Blog post # 2
My strategy for bridging the academic language/processing ability gap for my focal
student was to introduce them to “journalism science” in the form of doing a current
event for extra credit. As described by Doug Buehl (2017) in Developing Readers
in the Academic Discipline, “Journalism science alerts us to a new study, for
example, and reports in a general fashion on the findings and possible implications
(p. 101).” My cooperating teacher has long encouraged students to do mini activities
for extra credit on their own time but had not laid out any specifics for what students
could do, or how many points they would receive for extra credit. The general
guidelines were to run your idea by one of us to see if it sounded good. We have had
a few posters turned in with food webs, and the scientific method, but enthusiasm for
“research something and make something” has dwindled.
I have introduced the Science Current Event Assignment. The steps follow:
1) Read a current event - provide the link to the webpage, or take a photo of the article.
The assignment will not be accepted without this step.
- What is the main point of the article? Why did you choose it? How is this scientific? (2 points)
- How/why was the discovery made? (1 point)
- What were the steps or procedures for the experiment(s)? (1 point)
- What are the conclusions of the study and future steps to implement this new research?
(1 point)
By doing current events on scientific discoveries related to the topics we have
already covered in class, students are building on what they already know. This
is an effective way for students to broaden their disciplinary knowledge, and to
read science articles on topics that appeal to them. This type of assignment also
begins to address the gaps in content knowledge that students possess, and
educators cannot bridge these gaps with a one size fits all model. Buehl states,
“Instead, our instruction needs to seek a middle ground, a teachable terrain
between the extremes of academic knowledge and discourse, which is a
considerable distance from many of our students, and student-centered approaches
that honor everyday informal knowledge, which may be a considerable distance
from our standards and curriculum (p 91).” Indeed, this model assignment allows
students to build their own prior existing knowledge, develop text-to-text
understandings, and foster their disciplinary literacy in Science.
This is particularly effective for emergent bilingual students to be mentored into
reading scientific studies. I chose to focus on one emergent bilingual student in
my class and asked him to model the assignment for me during lunch, as an
opportunity for him to earn some extra credit. I sat down with him and asked him
to read along with me about an article on how chocolate is made. The article was
in a young adult National Geographic magazine and explains how the chocolate
begins as a cocoa bean and is processed into a chocolate bar over several steps.
Additionally, I have this particular copy of the magazine in English and Spanish,
and so we were able to do a contrastive analysis between the two languages to
further the student’s understanding of the steps. He wrote a short summary, and
although not all of the answers to the extra credit assignment were able to be
answered for this model, I do believe he gained a deeper understanding of the
topic. He learned about the fermentation of the cocoa beans, which he had not
known about before. We then ate some M&Ms to celebrate! One page of the article
is below.
Having the student do the reading, and then answer the comprehension questions
in a short writing assignment is self-directed, and allows for students to select what
they research. Since opening this assignment up to the whole class, I have had a few
students express interest in completing a current event for extra credit, and we will
see if the students take advantage of this opportunity.
One drawback of this particular strategy is that many students do not have access to
computers or the internet at home. I did not consider this issue of equity in designing
the assignment, however, I do provide time at lunch once a week where students
could come in and use our Chromebooks to complete this type of activity.
- Do you think there is an equity issue for this type of assignment?
- Should it be part of the students’ regular curriculum or do you think the extra credit,year-round assignment is better?
- How would you improve upon this model in regards to “teaching” students to relateto scientific discipline-rich literature?