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NOTE: Some sessions are grouped. Please note the room.Symposium: Reflective Practitioners: Action Research in Pre-Service Teacher Education Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Alumni Daryl Gordon, Adelphi University Blair Bateman, Brigham Young University Joel Hardman, Southern Illinois University Edwardsville Diana Schwinge, Adelphi University This symposium brings together four teacher educators who involve pre-service language teachers in action research projects. Presenters will share insights and challenges related to conceptual and practical questions including selecting an action research question, research ethics and IRB approval, research design, data analysis, and implications for continuing professional development. |
Paper Session: Collaborative Teacher Development: Teaching and Learning for Two FL Teachers Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Campus Kristin Hoyt, Kennesaw State University Two foreign language (FL) teachers collaborated in a project from which they both benefited as teachers and learners. Bringing together different perspectives as pre-service FL teacher and FL teacher educator, and based on principles of self-reflective inquiry, they engaged in collaborative exchange and experienced professional growth via situated, experiential learning. |
Paper Session: Enhancing Study Abroad Design to Better Support Language Teachers' Development Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Campus Erin Kearney, University at Buffalo - SUNY So-Yeon Ahn, University at Buffalo - SUNY This conceptual presentation seeks to advance the notion that study abroad opportunities can be developed in ways that better support the needs of (future) foreign language teachers. We draw specifically on our recent experiences launching two new study abroad programs and share our plans for research related to these programs. |
Paper Session: Evaluating the Impact of Online Professional Development for Japanese Language Teachers Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Coffman Eiko Ushida, University of California - San Diego Takeshi Sengiku, Gettysburg College Yasuhiko Tohsaku, University of California - San Diego This presentation will report on the impact of JOINT (Japanese Online Instruction Network for Teachers), an online professional development program for Japanese language teachers. It will outline the successes and challenges of the JOINT program and discuss the effectiveness, limitations, and potentials of online professional development for language teacher education. |
Paper Session: Talking together, growing together - professional development of language teachers and researchers. Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Coffman Ana Sofia Pinho, University of Aveiro - Portugal This paper describes a subject-matter focused, research-based and community-centred project, which involves teachers, teacher educators, and researchers working in Language Education. Based on the story so far, the enquiry analyses its members' collaborative professional talk, searching for signs of professional transformation and learning occurring in the sociocultural exchanges and interactive moments. |
Paper Session: Translating Research into Practice Through Study Circles Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: coffman Patsy Vinogradov, University of Minnesota Astrid Liden, Minnesota Department of Education Study Circles are small, facilitated, practitioner learning groups that meet to discuss issues of relevance to their classrooms. Organized around a specific topic, practitioners read and discuss research, then implement and reflect on instructional practices. Presenters describe a study circle used successfully in Minnesota with instructors of pre-literate ESL adults. |
Paper Session: Effect of Training on Teachers' Knowledge about Second Language Acquisition Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Collegiate Sunyung Song, The Ohio State University Keiko Samimy, The Ohio State University Yunyan Zhang, The Ohio State University Katie Seyler, The Ohio State University Karen Newman, The Ohio State University This session shares findings from a research study that explored secondary content teachers' knowledge base and beliefs about second language acquisition as a result of their participation in a nine-month, professional development cohort program for English as a Second Language. Implications for in-service professional development programs are addressed. |
Paper Session: Teacher-Learners Engage in Re-Conceptualization of SLA Knowledge Through Inquiry Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Collegiate Melinda Martin-Beltran, University of Maryland Ali Fuad Selvi, University of Maryland This study explores how teacher educators and teacher-learners can foster praxis. We document teacher-learners' reconceptualization of SLA theory through their own inquiry. It connects personal language learning and teaching experiences, interviews with fellow teachers and learners, observations of practices, and research relevant to teacher-learners' own theories about SLA. |
Paper Session: Successful Linguistics Course for Language Teachers: Underpinnings from Adult Development Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Collegiate Andreas Schramm, Hamline University Language teacher education is required to instill an understanding of language systems. Language teachers have to develop from language users to language analyzers. Their education involves a shift in meaning-making capacity. This presentation demonstrates how three objectives from adult development can inform the design of a successful introductory linguistics course. |
Symposium: Expanding Language Teacher Learning; A Grass Roots Initiative for Change Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Faculty Christina Maynor, Minneapolis Public Schools - South High Gaelle Berg, Minneapolis Public Schools Erica Perry, Minneapolis Public Schools - Edison High Mary Schirber, Minneapolis Public Schools - Edison High Students benefit when World Languages teachers engage in long-term, rich, collaborative professional development. A group of Minneapolis Public Schools World Language teachers co-creating a dynamic array of professional development activities and supports will share stories illustrated by evidence of student results. |
