Academic writing often confines students to a rigid approach that stifles creativity. This session introduces an innovative approach using stories from The Players' Tribune blog as mentor texts. By fostering personal voice and multimedia expression, students learn to challenge academic norms. Participants will explore strategies for encouraging 'rule-breaking' within academic contexts, empowering students to find their unique voices and build community through multimedia and digital literacy.
Dr. Denise Maduli-Williams is a Professor of English and ELAC (English Language Acquisition) and the Online Accessibility Mentor at San Diego Miramar College, teaching online, hybrid, and in-person. With over two decades of experience, her teaching journey spans diverse settings... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 8:45am - 9:15am PST
KH B2007
Generation Z students, shaped by technology and pandemic online classes, find reading challenging due to shorter attention spans and a preference for visual and oral information. Digital natives who are accustomed to constant digital exposure quickly embrace technology but find traditional reading tedious. Educators struggle to teach reading amidst online learning transitions. To aid comprehension, teachers should employ include visual aids, structured sentences, and active learning. Proficiency in reading is essential for academic success and standardized exams. This presentation promotes diverse teaching approaches to improve Generation Z's reading abilities, vital for their academic and professional futures.
This practice-oriented session presents evidence-based pedagogical strategies to promote language development of adolescent multilingual students for academic writing. The strategies and activities are contextualized within close reading of a complex text and a source-based analytical writing and are tied to a cognitive strategies readers and writers access for meaning making.
EL student writers come to believe writing (especially in the target language) to be demonstration of mechanics. As EL student writers shift from noncredit ESL (or secondary ELD) to college classes for credit, transitioning the purpose of writing from demonstration of language comprehension to authentic communication is often under-considered and disadvantages transitioning EL student writers. This lightning talk will review a writing task which focuses on this shift to a communicative writing focus via centering student experience (schema) and the civic value of this experience for the writing's audience, creating an opportunity to perform writing, and reflecting on the writing process.
How do you teach people to read and write if they can't speak or understand English, or in many cases, can't read or write in any language at all? The presenter will share tips, techniques, and lesson plans. One of the key components of success is building a class community where the students get to know, help, trust, and respect one another. Attendees will leave this session with an understanding of the process and a variety of techniques and activities they can use in their own beginner level classes.
Johanna Gleason teaches beginner level HyFlex classes at San Diego College of Continuing Education (SDCCD). She also Business Writing and Rhetoric and Freshman Success courses at San Diego State University, and English Conversation to Russian students and faculty through the Department... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 9:30am - 10:00am PST
KH B4015
Are you looking for materials to support CASAS STEPS objectives? Stand Out Fourth Edition provides a comprehensive and aligned approach to preparing students for the new CASAS Reading and Listening STEPS test. Its integration of skills practice, dedicated reading skill development, CASAS-style assessment tasks, and alignment with CASAS Competencies all contribute to developing students' language proficiency and readiness for success on the CASAS STEPS test. Join our informative session to delve deeper into this invaluable resource. Materials will be provided, equipping you with the necessary tools for successful CASAS STEPS preparation.
National Sales Manager, National Geographic Learning
I’m super excited to present at CATESOL and share the latest result of National Geographic Learning’s collaboration with TED.com. Talk to me about your classroom experiences with TED.com.
Friday November 15, 2024 9:30am - 10:00am PST
KH B4013
Augmented Reality (AR) revolutionizes language education by combining real-life environments with digital information which can be viewed through a device such as a smartphone, tablet, computer, or AR glasses. In this presentation, we will delve into various features of AR technology and its applications in second language acquisition and teaching.
Educate our world through Peace Corps service. Education and English-teaching specialists are needed to address global education and training needs at grassroots levels. Learn how you can collaborate with teachers overseas to bolster a community's education levels, teaching methods, and language competencies, while gaining transferable skills for your career.
Join us for an insightful and practical session focused on leveraging AI and modern technology to enhance coursebooks in Adult Education ESOL classes. We'll explore innovative techniques to support literacy students, manage multilevel classes, and improve workplace-related instruction. Find out how to design prompts to help create personalized and meaningful activities to encourage student engagement in a relevant, real-world context. In addition, we will introduce a new online test preparation product designed to help students succeed in the CASAS STEPS test-taking experience. This tool offers tailored practice and feedback, ensuring students are well-prepared for their assessments.
Join author Donna Price and two engaging Adult Ed ESL instructors as they share their experiences from their virtual and face-to-face classes. They'll focus on building communities in their beginning and intermediate level ESL classes while Donna showcases the variety of resources available on Cambridge's learning management system, Cambridge One. Find out what their favorite technology tools are, including easy digital gamification, creative uses of the Ventures series, and strategies for engaging learners and building community. You'll leave excited to incorporate new strategies and technology tips into your classroom with ease.
Johanna Gleason teaches beginner level HyFlex classes at San Diego College of Continuing Education (SDCCD). She also Business Writing and Rhetoric and Freshman Success courses at San Diego State University, and English Conversation to Russian students and faculty through the Department... Read More →
Teacher, Cambridge University Press, Evans Community Adult
Holland MacFallister is delighted to continue his association with Cambridge University Press at CATESOL after teaming with them at COABE in Seattle and CCAE in Los Angeles, as well as sharing his enthusiasm for adult ed in several online videos and live panels. He is a full-time... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 11:00am - 11:45am PST
KH B3016
Community Reading Groups embody civic learning through student-developed materials and active, student-centered participation in small group discussions based on readings. Working with peers and teacher, students select readings, compose discussion questions, lead & participate in discussions, build knowledge and vocabulary, increase confidence, and much more. Join this workshop for a simulated lesson and copious resources. Come today! Try it in class this week!
