Our philosophy

NHA believes all teachers are teachers of EL students and we are committed to ensuring that EL students have access to high-quality education and instruction. We believe that student learning is first and foremost an adult responsibilty. If a student has not mastered the material we have taught them, then we must adjust our instructional strategies.



Friday, April 26, 2013

Calling all Chatty Cathy's

Now if you haven't seen these handy dandy phones in use you are missing out!
These are great tools for students to practice speaking.

Let me demonstrate for you...

Get it? :)
You can speak at a whisper and have the phone magnify your voice right back up to your ear. I've seen these work well in classrooms when the teacher asks the students to revise and review their writing.

Lucky you, I have 4 of these ready to send off to the winner of this week's challenge.

In order to be considered for this amazing prize you have to email me an example of a lesson or activity that you did this year that went well.

I will randomly draw a winner and notify you. Plus I'll have a lot of great tips to share :)
Thanks for playing!

Thursday, April 18, 2013

Get Excited about Language!

I had the pleaseure to visit our schools in Ohio this past week and picked up some great ideas to share with you!

What better way to engage a student and get them excited to play with words than to allow them access to your materials! Pathway Charter Academy makes it hard not to pick something out and take it home to play with!
Everything displayed was asking to be picked. From word games, to dictionaries and books.
A dictionary never looks as engaging when hiding away in a bookshelf.

Just like a birthday gift, these shiny bags are sent home containing stories and materials to be used and returned. From the schools experience it seemed the kids loved showing off their Book Bag of goodies.

So get your things off the shelves! Display them and encourage students to bring them home. And hopefully a little incentive will bring those materials back to you :)

Thursday, April 4, 2013

Novel Study

For many of us we have rounded the ELL testing corner. Breathe a little sigh of relief.
So what is next for your ELL students?

I want to advocate for one of my all-time favorite things to do with any level any grade students; the novel study.

Here's why I love them:
  1. student groups can pick/choose based on interest
  2. we can immerse ourselves into the book (learn the geography and time frame of the book)
  3. we can use a study guide, many of which are premade for us at http://store.learninglinks.com/novel-ties.html my favorite Novel Ties companions
  4. we can be self-paced
Here's how I begin a novel study:
  1. find 3-4 books that I think are interesting and engaging for my students (preferably I have pre-read them- with one noteable exception: I was reading a Boy in teh Girls bathroom to my 7th graders and could not stop laughing...it was a little embarrassing)
  2. demonstrate to my small group how I preview books (look at cover, back of book blurb, first page)
  3. have the group sit in a circle each beginning with one book in their hands
  4. spend 2-3 minutes previewing the book
  5. students write down a yes/no/thoughts about the preview on their notes
  6. students pass the book along and preview the next (and so on)
  7. students vote for which book we read
  8. after the book is selected I gather a group set (maybe I have to visit the local libraries as well to get copies for each student)
  9. I pace out the book with the amount of time I have (maybe 2-3 weeks)
  10. I buy/borrow/create a novel study guide to go along with the book
  11. the first lesson is always geography and time- get a map out, locate our story and discuss the contemporary events (if applicable)
  12. get reading! *the books always stay with me-avoiding the 'lost book' issue
Here are some titles I have used in the past and LOVED!