Friday, October 28, 2011

Lista 5

Lista 5
He now has passed all five of his word lists!  Superb job!!!!!!!

He has memorized 50 new words in Spanish.  Now he will begin on lista 1 again but will need to know how to spell each word and use the vocabulary in a complete sentence.  We will start work on Monday, as he needs a few days to play, relax his brain and have fun! I have said it many times, but we are so proud of him and all that he has accomplished these past 12 weeks!

New Student

New Student
Apparently, there is a new male student in Jedadiah’s class.  I don’t know if he transferred from the English class or if he came from another school.  I will find out the details! From Sra. Cervantes, I learned that his name is Emiliano, and he is from another school. I am happy to see another boy added to the class since we had lost Gavin last month.

Kindergarten English Word Lists of Frequency

English Words
I was asked by a friend of mine if I get obtain the English Kindergarten word list. So I asked Mrs. Barajanos if I could have a copy of the words. She agreed, and I gave the word list to Jane.  Jedadiah was so intrigued that he wanted to copy all 50 words onto his own index cards. This he completed one Saturday morning, all on his own accord!


and
him
is
yes
all
an
by
for
but
his
on
you
had
of
little
like
go
was
she
it
see
to
this
he
look
a
at
have
up
not
the
with
in
no
good
we
be
are
as
her
my
am
play
that
do
I
me
can
said
they


Book List from Houghton Mifflin Company

Book List
Up to now, we have been given two different book lists of suggested recommended reading.  So, we went to the library to find the following books for Jedadiah to read.  Some of the books are in English and Spanish.

For the We’re a Family theme:
  • Katy No-Pocket by Emmy Payne
  • Lots of Dads by Shelly Rotner
  • Peter’s Chair by Ezra Jack Keats
  • Buzz by Janet S. Wong
  • A Birthday Basket for Tia by Pat Mora
  • On Mother’s Lap by Ann Herbert Scott

For the theme of Colors:
  • Mouse Paint/Pintura de ratòn  by Ellen Stoll Walsh
  • Mr. Robbit and the Lovely Present by Maurice Sendak
  • The Adventures of Harold and the Purple Crayon by Crockett Johnson
  • Kente Colors by Debbi Chocolate

Oral Language

Oral Language
Driving to his art class on Tuesday afternoon, we passed a Carl Jr’s Restaurant.  There he was a big yellow star and this is what he said, “Yo veo una estrella amarilla y grande.”

Writing Journal

Writing Journal
He has been writing in his journal at school, and I didn’t even realize this until he brought home his first notebook filled with journal entries. 
He had written fourteen logs all in Spanish. Most of the logs begin with Yo veo o Me gusta….; nevertheless, I am proud that he has already begun his literacy skills in Spanish.

Rosetta Stone

Rosetta Stone
The school has offered, free of charge, Rosetta Stone to the parents in the Dual Immersion Program.  I have logged on once, but I need to dedicate some time to this 5 times a week to improve my own language skills. I really need to take advantage of this benefit!

Pep Rally

I was late to the rally but basically Mrs. Willis (the principal) motivated the students to go to college! The school is a part of the No Excuses program.  There are approximately 99 schools nation-wide that participate in this special program.  Even from kindergarten the school is preparing the students to go to college!

School Work

Another busy week at school.  I am amazed at how much kindergarten students do in one three-hour day!
I am also in awe of what an excellent job Sra. Oliver does at keeping her students engaged, interested, motivated and challenged.  I have never seen her raise her voice or act frustrated.  She is absolutely a talented teacher!











Literacy at Home

Drawing the Solar System


Practicing his letters.

Crazy Hair Day

Crazy Hair Day
Friday the students were allowed to style their hair in a crazy way.  He was so excited and happy to participate in this Spirit Day activity.  Even though he was supposed to look crazy, Grandma said he looked so handsome!

Week 12

Minimum Week
This week he has to arrive at school by 8:10 and is dismissed at 12:12.  I love taking him to school in the morning.  It seems more natural to learn and to leave the house in the morning.  I have gotten so much done this week.  It’s been great!
I was in the classroom this morning and observed how the students formally greet Sra. Oliver with a hand-shake and a Buenos dias. Also, I thought it was quite humorous because the students recite the Pledge of Allegiance to the American flag in Spanish.  He knows the pledge in Spanish but not in English.  I will need to teach him to say it in English!