Symposium: Enhancing Horizons: Language Teacher Educator Partnerships across International Contexts Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Nolte Susan Gray , University of Auckland Yvonne Foley , University of Edinburgh Charlotte Franson, Canterbury Christ Church University This symposium is inspired by recent European research focusing on "Inclusive Academic Language Teaching" (IALT) as the way to meet the needs of young people learning English as an additional language. We examine possibilities and constraints in the provision of IALT in in-service education in England, Scotland, and New Zealand. |
Paper Session: Analysis of Differentiated Instruction in an ELL Teacher's Professional Development Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Northrop Grace Chin-Wen Chien, University of Washington This paper aims to analyze how differentiated instruction was employed in a series of workshops for an English Language Learner (ELL) teachers' professional development in a northwest city in the United States. Challenges that instructional coaches faced when giving differentiated instruction to teachers will be discussed and suggestions will be provided. |
Paper Session: Cooperative Language Learning -- They're Afraid of Each Other, Not You! Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Northrop Rocky Tyler, University of South Florida This paper session will explore the theoretical and practical implications of the integration of group development theory into the knowledge base of language teacher education. Topics addressed include K-12 group development models and strategies, willingness to communicate (WTC), and L1 use in support of cooperative/collaborative L2 learning. |
Paper Session: Preparing Language Teachers to Teach Learning Strategies Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Northrop Anna Uhl Chamot, National Capital Language Resource Center This presentation describes a university language teacher education program that incorporates research and methods for teaching learning strategies in its coursework. Teacher candidates over a four-year period completed a self-assessment questionnaire after taking the third course that included language learning strategy instruction; results will be described. |
Paper Session: Non-Native Speaker Teachers of Spanish: Narrative Accounts from In-Service Teachers Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Presidents Amy Fioramonte, University of South Florida Amy Thompson, University of South Florida This study focuses on the perceptions of non-native speaker teachers (NNSTs) of Spanish. Interviews of in-service NNSTs of Spanish reveal insights regarding both advantages and disadvantages of being a NNST of Spanish, which in some ways parallel the research on NNSTs of English. Results and implications are discussed. |
Paper Session: The Power of Stories: Preparing Teachers to Tell Stories Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Presidents Mary Curran, Rutgers University Curtain Helena, University of Wisconsin - Milwaukee (Emerita) Stories provide authentic, meaningful contexts for learning. They are also engaging and powerful tools for novice teachers. The presenters provide an introduction to narrative theory, offer classroom examples of stories and storytelling, and share a model of language teacher education in which novice teachers are prepared to use storytelling in action. |
Paper Session: Narrative as a Mediational Tool in L2 Teacher Professional Development Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Presidents Paula Golombek, University of Florida Karen Johnson, Penn State University Using a Vygotskian sociocultural theoretical approach, this presentation conceptualizes how narrative mediates the cognitive processes of L2 teachers through three distinct yet permeable functions--narrative as externalization,verbalization, and systematic inquiry--and illustrates their interplay by tracing teacher professional development in two teacher-authored narrative inquiries. |
Symposium: Trends and Research in Preparing K-12 Mainstream Teachers of ELLs Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Regents Beth Wassell, Rowan University Marjorie Hall Haley, George Mason University Ann Mabbott, Hamline University Jacqueline McCafferty, Rowan University Kate Reynolds, University of Wisconsin - Eau Claire Joan Shin, University of Maryland - Baltimore County This symposium features 5 diverse approaches for preparing in-service and pre-service mainstream or content area teachers to effectively teach ELL students. Discussion between the presenters and audience will focus on program objectives, audiences, activities and outcomes, and current gaps in research. |
Paper Session: Teachers Teaching Teachers: Collaborating to Improve Kindergarten Student Language Production Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Rotary Nicole Boudreaux, Lafayette Parish School District Michelle Haj-Broussard, McNeese University Lafayette's immersion programs count six to eleven sections at each elementary grade, allowing for strong curriculum and material development and collaborative training. Practices of kindergarten teachers were examined to identify reasons for and eliminate differences in student oral language production. This presentation documents the action research's findings and its impact on teacher training. |
Paper Session: Teachers' Beliefs and Practices about Using the L2 in Instruction Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Rotary Linda Quinn Allen, Iowa State University This paper reports on a study that sought to determine L2 teachers' beliefs and practices about the L2 as the language of instruction. A comparison of teachers' beliefs and practices, the ratio between L2 and L1 use, and purposes for which the teachers used the L1 will be presented. |
Paper Session: Teacher Language Proficiency and Classroom Interaction: Feedback in IRF Sequences Saturday, May 21, 9:15 am, Room: Rotary Rachel Shively, Illinois State University This study investigates the relationship between Spanish teachers' oral language proficiency and their engagement in the third turn in typical Initiation-Response-Feedback (IRF) exchanges with students. Using the case of the feedback turn, the study explores the potential impact that teachers' language proficiency has on communication in the classroom. |