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Welcoming Linguistic Diversity in Early Childhood Classrooms

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When young English language learners speak a variety of home languages, welcoming them into the classroom can be very challenging for teachers and English-speaking pupils. This book, written by tea...
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  • 06 June 2011
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Teachers in multilingual classrooms have been working for some years to improve their repertoire of ways to address the needs of very young children who enter school not speaking the language of instruction. The work of 22 seasoned teachers and administrators in international schools all over the world, this book contains a wealth of information for classroom teachers, enabling them to face a new school year with confidence, and for administrators to understand more clearly what is involved in the teaching of young children who do not yet understand the school’s language. Written by teachers well experienced in addressing the needs of this young and vulnerable group, this book will come as a boon to new teachers presented with a multilingual classroom for the first time.
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Price: $39.95
Pages: 256
Publisher: Multilingual Matters
Imprint: Multilingual Matters
Series: Parents' and Teachers' Guides
Publication Date: 06 June 2011
Trim Size: 8.85 X 6.70 in
ISBN: 9781847693464
Format: Paperback
BISACs: EDUCATION / Professional Development, Teacher training, EDUCATION / Teaching / General, EDUCATION / Teacher Training & Certification, Teaching skills and techniques
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Packed with practical and powerful strategies for educators serving diverse schools, this book makes a strong case for greatly varied, original, creative, and instructionally effective uses of students’ mother tongues as an integral component of the curriculum of English-medium international schools. While presenting the research rationale, the authors from around the world have enlivened their chapters with rich, delightful, and humorous descriptions of real life in early childhood classrooms full of diverse learners from multiple language backgrounds. The book includes compelling messages and should be required reading for all teachers, administrators, and parents of this globally interconnected world of the 21st century.

Edna Murphy, after a short career as a teacher, became head of primary schools first in London and then Brussels. She founded and edited for 22 years the International Schools Journal, a semi-annual publication now in its 30th year. She later conceived of, edited and contributed to a book entitled ESL: A Handbook for Teachers and Administrators in International Schools. She also served for many years on the Board of the European Council of International Schools. In this capacity and well into her retirement she headed accreditation teams to schools in Europe, Asia and Africa, the primary school being her particular interest.

SECTION ONE
CHAPTER 1 Eithne Gallagher: Young Children Have Stories to Share
CHAPTER 2 Denise Sullivan: Using Multilingual Strategies in Monolingual Early Childhood Classrooms
CHAPTER 3 Patricia Parker: A Year with Five Beginners: Excerpts from the Journal of a First Grade Teacher
CHAPTER 4 Carol Breedlove: Developing the Basic English Language Skills of Young Children in a Linguistically Diverse Classroom
CHAPTER 5 Nancy Stauft: An International School Celebrates its Diversity
CHAPTER 6 Kalei Brumsickle: An Amazing Journey: Making English Language Learners Successful
CHAPTER 7 Anita Hayim-Bamberger: The Importance of Maintaining Mother Tongue and Culture in the Classroom
SECTION TWO
CHAPTER 8 Maulfry Worthington: Young Mathematicians: Global Learners
CHAPTER 9 Frances Bekhechi: Meeting the Needs of Young Second Language Learners who Struggle
CHAPTER 10 Dylan Yamada-Rice: The Benefits of Sign Language in the International Preschool Curriculum
CHAPTER 11 Debra Rader: Addressing Transition Issues with English Language Learners in the Early Childhood Years
CHAPTER 12 Steven Luscomb: Music: The Universal Language
CHAPTER 13 Ernestina Meloni: Italiano Si! Si! Teaching Italian through PE
CHAPTER 14 Jeffrey Brewster: The Role of the Library in Supporting Young Language Learners and their Families.
CHAPTER 15 Angela Hollington: Breaking the Silence: One School’s Response to a Non-Communicative Class
CHAPTER 16 Colleen MacDonell: Library Programming for Young English Language Learners
SECTION THREE
CHAPTER 17 Coreen Sears: Listening to Parents: Acknowledging the Range of Linguistic and Cultural Experiences in an Early Childhood Classroom
CHAPTER 18 Jane Scott: Writing and Implementing a Language Policy in the Primary Section of a Linguistically Diverse School
CHAPTER 19 Sally Flanagan and Sarah Ford: Maintaining Mother Tongue and Home Culture in a Child’s School Experience
CHAPTER 20 Elaine Whelen: Joining the Mother Tongue Conversation from an Administrator’s Perspective
CHAPTER 21 Laura Bridgestock: Native Languages and the IB
CHAPTER 22 Emily Munyoki: Sometimes if you Ask a Silly Question you get a Serious Answer or How I Learned Five Languages