Sunday, October 23, 2011

Hearing Bilingual: How Babies Sort Out Language By PERRI KLASS, M.D.

18 and Under
Hearing Bilingual: How Babies Sort Out Language
By PERRI KLASS, M.D.
Published: October 10, 2011

Once, experts feared that young children exposed to more than one language would suffer “language confusion,” which might delay their speech development. Today, parents often are urged to capitalize on that early knack for acquiring language. Upscale schools market themselves with promises of deep immersion in Spanish — or Mandarin — for everyone, starting in kindergarten or even before.
Yet while many parents recognize the utility of a second language, families bringing up children in non-English-speaking households, or trying to juggle two languages at home, are often desperate for information. And while the study of bilingual development has refuted those early fears about confusion and delay, there aren’t many research-based guidelines about the very early years and the best strategies for producing a happily bilingual child.
But there is more and more research to draw on, reaching back to infancy and even to the womb. As the relatively new science of bilingualism pushes back to the origins of speech and language, scientists are teasing out the earliest differences between brains exposed to one language and brains exposed to two.
Researchers have found ways to analyze infant behavior — where babies turn their gazes, how long they pay attention — to help figure out infant perceptions of sounds and words and languages, of what is familiar and what is unfamiliar to them. Now, analyzing the neurologic activity of babies’ brains as they hear language, and then comparing those early responses with the words that those children learn as they get older, is helping explain not just how the early brain listens to language, but how listening shapes the early brain.
Recently, researchers at the University of Washington used measures of electrical brain responses to compare so-called monolingual infants, from homes in which one language was spoken, to bilingual infants exposed to two languages. Of course, since the subjects of the study, adorable in their infant-size EEG caps, ranged from 6 months to 12 months of age, they weren’t producing many words in any language.
Still, the researchers found that at 6 months, the monolingual infants could discriminate between phonetic sounds, whether they were uttered in the language they were used to hearing or in another language not spoken in their homes. By 10 to 12 months, however, monolingual babies were no longer detecting sounds in the second language, only in the language they usually heard.
The researchers suggested that this represents a process of “neural commitment,” in which the infant brain wires itself to understand one language and its sounds.
In contrast, the bilingual infants followed a different developmental trajectory. At 6 to 9 months, they did not detect differences in phonetic sounds in either language, but when they were older — 10 to 12 months — they were able to discriminate sounds in both.
“What the study demonstrates is that the variability in bilingual babies’ experience keeps them open,” said Dr. Patricia Kuhl, co-director of the Institute for Learning and Brain Sciences at the University of Washington and one of the authors of the study. “They do not show the perceptual narrowing as soon as monolingual babies do. It’s another piece of evidence that what you experience shapes the brain.”
The learning of language — and the effects on the brain of the language we hear — may begin even earlier than 6 months of age.
Janet Werker, a professor of psychology at the University of British Columbia, studies how babies perceive language and how that shapes their learning. Even in the womb, she said, babies are exposed to the rhythms and sounds of language, and newborns have been shown to prefer languages rhythmically similar to the one they’ve heard during fetal development.
In one recent study, Dr. Werker and her collaborators showed that babies born to bilingual mothers not only prefer both of those languages over others — but are also able to register that the two languages are different.
In addition to this ability to use rhythmic sound to discriminate between languages, Dr. Werker has studied other strategies that infants use as they grow, showing how their brains use different kinds of perception to learn languages, and also to keep them separate.
In a study of older infants shown silent videotapes of adults speaking, 4-month-olds could distinguish different languages visually by watching mouth and facial motions and responded with interest when the language changed. By 8 months, though, the monolingual infants were no longer responding to the difference in languages in these silent movies, while the bilingual infants continued to be engaged.
“For a baby who’s growing up bilingual, it’s like, ‘Hey, this is important information,’ ” Dr. Werker said.
Over the past decade, Ellen Bialystok, a distinguished research professor of psychology at York University in Toronto, has shown that bilingual children develop crucial skills in addition to their double vocabularies, learning different ways to solve logic problems or to handle multitasking, skills that are often considered part of the brain’s so-called executive function.
These higher-level cognitive abilities are localized to the frontal and prefrontal cortex in the brain. “Overwhelmingly, children who are bilingual from early on have precocious development of executive function,” Dr. Bialystok said.
Dr. Kuhl calls bilingual babies “more cognitively flexible” than monolingual infants. Her research group is examining infant brains with an even newer imaging device, magnetoencephalography, or MEG, which combines an M.R.I. scan with a recording of magnetic field changes as the brain transmits information.
Dr. Kuhl describes the device as looking like a “hair dryer from Mars,” and she hopes that it will help explore the question of why babies learn language from people, but not from screens.
Previous research by her group showed that exposing English-language infants in Seattle to someone speaking to them in Mandarin helped those babies preserve the ability to discriminate Chinese language sounds, but when the same “dose” of Mandarin was delivered by a television program or an audiotape, the babies learned nothing.
“This special mapping that babies seem to do with language happens in a social setting,” Dr. Kuhl said. “They need to be face to face, interacting with other people. The brain is turned on in a unique way.”
A version of this article appeared in print on October 11, 2011, on page D5 of the New York edition with the headline: Hearing Bilingual: How Babies Sort Out Language.

