Educating Children for Bilingual, Informed, & Active World Citizenship
By Marcy Zachmeier-Ruh, Director of Curriculum and Mary-Fred Bausman-Watkins, Director of Operations
The Twin Cities German Immersion School (TCGIS) is a charter elementary school that values high academic achievement and engages each individual child through an enriched second language curriculum taught in German. With the support of parents, our school creates a community that nurtures a child’s natural curiosity and fosters international awareness. |
The Twin Cities German Immersion School (TCGIS) is a charter elementary school that values high academic achievement and engages each individual child through an enriched second language curriculum taught in German. With the support of parents, our school creates a community that nurtures a child’s natural curiosity and fosters international awareness.
Program Features
Instruction at TCGIS includes math, German language arts (reading,
writing, spelling, phonics, literature), science, social studies,
character development and physical education on a daily basis,
with world cultures integrated throughout the curriculum.
All children have rotating weekly opportunities to experience
vocal & instrumental music, visual arts, drama, and choreographed
movement. At four different points during the year, weeklong
blocks of special cultural projects are offered.
For children who are not yet reading, initial literacy occurs
in German. Formal reading instruction in German is introduced
in first grade, and English Language Arts will be added in
third grade. Instruction in English and German will be clearly
separated by language. By middle school, instruction in English
will be expanded into additional subject areas, while German
will be maintained for the majority of the day. The addition
of a third language is planned for the middle school level
as well.
Key instructional strategies
TCGIS implements best practices for elementary students and
methodologies most appropriate to our unique instructional
model. The daily routine includes morning meeting with guided
social interaction and introduction of learning themes, direct
instruction with the whole class, small-group instruction,
and academic choice time. Small-group instruction provides
peer interaction for thematic work with teacher supervision,
as well as ability grouping in math and language arts. Differentiated
instruction enables those students who need more hands-on
guidance to practice basic skills, while those who have already
mastered the current concepts can work on more challenging
activities at a higher cognitive level. Native German-speaking
interns, as well as parent and community volunteers, are used
extensively to enable small-group learning.
TCGIS has a dual academic focus: a thorough understanding
of basic concepts and mastery of a specified body of knowledge
within each subject area. This combined approach enables children
to apply what they have learned in real-life situations. TCGIS
is committed to teaching children to be communicative in German
in social contexts as well as in academic ones. The development
of a respectful, caring community in which all children feel
valued and in which making mistakes is an accepted part of
the learning process is a primary goal.
Language development is fostered through our thematically
integrated curriculum. Our textbook series from Germany presents
basic concepts in science, health, social studies, and language
arts through coordinated thematic units. This means that vocabulary
introduced in one subject is further reinforced in others,
decreasing the bulk of words students need to understand and
increasing the time spent practicing the new language. Teacher-generated
stories incorporating new vocabulary also accompany each unit,
giving children an opportunity to further internalize the
language through retelling of the stories and corresponding
role-play activities.
Instruction in all subject areas occurs entirely in German,
and children are encouraged to use German as much as possible.
English-language responses from children are acknowledged,
but teachers redirect the conversation with a German response.
In the early months, English is used with children on an individual
basis to clarify health or safety issues, but by January of
first grade, the expectation is that all children will speak
only in German.
Unique curriculum components
As a charter school, TCGIS has the unique opportunity of building
an immersion program from the ground up. Four major research-based
concepts have been integrated to form the backbone of our
international, standards-based curriculum:
Understanding by Design: a curriculum design framework using
thought-provoking questions as guideposts for designing instruction
Responsive Classroom: a philosophy of teaching and learning
that fosters safe, challenging, and joyful classrooms by offering
a diversity of learning experiences in which active, informed
participation is valued and each child feels important
Thematic Units: languages taught in meaningful context as
an interdisciplinary subject and story-form framework provides
a natural setting for students to use their new language
Total Physical Response/Storytelling: comprehension is demonstrated
by physically responding to commands and spontaneously creating
stories to retell.
Fine arts are fully integrated with the themes and content
of the core instructional program. Our music curriculum is
based on internationally recognized philosophies (Orff Schulwerk
and Kodály, see sidebar on p. 13) emphasizing early
exposure to music theory and personal creativity through song,
instruments, and dance. In visual arts instruction, children
are exposed to a wide range of artistic media and international
artists, with many opportunities to develop creativity through
individual choices within each theme.