What is AI? How does it really work under the hood? How can you harness AI as a tool to extend and augment your EL Civics instruction and assessment?
Participants will leave this session with ChatGPT and Pace AI tools, tips, and tricks to develop instructional and assessment materials and teach to CASAS civic objectives and additional assessment plans (COAAPs). Learn how to prompt engineer with ChatGPT to build EL Civics scenarios and example texts from scratch, and then learn how to convert that text into personalized practice tailored to different student levels with Pace AI.
The mission of CASAS is to assist adults functioning at or below a high school level in attaining the basic literacy skills to function effectively on the job, in the community, and in the family. We accomplish this by assisting state and local education, training, social service... Read More →
How can we afford to build digital literacy when students are learning basic English literacy? While skipping digital literacy in beginner adult education programs may seem reasonable, students need these skills for future success. We can build the plane and fly at the same time by using traditional literacy and digital literacy in tandem. This poster session will show example lesson plans for how to reinforce beginner literacy learning outcomes with digital literacy skills. Teachers will walk away with ideas and materials.
Traditional writing assessment often focuses on a final product as compared to the developmental process that initially brought it to fruition (Hirvela,1999; Stern & Solomon, 2006). As a result, learners focus their attention on perfecting a final product rather than on the process of writing. Unsurprisingly, much instructor feedback addresses technical corrections while comments focused on quality and development of ideas, structure/organization, and cohesion are frequently deficient (Stern & Solomon, 2006). In this workshop, we offer social annotation as a more humanized learning and assessment process.
This session explores engaging and empowering ESL students in academic writing through novels, group work, and digital tools. Irvine Valley College's ESL class, two levels below English composition, incorporates weekly reading assignments, written tasks, and presentations using Google Slides and AI-generated images. The curriculum is designed to be student-centered, promoting active reading, thorough understanding, and peer teaching. Implementation includes role assignments, collaborative presentations, and response blogs. By semester's end, students will read and reteach a novel, demonstrating improved language skills. Continuous refinement and potential rubric introduction aim to enhance grading consistency. Online supplements and student presentation links will be shared.
I have many years of experience in ESL/EFL education, having taught in my native country of Brazil, China, and the USA. I have taught remedial writing at CSULA as a grad student, ESL at the ELP at CSULB, non-credit ESL at NOCE for 2 years, credit ESL at Cypress College for 4 years... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 1:30pm - 2:30pm PST
KH B2019
Students often struggle to use academic words accurately and fluently in situations where it matters. In this workshop, participants will get theory-based ideas on how to lay the groundwork for interactive, fun games that increase academic word-knowledge depth and fluency. Participants will get sample materials and instructions to actually practice playing four different adapted and simplified popular commercial games they can use to teach academic vocabulary, cohesive devices, and collocations with their own word lists. Participants will also have the opportunity to discuss and brainstorm the use of other popular games that can be adapted to increase academic word fluency.
This project reviews forty scholarly works on intertextuality in academic reading and writing to investigate how language educators can help L2 learners improve their academic literacy through intertextuality-based practices. It identifies effective pedagogical practices and provides practical guidelines for educators to integrate intertextuality in the teaching and learning of academic reading and writing, enhancing L2 learners' academic literacy by bridging theoretical perspectives and practical applications.
I am Hana Wu, currently an MA TESOL student at San Francisco State University and a passionate educator with over two decades of experience in language teaching and curriculum design. My journey in TESOL began in Taiwan, where I pursued a Ph.D., taught English at various levels, and... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 3:30pm - 4:00pm PST
KH B2014
Explore how to integrate AI for student-centered learning and innovation in ESOL classrooms. Designed for higher education instructors new to AI, this session provides practical strategies to create personalized, engaging learning experiences. Learn to seamlessly incorporate AI into your teaching to foster better student outcomes, drive educational innovation, and amplify student voices in the digital age.
Dr. Denise Maduli-Williams is a Professor of English and ELAC (English Language Acquisition) and the Online Accessibility Mentor at San Diego Miramar College, teaching online, hybrid, and in-person. With over two decades of experience, her teaching journey spans diverse settings... Read More →
Wordsmith, Educator, Global Wanderer, Dancer, Yogi.Dayamudra is Founder and Creative Director of the non-profit, Jai Bhim International, collaborating on alternative educational youth projects in south India. JBI's latest initiative is Blossom Projects, a residential community for... Read More →
Friday November 15, 2024 3:30pm - 4:00pm PST
KH B4016
This study used a written interview format to ask several large language models (LLMs, specifically, Claude, Chat GPT, and Gemini) about their ability to write reading passages restricted to particular vocabulary lists, and with specific restrictions on text complexity. The presentation outlines the background of the study, particularly features that might be included in passage specifications, and provides options for setting specifications in a particular context and/or at a particular level of English proficiency. It outlines the various capabilities claimed by current versions of the LLMs that were interviewed.
Identity labels can be confusing for international student writers, even at the university level of academic writing programs in the United States. This presentation highlights teacher and student experiences with a collaborative podcast writing project on identity labels. The multimodal writing project was designed to help students explore the intersections between identity and language via a critical language awareness lens. Come learn how to empower and guide your students toward accurate and effective language to discuss identity, power, and social justice. The assignments and rubrics will be shared and presenters will share future goals and adaptations of this project.