Wednesday, December 14, 2016

ELL Case Study & SOLOM

Erika Garcia
EDLI 635
Fall 2016
Dr. Hsu

ELL Case Study

            My student, who I will refer to as Ny, is in the 6th grade at the Academy Charter School in Hempstead. They have grade K-6 with 482 students, a teacher ratio of 16:1 that is higher than the average NY classroom of 14:1. The school has a 100% minority enrollment that is more than the state average of 54%. The k-4th graders are in one building and 5th-9th graders are in another building. Each grade shares floor during bell periods, where they attended classes on a daily bases. Student’s classes are ELA writing and reading, ELL guided, two periods of Math, science, technology, gym and social studies. I observed Ny during Math and both his ELA reading and guided reading class. The school does not have any struggling bilingual 6th graders. The first student that they suggest for me to observe that was bilingual was in high-level classes. There resource room did not have any bilingual students. Ny was then suggested to me because he is a student who has difficult time in many areas. No services have been given to Ny but I think he needs speech and he struggles with reading. So Ny being placed in the resource room is a great idea.
            Ny is 12 years old and has a younger brother in 5th grade. He is currently homeless and jumps from house to house with his brother and mom. He doesn’t show this in his character at all. He carries a touch attitude and can be caring at times. You can tell when he isn’t having a good day based on his attitude in class, his body language and smart remarks he makes. He struggles reading out loud, comprehension and when writing his grammar is not good at all. His mom tries the best she can with her sons and tries to help them academically. Although it is a challenge I believe he tries. When I did the running record, the ELA teacher Ms.Sturges asked him to come over to work with me and he kindly said of course. He was very polite while speaking to me and every day since developed a great rapport while he sees me.
            Overall his grades are below average, he is absent a lot because of his living situations and does poorly on his exams. After school is available but he barley attends, which is why the extra help during the day would be great for him. Based off his Interm (an exam they do at the school to record data) he scores way below average in ELA and Math overall. He is at a 3rd grade reading level. Along with this Ny does not have a clear vocabulary, fluency or comprehension of while speaking or listening? When speaking Ny can sound intelligible at times and his words sound cluttered, because of his speech problem. Instead of using proper English he speaks a lot of slang and doesn’t take things very seriously. When Ny writes it’s hard to understand because he does not have good penmanship and does not know how to express himself. Students were given an assignment to create a book report out of a manila folder. The students had to draw a cover illustrate the inside and write about the book. Ny did not complete this assignment because he did not want to write. He only drew a cover and that’s it. When it came to his grade he questioned it and the teacher said you could finish to get a higher grade. He took it back but not sure if it was finished. Children now a day can be mean and made fun of his low grade with it being an easy assignment. I find this is the reason why he went back to the teacher to address the reason.
            During guided reading the teacher has students read out loud and I find that he enjoys doing this for whatever reason. Each day I observed him during guided reading he raised his hand to read. He would read two pages out the book “Bud not Buddy”. After the first page is read the teacher stops and goes over what has happened. He usually isn’t able to comprehend what he just read until she asks a question or gives him a hint. I find that he concentrates more on reading and pronouncing his words correctly that he isn’t paying much attention to what is being said in the story. However when someone else reads and he is paying attention at times he is able to answer questions on the story and if it is one he is interested in.
            Ms. Sturges the ELA teacher gives her students reading logs to complete for each week. They must have their parents sign it and write 5-7 sentences about what they read with proper grammar, pronunciation, spelling, capitalization etc. I saw several of Ny reading logs and they are not done for his grade level. He writes at least two sentences, grammar, sentence structure, meaning and so forth is not good at all. As well with his situation his mom doesn’t sign many of them or they do not get returned so I highly doubt he reads on a daily basis. Ms. Sturges knows this so she always finds time to have them read alone and complete the reading log in school where she can help him.
            Observing and working with Ny was difficult and sad to see, even prior to me knowing his background information. I feel that more attention is needed and services should be put into place. I like the fact that he tries but it takes the right educator to push students like this in a low socioeconomic neighborhood to do better. Unlike the math class where he is not getting pushed he doesn’t try. I see where help is needed and how to help; he isn’t ashamed on getting correct and being taught the correct way to do things.

Reflection
Once I was done observing Ny’s comprehension, writing, grammar and fluency he falls under the 6th grade level. This did not surprise me because of the setting he is in and the extra help he is not receiving. I believe that with a small setting or even a one to one at times Ny would benefit more, focus and begin to push himself to do better.
On Ny’s SOLOM he scored a 3 when it came to comprehension, fluency and vocabulary meaning that he scored at a intermediate high level for reading and listening according to the ELL. When it came to his grammar he scored a 2 being said that Ny doesn’t have a large vocabulary and sticks to the basics while comprehending, writing or speaking. According to the ELL he falls on a beginning high-level writing.
Ny’s SOLOM was based off his guided reading assignments, reading log assignment and guided reading book assignment in class. When it came to the reading and listening for each assignment he was able to comprehend most details after the teacher when over what was read. He was also able to answer some questions that stood out. For deeper meanings he would say he wouldn’t know. He always tried his hardest and never gives up as I mentioned. I also think the teacher has a lot to do with this because she has a awesome reward system in her classroom. For every question they answer right they either get a candy, tickets they can hand it or five checks that equal a good call home to mom. This pushes each and every student in her class to do better and push for the rewards. Being that the teacher is in class alone she cannot divide all her attention to certain students, so frequent guided reading groups a week can help for Ny’s attention and help with comprehension. She has see how he takes notes and recalls information in a smaller setting.
Although when it comes to Ny’s handwriting this can take several time and patience during the week. His writing looks like he belongs in 3rd grade, it is below his grade level. He does not have the best spelling, grammar, vocabulary, structure and penmanship. I think having him write on a daily basis about topics he enjoys can help. As well writing on paper with lines and rewriting his stories as much as he can. Practicing larger vocabulary from the guided reading book, as to finding the definition using the word during that week in class and while writing using those vocabulary words. This will give Ny a better implementation of communicating and using larger words while communicating.

Most importantly throughout my observation I learned that you have to have patience with each students and find a common ground to attend to the entire class. Having a reward system that pushes the students to do better and motivate them is great. As well taking time to reach out to each student and learning how to work with individual needs in a group setting, like calling on them to read aloud. Yes being an educator is a lot of work but even pushing for services and saving students work can come a long way to get assistance for the child and to not wait late.


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