and strategies related to planning, implementing, and managing ESL and content instruction, including classroom organization, teaching strategies for developing and integrating language skills, and choosing and adapting classroom resources.
(a) Planning for Standards-Based ESL and Content Instruction: Candidates know, understand, and apply concepts, research, and best practices to plan classroom instruction in a supportive learning environment for ESOL and bilingual students. Candidates serve as effective English language models, as they plan for multilevel classrooms with learners from diverse backgrounds using standards-based ESL and content curriculum. Candidates:
(A) Plan standards-based ESL and content instruction;
(B) Create environments that promote standards-based language learning in supportive, accepting classrooms and schools;
(C) Plan students' learning experiences based on assessment of language proficiency and prior knowledge; and
(D) Provide for particular needs of students with limited formal schooling (LFS) in their first language.
(b) Managing and Implementing Standards-Based ESL and Content Instruction. Candidates know, manage, and implement a variety of standards-based teaching strategies and techniques for developing and integrating English listening, speaking, reading, and writing, and for accessing the core curriculum. Candidates support ESOL and bilingual students in accessing the core curriculum as they learn language and academic content together. Candidates:
(A) Organize learning around standards-based subject matter and language learning objectives;
(B) Incorporate activities, tasks, and assignments that develop authentic uses of language, as students learn about content-area material;
(C) Provide activities and materials that integrate listening, speaking, reading and writing;
(D) Develop students' listening skills for a variety of academic and social purposes;
(E) Develop students' speaking skills for a variety of academic and social purposes;
(F) Provide standards-based instruction that builds on students' oral English to support learning to read and write;
(G) Provide standards-based reading instruction adapted to ESOL and bilingual learners; and
(H) Provide standards-based writing instruction adapted to ESOL and bilingual learners. Develop students' writing through a range of activities from sentence formation to expository writing.
(c) Using Resources Effectively in ESL and Content Instruction. Candidates are familiar with a wide range of standards-based materials, resources, and technologies, and choose, adapt, and use them in effective ESL and content teaching. Candidates:
(A) Select, adapt and use culturally responsive, age-appropriate and linguistically accessible materials;
(B) Select materials and other resources that are appropriate to students' developing language and cont-area abilities, including appropriate use of the student's first language;
(C) Employ an appropriate variety of materials for language learning, including books, visual aids, props and realia.
(D) Use appropriate technological resources to enhance language and content-area instruction for ESOL and bilingual students (e.g., Web, software, computers, and related devices); and
(E) Use software and Internet resources effectively in ESL and content instruction.
(4) Assessment: Candidates understand issues of assessment and use standards-based assessment measures with ESOL and bilingual students.
(a) Issues of Assessment for ESL. Candidates understand various issues of assessment (e.g., cultural and linguistic bias; political, social, and psychological factors) in assessment, IQ, and special education testing (including gifted and talented); the importance of standards; and the difference between language proficiency and other types of assessment (e.g., standardized achievement tests of overall mastery), as they affect ESOL and bilingual student learning. Candidates:
(A) Demonstrate an understanding of the purposes of assessment as they relate to ESOL and bilingual learners and use results appropriately;
(B) Demonstrate an understanding of the quality indicators of assessment instruments;
(C) Demonstrate understanding of the limitations of assessment situations and make accommodations for ESOL and bilingual students; and
(D) Distinguish between a language difference, gifted and talented and special education needs for ESOL and bilingual students.
(b) Language Proficiency Assessment. Candidates know and use a variety of standards-based language proficiency instruments to inform their instruction and understand their uses for identification, placement, and demonstration of language growth of ESOL and bilingual students. Candidates:
(A) Understand and implement national and state requirements for identification, reclassification and exit of ESOL and bilingual students from language support programs;
(B) Understand, develop and use norm-referenced assessments appropriately with ESOL and bilingual learners;
(C) Understand, develop and use criterion referenced assessments appropriately with ESOL and bilingual learners;
(D) Understand, construct and use assessment measures for a variety of purposes for ESOL and bilingual students; and
(E) Assess ESOL and bilingual learners' language skills and communicative competence using multiple sources of information.
(c) Classroom-Based Assessment for ESL. Candidates know and use a variety of performance-based assessment tools and techniques to inform instruction. Candidates:
(A) Use performance-based assessment tools and tasks that measure ESOL and bilingual learners' progress toward state and national standards;
(B) Use various instruments and techniques to assess content-area learning (e.g. math, science, social studies) for ESOL and bilingual learners at varying levels of language and literacy development; and
(C) Prepare ESOL and bilingual students to use self- and peer-assessment techniques when appropriate.
(5) Professionalism: Candidates demonstrate knowledge of the history of ESL teaching. Candidates keep current with new instructional techniques, research results, advances in the ESL field, and public policy issues. Candidates use such information to reflect upon and improve their instructional practices. Candidates provide support and advocate for ESOL and bilingual students and their families and work collaboratively to improve the learning environment.
(a) ESL Research and History: Candidates demonstrate knowledge of history, research, and current practice in the field of ESL teaching and apply this knowledge to improve teaching and learning. Candidates:
(A) Demonstrate knowledge of language teaching methods in their historical contexts; and
(B) Demonstrate knowledge of the evolution of laws and policy in the ESL profession.
(b) Partnerships and Advocacy. Candidates serve as professional resources, advocate for ESOL and bilingual students, and build partnerships with students' families. Candidates:
(A) Advocate and serve as language and education resources for students and families in their schools and communities;
(B) Serve as professional resources personnel in their education communities; and
(C) Advocate for ESOL and bilingual students' access to all available academic resources, including instructional technology.
(c) Professional Development and Collaboration. Candidates collaborate with and are prepared to serve as a resource to all staff, including paraprofessionals, to improve learning for all ESOL and bilingual students. Candidates:
(A) Establish professional goals and pursue opportunities to grow in the field of ESL;
(B) Work with other teachers and staff to provide comprehensive, challenging educational opportunities for ESOL and bilingual students in the school;
(C) Engage in collaborative teaching in general education and content-area classrooms; and
(D) Model academic proficiency in the English language.
(6) Technology: Candidates use information technology to enhance learning and to enhance personal and professional productivity. Candidates:
(a) Demonstrate knowledge of current technologies and their application in ESOL;
(b) Design, develop, and implement student learning activities that integrate information technology; and
(c) Use technologies to communicate, network, locate resources, and enhance continuing professional development.

Or. Admin. Code § 584-065-0100

TSPC 9-2005, f. & cert. ef. 11-15-05

Stat. Auth.: ORS 342

Stats. Implemented: ORS 342.120 - 342.143, 342.153, 342.165 & 342.223 - 342.232