Entry 4: Reflection

This course has enlightened me on how ESL students learn English and other content areas. Before this course, I did not know how many factors affected the language learning process. I thought learning a language was mostly rote memorization. This course taught me that teachers need to take into consideration internal and external factors of each student as they are learning language. Additionally, the teacher needs to take into consideration macro level ideas, such as crosslinguistic influences and foreign language aptitudes.

At first, I did not think this class would help me as much when I become a teacher because I have no intentions on becoming an ESL or bilingual teacher, however, my views on this have changed. Since I have begun student teaching I have learned that this content should be taken into consideration by all content teachers because a student may be in an inclusive classroom despite learning English as a second language. As a future teacher, I  bring the learning strategies I have learned this semester into the classroom. I will constantly remember that my students are “are highly motivated students who also enjoy high-quality instructional experiences” (Ortiz, 2013, p. 28). As an example, my cooperating teacher is in a general classroom but has a few ESL students. She told me she creates all of her anchor charts with intention, utilizing all of her prior knowledge from being an ESL teacher. In the future, I would like to work with as much intention as her to ensure the success for all my students.

Looking back, I wish the class would have gone into greater depth on how teachers can specifically affect the motivation of their students and less in depth on the correlation between age and second language acquisition. I wrote my research paper on  how teachers can affect student motivation and found it to be quite interesting. I believe it would be beneficial for all aspiring teachers to know how their actions and words in the classroom can have an impact on their students learning English. Juxtaposed, I believe the relatedness between age and acquiring a second language could be lessened. It may be because I remembered a lot of this information from previous classes, but in psychology and educational psychology, this material was already mentioned. Specifically, I remember learning about critical learning periods, which is the “hypothesis that there is a specific period of time early in life when the brain exhibits a special propensity to attend to certain experiences in the environment” (Ortiz, 2013, p. 13).


A large majority of the learning I did this semester was through my VBlog. Making the videos and posts made me more involved in my learning. While it may have been challenging to find people to interview who fit the description sometimes, it was rewarding afterwards because I was able to see what I have learned from my text and how it has affected people as they have learned English as a second language or taught ESL students. Additionally, one of my favorite parts of the VBlog was being able to see other VBlogs as well because my peers were able to interview people who were different from who I was able to interview.  Everyone had such diversity in their choices and it allowed me to see a lot of different aspects of what we had learned over the semester manifesting in individuals differently.  

Comments

  1. Hi Chelsea! Just like you, I don’t plan on being an ESL or bilingual teacher but I do think that it is important to know the topics discussed throughout this course because we might have ESL students in our classrooms and we must know how to adjust our lessons and use strategies that will help all of our students. In addition to motivation, I also think that we should try to help our students create positive attitudes towards their L2s. According to Ortega (2013), “positive attitudes towards the learning context as well as the L2 community and culture …. and current satisfaction with teachers and instruction can boost motivation considerably” (p 190). As teachers, we can help motivate L2 learners and help them create those positive attitudes that will help them be more successful with their L2.

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    1. Hi Gabriela,

      You bring up an excellent point! Even if we are not ESL or Bilingual teachers, we will still have students who are learning English as a second language in our classroom. Teachers serve a pivotal role in their ability to increase a child’s motivation towards developing a second language. Students must have a positive attitude towards the second language, “such attitudes are shaped by the frequency and quality of past L2 contact but they also help shape willingness to seek and engage in future L2 contact” (Ortega, 2013, p. 204). Ortega is explaining that if we want students to continue to develop their second language, they must have constant, high-quality instructional experiences.

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  2. Hi Chelsea! It is interesting to see what this course has to offer and the growth of applying it to our future classrooms. Just like you and Gabriela, I had no intentions of becoming a specialist for language, but I am very intrigued by the thought of learning a few languages to connect with my students. In addition, it helps a lot when we have a positive mentor who can provide constructive feedback, as well as view the perspectives of ELL specialists during the video interviews. Ortega mentions although motivation nurtures more success for L2 learning, experiencing L2 learning success also boosts motivation to even higher levels (Ortega, 2013, p. 189). Therefore, both students and teachers should work collaboratively to create those real-life connections to language learning.

    Ortega, L. Understanding second language acquisition. New York: Routledge, 2009.

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    1. Hi Michelle,

      I love to see that you already have a passion to form connections with your students by learning additional languages. By forming these connections, you will better be able to teach your students, as we have learned in our other teacher courses. It’s also worth noting that this makes you slightly intrinsically motivated, but also slightly extrinsically motivated. Intrinsic motivation, which is motivation that is “self-initiated by choice and largely sustained by inherent enjoyment in the activity” (Ortega, 2013, p. 186), is seen by your choice to learn more languages because you have a passion related to them. However, some of your motivation is extrinsic, which is defined as “ structured by a means–end, pragmatic–instrumental causation that is imposed from the outside” (Ortega, 2013, p. 176), because you are also highly motivated by the end goal of forming better connections with your students.

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  3. Hi Chelsea! Before this class I was also under the impression that learning a language was basic memorization. At least for me, this misconception comes from mandatorily having to learning a second language in high school. In my experience learning a second language consisted of trying to imitate how the teacher pronounced each word. I think I can speak for all teachers when I say that we want our students to be invested in their learning. A great way to keep supporting students’ desire to learn is to have students use their L2, in meaningful ways just as Ortega mentions (2013, p. 62). Instead of memorizing random words, like I had to do in high school.

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    1. Hi Karen,

      I also remember learning a second language in high school. It was extremely boring and consisted of only memorization. As you mentioned, it is better for students to have a desire to learn instead of having them use rote memorization. However, I am torn on whether this is because we were learning a second language before this research had been shared with our teacher, or if it’s because we were learning a second language after our sensitive periods since “post-pubertal learners, however, are not likely to perform in the native speaker range (Ortega, 2013, p. 29).

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