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Books > Social sciences > Education > Teaching of specific groups > Teaching of ethnic minorities
Hispanic and Latino students now represent the largest ethnic group
educated in the United States public school system. That means the
ability to successfully educate Hispanic and Latino students, from
pre-kindergarten to graduate school, is now of primary importance
to the future of the United States. Under this critical context,
Jaime Castellano's Educating Hispanic and Latino Students: Opening
the Doors to Hope, Promise, and Possibility arrives at the perfect
moment to help educators better understand the Hispanic and Latino
student demographic, and more importantly, uncover the strategies
and implementation practices to better educate this burgeoning
population. Topics covered include: The influence of poverty on the
education of Hispanic/Latino students The challenge of identity
when educating Hispanic/Latino students Educating the "whole child"
and what this means for Hispanic/Latino students Engaging America's
Hispanic/Latino parents and families Supporting Hispanic/Latino
students through curriculum, instruction, and assessment By
recognizing that Hispanic and Latino students are vital linguistic,
economic, and social resources to our society, Castellano's
Hispanic and Latino Students: Opening the Doors to Hope, Promise,
and Possibility is rooted in the firm belief that educational
equity, access, and higher expectations should be the driving force
to provide Hispanic and Latino students a quality education that
prepares them for a successful and meaningful future.
Teaching young learners can be a huge amount of fun. As teachers we
can introduce all sorts of games, projects and variations on
traditional exercises. All this needs careful structuring if the
resulting activity is to be manageable and, more importantly, if it
is going to help students learn and practise words and sentences in
English. In Structuring Fun for Young Learners you'll learn about
the principles behind that structure with a roller coaster ride of
colourful ideas, examples and anecdotes as their vehicle. There are
over three hundred diagrams and photographs to help explain exactly
how the described activities work and give you the flavor of ELT
classes at primary level. When fun in the classroom is properly
structured, everyone is a winner. Your students will remember those
activities for years and you will still be able to cover your
course content without compromising on classroom management. In
order for all this to happen, important questions such as: 'How do
children behave in classrooms?' 'Why do they want to do some tasks
and refuse to do others?' 'What is learning anyway and how can we
tie our target words and sentences to the activities we do?' have
to be asked. These fundamentals are covered in the first five
chapters of the book. The second part of the book explores
movement, text, space, novelty objects, teacher-student dialogue,
personalisation, clips, images, support for learners, use of
coursebooks and your own professional development as a young
learner teacher. So, whether you are a new teacher, a seasoned
veteran or teacher trainer with young learners classes this is the
book for you.
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Speed
(Paperback)
Speak Too Day
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R322
Discovery Miles 3 220
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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Cohan, Honigsfeld, and Dove bring together current research,
authentic examples of best practices, and voices from the field to
champion the power of purposeful collaboration and provide
educators with resources that will empower them to support English
learners (ELs) and their families. Guided by four core principles
(common purpose, shared mindset, diverse team membership,
supportive environment), the authors explain how to meet the
challenges of collaborating with ELs and help all
stakeholders-administrators, teachers, students, parents, community
leaders-develop new and effective ways of working together for the
success of each learner.
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