School Work

From the amount of papers he brings home from school, I can see that the students are busy daily.












Sus

Sus
While driving home from school on Wednesday, Jedadiah said look Mom there is SUS.  It took me a minute or so to see what billboard or sign he was looking at.  I finally saw a sign that said SUSHI Wasabi.  I said….oh yeah there is SUS in the sign that says a Japanese word, sushi.
 His eyes and brain are beginning to recognize various letters in both languages. This week, he has also noticed the English word UP on several boxes we have in the garage.

“Baby Watch”

“Baby Watch”

Sra. Oliver is still around.  She was caught hopping on one foot during PE class on Thursday.  Jacob's mom, who was volunteering that day suggested that she not do that anymore.
On a positive note, we know that Sra. Cervantes will be covering for Sra. Oliver during her maternity leave.  I am happy about this because Sra. Cervantes is one of the intervention teachers and the student's already know her.

Box Top for Education

Box Top for Education
I forgot to write about this last week, but the school body turned in 1640 labels for education.  The school should receive a check for $160.40.

Lista 5

Lista 5
There was no time for his testing of this list this week.  His teacher said on Tuesday he would be tested.
This is from lista 4.

Literacy at Home

Literacy at Home
He is constantly writing, drawing and trying to spell various words.



Parent Teacher Conferences- First Report Card!

Parent Teacher Conferences
We met with Sra. Oliver on Tuesday after school.  I was excited and nervous to see his very first report card and to hear her opinion of Jedadiah.  I was prepared with paper and pen but didn’t need to use it. 
Sra Oliver took her time explaining the report card since it is in Spanish and answered every question that we asked.  The conference lasted more than 40 minutes. We were proud of his progress in Spanish and ecstatic with all of the Outstanding (O) grades he received.  His only two areas of Needs Time (NT) are writing sentences in Spanish and letter recognition.  This last area is ironic because he scored quite high on the Sounds of the Letters Section, which is actually more important to know the sounds of the letters when you begin to write anyway.  Final count is 5 outstanding grades (O) and 4 Satisfactory (S).  Thanks for the Mouzakis family; we celebrated his success by going to Claim Jumper for dinner.

An interesting point Sra. Oliver made is that Spanish is not taught by individual letter sounds when writing.  For example, in English children would learn to spell cat by the sound of  C   a    t and then the word cat would be made.  Instead Spanish includes a consonant and a vowel; the vowels are of the utmost importance. For example….gato would be learned ga…to. I think I have been confusing him at home when I try to help him spell words in Spanish. 

