Foreword by Paola Uccelli Preface Acknowledgments About the Authors About the Contributors PART I. LAYING THE GROUNDWORK Chapter 1. Definitions and Contexts Chapter 2. What Is the DLLP Approach? Appendix 2A: Research Methods and Protocols Appendix 2B: Directions for Teachers' Tool for Documenting Language Features in the Classroom for Formative Purposes Chapter 3. Formative Assessment PART II. FEATURES OF THE DLLP APPROACH Chapter 4. Word Features of the DLLP Approach Appendix 4A: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Sophistication of Topic-Related Vocabulary Appendix 4B: Student Self-Assessment DLLP Graphic Appendix 4C: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Sophistication of Verb Forms Appendix 4D: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Expansion of Word Groups Chapter 5. Sentence Features of the DLLP Approach Appendix 5A: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Sophistication of Sentence Structure Chapter 6. Discourse Features of the DLLP Approach Appendix 6A: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Coherence/Cohesion Appendix 6B: Discourse Connector Lists Appendix 6C: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Establishment of Advanced Relationships Between Ideas Appendix 6D: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Stamina Appendix 6E: Practice Finding the "Best Fit" on Perspective-Taking Appendix 6F: Written Language Features of the DLLP Approach PART III. LEADING LANGUAGE AND CONTENT LEARNING Chapter 7. Leadership and Communities of Practice to Support DLLP Implementation Appendix 7A: Agendas for Communities of Practice Index
It's critically important that teachers attend to both content and language development when introducing new subject matter, especially for English learners. Here's your opportunity to get started tomorrow and every day thereafter: Alison Bailey and Margaret Heritage's all-new Progressing Students' Language Day by Day.
Alison L. Bailey is Professor of Human Development and Psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles, working on issues germane to children's linguistic, social, and educational development. She has published widely in these areas, most recently in Annual Review of Applied Linguistics, Teachers College Record, Educational Researcher, and Review of Research in Education. Her previous books with Margaret Heritage include Formative Assessment for Literacy, Grades K-6 (Corwin Press) and Self-Regulation in Learning: The Role of Language and Formative Assessment (Harvard Education Press). Other recent books include Children's Multilingual Development and Education: Fostering linguistic resources in home and school contexts (Cambridge University Press), and Language, Literacy and Learning in the STEM Disciplines: How language counts for English Learners (Routledge Publishers). She serves as a member of the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP) Standing Committee on Reading, the National Council on Measurement in Education (NCME) Task Force on Classroom Assessment, and the National Academy of Sciences' Consensus Committee on English Learners in the STEM Disciplines. Margaret Heritage is an independent consultant in education. For her entire career, her work has spanned both research and practice. In addition to spending many years in her native England as a practitioner, a university teacher, and an inspector of schools, she had an extensive period at the University of California at Los Angeles (UCLA), first as principal of the laboratory school of the Graduate School of Education and Information Students and then as an Assistant Director at UCLA's National Center for Research on Evaluation, Standards and Student Testing. She has also taught courses in the Departments of Education at UCLA and Stanford University. She is a regular presenter at conferences across the United States and internationally. Her most recent book with Corwin, co-authored with Christine Harrison, is The Power of Assessment for Learning: Twenty Years of Research and Practice in UK and US Classrooms.