Culture is taught both directly and indirectly at TCGIS. Core
curriculum is presented primarily through authentic German
textbooks and materials, and daily interaction with native
speakers. Cultural celebrations and practices of many different
countries are explored throughout the year, with special emphasis
on those that are celebrated by members of our school community.
Authentic German cultural items are displayed throughout the
school, and classrooms provide a rich learning environment.
Students and their families are encouraged to participate
in culturally authentic events and festivals organized by
the TCGIS and our sponsoring organization, the Germanic-American
Institute (GAI).
Before- and after-school care in a German-speaking environment,
including additional half-day care for kindergartners, is
also available within our school building on a fee basis through
the GAI. The GAI also founded the Kinderstube German Immersion
Preschool, which is currently operating at two sites and attracting
an ever-growing clientele, many of whom will attend TCGIS
in future years.
Assessment practices
Initial testing establishes baselines for reading, math, and
German proficiency when children enter TCGIS. Academic progress
is monitored on a daily basis at the classroom level and at
the end of every unit for each grade level, and portfolio
assessment includes ongoing selections of student work and
teacher narratives. TCGIS will participate in all required
state testing, and adheres to national No Child Left Behind
guidelines. Language assessments will also be administered
to evaluate proficiency development in German. For example,
at program entry students will take the Early Language Listening
and Oral Proficiency Assessment (ELLOPA) developed by the
Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL), and in the primary grades
CAL’s Student Oral Proficiency Assessment (SOPA). In
the upper elementary grades, Kompetenz in Deutsch (KiD), a
language assessment tool published by Österreichisches
Sprachdiplom Deutsch (ÖSD) in Austria will be given.
Parent and community involvement
Without parent and community involvement, TCGIS would not
exist. Our sponsor, the Germanic-American Institute, is a
local non-profit organization with over 1,450 members dedicated
to the promotion and enjoyment of Germanic culture and language.
Parents and community members serve on our board of directors,
volunteer in the classroom, raise money for the school and
have been a driving force behind the founding of TCGIS.
Media resources
TCGIS is fortunate to have already accumulated a large collection
of German language books. We are also the recipients of a
generous Walton Family Foundation grant. A major portion of
the grant is dedicated to expanding our library collection
and providing audio recordings and summary translations of
books so non-German-speaking parents can enjoy the stories
along with their children. A collection of German language
videos and DVDs is another planned component that has already
been partially realized.
challenges & areas for growth
TCGIS is dedicated to outreach to diverse communities. All
children benefit from being challenged by an interesting and
stimulating curriculum, and the advantages of bilingualism
should not be confined to upper middle-class students. Children
from lower income families are most in need of an enriched
education, and children who enter school with a deficit in
language are those who are most in need of an enriched language
curriculum.
TCGIS seeks to become a resource to parents by offering educational
opportunities in German language and culture, child development,
and supporting second language instruction. This is especially
important for parents who are not proficient German speakers.
As the school matures, we hope to provide more opportunities
for family immersion in Germanic culture, participation in
local cultural events, and relationship building with schools
and families in Germany.
program strengths & innovation
A curriculum framework has been developed for TCGIS that clearly
identifies the learning standards in all subject areas for
both Minnesota and the German state of Baden-Württemberg,
systematically embeds them into the curriculum, and articulates
them across grade levels. All subject areas at TCGIS are integrated
into cross-curricular themes to further reinforce basic concepts,
and a multi-sensory approach implementing project-based experiences
and hands-on learning activities accommodates all learning
styles. Through fine arts instruction, concepts learned in
the classroom are further reinforced, and children have the
opportunity to explore academic themes more creatively and
use language in a very holistic manner.
Staff development and support are essential to TCGIS’s
success. Teachers receive extensive training in backwards
curriculum design, core principles of immersion education,
Responsive Classroom philosophy, TPR/TPRS, and integration
of German language skills into thematic units. All teachers
receive a weekly block of joint planning time (in addition
to regular prep time), under the guidance of the curriculum
director, during which curricular innovations, instructional
techniques, and cultural and linguistic issues are discussed.