Week 11 Highlights-Parent University

The topic this week was entitled, Making the Most of Parent-Teacher Conferences and was hosted by Mrs. Verdugo (6th grade) and Mrs. Fudge (1st grade).  Several points were made:
1. conferences last about 20 minutes because teachers have many parents to meet with
2.  arrive on time
3.  prepare ahead of time questions to ask the teacher:
            Strengths?
            Concerns?
            Social behavior?
            Friends?
            Homework?
            Classwork?
            How to keep him motivated?
            How to encourage him?
4.  talk to your child about his/her opinions:
 the class,
favorite subject,
friends,
recess,
classroom behavior and
his progress.
5.  Make sure your child knows that you and his teacher are on the same team and want him to succeed. 
6.  For Kindergarten through second grade:
O         outstanding
S+        Satisfactory/Meets Target
S-         Below Target
N         Needs Improvement

For grades third through sixth:
A        
B
C
D
F

7. Praise your child publicly for any good grades received.
8.  Does he agree with the grade report?

            Questions I thought of…
            To to student?
Who are your friends? What’s your favorite subject? What do you like about your class? What do you enjoy about your teacher?
            To the teacher?
When does he have time with you? What does he learn during intervention groups? How is he doing socially? What do you appreciate about him? Does he have any friends? What type of student is he? What type of relationship do you have with him?  How can we support his learning at home?

Friday, October 14, 2011

Field Trip to the Tortilla Factory

Field Trip to the Tortilla Factory
Friday all of the kindergarten students walked about two blocks to a local tortilla factory.  The children saw how corn tortillas are made from corn kernel to a cooked tortilla. After walking through the small factory, the students were given a fresh tortilla filled with queso.  The parents received one too, but I added some salsa to mine.  It certainly was tasty. 
While the children were waiting for their turn to tour the factory, Sra. Oliver gathered her pollitos around her and the children sang several songs, in Spanish.  Just watching the children and how engaged they were in their singing brought tears to my eyes.  I am just amazed at how seemingly easily all of the kids have acquired so much of the Spanish language already. 

Spanish Lesson

Spanish Lesson
Driving home on Monday, Jedadiah was say, “Me gusta papas.” I said, oh I like papas, too.  He said, no mom….papa  with no acento is papa/potatoes and papà with an acento is like daddy.
He then proceeded to say that mama has an acento, too.
He also is making complete sentences for example: Me gusta mi mama.
Puedo ayuda.
Yo veo un perrito.  (He then admitted that he couldn’t say perrito that good.)

“Baby Watch”

“Baby Watch”
Jedadiah said that his teacher is at 98% this week.  I have heard from the other moms that Sra. Oliver has dilated.
I keep asking that same question, “Who is going to cover for her while she is on maternity leave?” She has two more weeks to complete the first trimester. 

 

Literacy at Home

Literacy at Home
He made a really fun matching game that we all played on Wednesday morning.  He let Samara win two times, but when she lost the final game she wanted to stop playing. 
They also made a large maze that led from the boxes we have up to limit the area where Momo can go in the house to their study table.  He included scary faces to keep away the enemy and traps.  He is quite creative.








School Work

This week has been a review of all the letters and numbers.



Me gusta triangulos.



Lista 4

Lista 4
When I picked him up from school today (Thursday), I noticed he was holding a Pez candy in his hand.  I asked where you got that candy he said, I passed Lista 4 today!
What?
I didn’t even know you were going to be tested today! Boy, I am so proud of him. 
What amazes me is that he is motivating himself to learn.  Yes, I review the words at home with flashcards that I made, but he is memorizing the words himself.  We don’t spend an exorbitant amount time doing homework.  Instead I want him to draw, paint, read, play, exercise, ride his bike or scooter, watch movies and relax at home. 

English Language Development Class (ELD)

English Language Development Class (ELD)
I haven’t written much about his English class, but he does have English language development daily.  This class accounts for 10% of his day.
For ELD, both dual immersion classes and three English kindergarten classes are integrated together  This means that about 125+ students are in this class, but there are credentialed teachers for each subgroup: Sra. Oliver, Sra. Mendoza, Sra. Cervantes, Mrs. Barajanos, Mrs. Liechty and Mrs. Keating.
He is in the group called cìrculo. According to Jedadiah there are 6 groups: cìrculo, triàngulo, cuadrado, rectàngulo, cono y cubo.  His buddy, Ryan, is in the rectàngulo group. 
From what I can tell, the students are learning, Social Studies during English class.  I have seen papers about America, California, American Symbols, the American flag, the Statue of Liberty, manners, people at school, and some famous nursery rhymes.  Each group has a different teacher; his teacher is Mrs. Barajanos. He said that ELD class is fun but hard.  I asked why English classes are harder than Spanish class, but he didn’t have an answer. His group is the English Only group.  The other groups were determined by the score on the California English Language Test (CELT).