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Guadalupe Valdes: An Intertextual Analysis

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In many schools throughout the country, there are populations of students that have been pushed to the side, with their education thought of as just their specialized teachers’ responsibility. While this situation is changing for some students, such as those with disabilities and students who are lucky enough to have dual language immersion programs in their school, many students who are learning English are still struggling to access the same curriculum that everyone else in the school has a chance to learn. Guadalupe Valdés (2001) looked at the English as a Second Language (ESL) program at a school which she called Garden Middle School. Although Valdés completed this study over fifteen years ago, the experience that her focal students had …show more content…

Outside of the school, she worked hard to gain access to English. Her mother spoke some English, and her step-father was fluent in English. She also accessed English through her church’s youth group (Valdés, 2001, p. 95). These things gave her an advantage with interpersonal communication skills, but the school did not offer her enough access to academic language to become successful. During the school day, she had very little access to native English speakers that would have offered her models of English. This meant that all of her models for the language came from outside a school using nonacademic language. She was willing to work hard toward learning but was not given the opportunity to apply that work ethic towards something …show more content…

74). Without having some continued support that teaches the students the types of skills they will need in a mainstream classroom, it is unreasonable to expect them to be highly successful in these settings. Gibbons (2015) also explains that many people feel explicitly teaching things such as grammar and social rules can help reduce some of the social inequalities that can result from speaking a language other than English at home (p. 108). By being more explicit, students will be able to achieve educational success. There were a number of programmatic issues with how ELLs were educated at Garden Middle School. That being said, changing the program is not always possible for an individual teacher up against a school district that is unwilling to be flexible. However, with the pedagogical changes I have outlined here, even a bad program structure can be as successful as possible. Good teachers in a bad program using good techniques can bring success for their students despite the challenges that the program might

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