clatterbane:

sarajaneadventures:

shuttheupfuck:

fangirlinginleatherboots:

teaching children that they are allowed to walk away and cool off if they are feeling overwhelmed might literally save their life as teens/adults

could save other ppls lives too.

It’s a rule in my classroom that you get to walk out and cool off if you tell me first, and tell me why after.

Hopefully taking into account that sometimes people will lose speech when they’re overwhelmed/stressed enough. So that they can’t explain that they need a break until after they’ve had a chance to recover some. It may also take a while before they can explain anything afterwards.

Better if you can leave before that point, but that can be particularly hard for kids. In multiple ways. Kids especially may also not know how to explain that they couldn’t talk then, but can now.

Mostly adding that because it doesn’t necessarily mean they’re doing it on purpose to be a jerk, or that they wouldn’t say something before walking away if they could. Had that misinterpreted too many times myself, especially in already heated situations.

oneshortdamnfuse:

A few things for people who work with or interact with non-native English speakers, especially immigrant and refugees, who are trying to learn English:

  • No, students do not learn English faster if you ban them from using their native language in the classroom. The “English only” approach is racist and xenophobic, in addition to being ineffective.
  • Think of it this way, you’re at the edge of a cliff – your language. On the other side if the language you intend to learn. You use your native language to bridge the gap. I take that away. That’s “English only.”
  • English Language Learners (ELLs) have a right to maintain their native language while residing in an English speaking country, and disallowing that is a basic human rights violation. 
  • Language facilitates one’s access to their culture and history. By disallowing one to use their own language, you are denying them the ability to communicate across generations and maintain their identity.
  • Not everyone’s goal is to master English, but learning English is necessary in order to access many of the resources in English speaking countries. Learning English is about survival, not about pleasing you. 
  • In the case of refugees, many want to return to their home country. They can’t due to natural or unnatural causes. Some choose to stay and become citizens, others only want to learn what they need to survive.  
  • Being bilingual or multilingual doesn’t significantly delay one’s ability to get work done. It doesn’t make one deficient, and treating multilingualism as a problem has ableist, xenophobic, and racist implications. 
  • While appreciating the skill it takes to be able to communicate in more than one language isn’t a bad thing, treating monolingualism as inferior can have ableist, xenophobic, and racist implications too. 
  • Not every language has a writing system, so don’t be surprised if you run into adult ELLs who do not have fine motor skills. That doesn’t mean they’re less intelligent than you, though.
  • Some may have stronger oral language capabilities because oral tradition is more important in their culture. Some may have stronger memorization skills because rote learning is valued. etc. etc. etc.
  • Similar to evolution, while some languages are certainly more complex than others, complexity =/= superiority. The effectiveness of a language isn’t measured in its complexity. It merely needs to be useful. 
  • Language needs to be explicitly taught to make content accessible. Math English is different from History English is different from Science English is different from English Language Arts. 
  • If you want someone to understand a concept taught through English, you need to understand that it’s your job to explicitly identify terms, explain relationships between words, etc. in order to make it accessible. 
  • Finally, English is not “the most difficult language.” The difficulty of a language is all relative to the learner, e.g. how closely related languages are in orthography, grammar, context, mutual intelligibility, etc. 

Signed,

A very frustrated teacher of ELLs whose greatest frustration isn’t caused by their ELLs but by native English speakers who don’t get it.