
Rewiring Our Teaching
By Mac & Marie

Rewiring Our TeachingMar 13, 2019

Ep. 4 Reflecting on Lesson Planning as teachers of ELLs/MLLs
In this first episode for the 2021-22 school year, we reflect on how we have changed in our approach to planning units and lessons, from being teachers who were held to strict pacing guides or rigid units, to teachers who use a more student-centered, dynamic approach. Why do some approaches lend themselves to the "factory model" and how can planning be more responsive and center the student?

Ep. 3: Annotations as Entry Points with MLL/ELLs
In this episode, Katie and I discuss how annotations serve as entry points for students as they engage with texts in English, and as key data points for us in navigating which scaffolds or strategies best support a student. In this way, we can start with student interest, then move from there! If you work with newcomers or "beginner" ELL/ENL/emergent bilingual students, this is a concrete tool you can use to support both their language learning, comprehension of texts and learner agency.

Ep 2: Pushing the limits in Reading with multilingual learners
We refer to this varied group of students as English Language Learners (ELLs) since it is still the most common term, but other terms are multilingual learners, emergent bilinguals and emergent multilinguals. Regardless of the term, these students are too often defined but what they don't yet know (English), rather than what they do and Katie describes here what it was like to lead her class by discovering and building on the latter.

Season 2, Ep. 1: Let's hear from the students
In this podcast, you will hear from two former students of mine who just graduated in June. I ask them to reflect on learning English as a second language as teenagers who arrived in the US in ninth grade. In particular, we focus on how they came to identify themselves as writers, or as comfortable and independent writing in English. A transcript will be up on our blog at www.macandmarie.org
(I apologize for the sound quality)

Part 1: Student Driven literacy formats

We are here!
