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Educating
Hispanic Students: Effective Instructional Practices
Practitioner Brief No. 5 (August, 2002)
Yolanda N. Padrón, Hersh C. Waxman, & Héctor H. Rivera
University of Houston
Effective instructional practices are crucial to addressing the educational
crisis facing many Hispanic students in the United States. The number
of Hispanic students attending public schools has increased dramatically
in recent decades, yet Hispanic students as a group have the lowest levels
of education and the highest dropout rate of any student group. Conditions
of poverty and health, as well as other social problems have made it difficult
for some Hispanics living in the U.S. to improve their educational status.
Cultural and historical practices have also placed numbers of Hispanic
children at risk for educational failure. Research-based instructional
practices are thus vital to improving the academic success of Hispanic
students. CREDE researchers have synthesized the research on strategies
that have been significant in advancing the achievement of these students.
This brief presents these identified teaching practices, which can be
applied in any classroom and are beneficial for all students, as well.
Effective Teaching Practices for Hispanic Students
Research shows that education needs to be meaningful and responsive to
students' needs, as well as linguistically and culturally appropriate
(Tharp, Estrada, Dalton, & Yamauchi, 2000). Instruction must specifically
address the concerns of Hispanic students who come from different cultures
and who are often trying to learn a new language. The home and community
environment must be tapped into and connected to students' learning in
addition to focusing on knowledge learned in the classroom. CREDE researchers
suggest five research-based practices that, while valuable for most English
language learners, have been particularly successful for teaching Hispanic
students (Waxman, Padrón, & Arnold, 2001).
These practices are highlighted below.
Culturally-Responsive Teaching
Culturally-responsive teaching incorporates the everyday concerns of students,
such as important family and community issues, into the curriculum. Teachers
develop learning activities based on familiar concepts, facilitating literacy
and content learning and helping Hispanic students feel more comfortable
and confident with their work (Peregoy & Boyle, 2000). By working
from and validating students' existing knowledge base, this teaching practice
improves the acquisition and retention of new knowledge and develops students'
self-confidence and self-esteem. For Hispanic students whose experiences
and everyday living may not be parallel to those experiences found in
the school environment, culturally-responsive teaching makes new subject
matter and everyday lessons relevant and significant. It increases the
transfer of school-taught knowledge to real-life situations and exposes
students to knowledge about other individuals or cultural groups (Rivera
& Zehler, 1991). This helps Hispanic students prepare themselves for
meaningful social roles in their community and the larger society by emphasizing
and connecting both social and academic responsibility.
Cooperative Learning
Cooperative learning uses small groups in which students have specific
roles in order to accomplish specific tasks and activities. This enables
students to work together to maximize and stimulate their own learning
as well as that of others in the group (Johnson & Johnson, 1991).
By having opportunities to discuss and defend their ideas with others,
students come to complex understandings. Instead of lecturing and transmitting
material, teachers facilitate the learning process by encouraging cooperation
among students. This teaching practice is student-centered and creates
interdependence among students and the teacher (Rivera & Zehler, 1991).
While cooperative learning is appropriate for all students, it is critical
for Hispanic students who may face socio-economic disadvantages. Through
collaborative practices, they can develop the social skills and inter-group
relations essential to academic success. Cooperative learning activities
influence Hispanic students by
providing opportunities for students to communicate with each other; developing
social, academic, and communication skills; decreasing anxiety and boosting
self-confidence and self-esteem through individual contributions and achievement
of group goals; improving individual and group relations by learning to
clarify, assist, and challenge others' ideas; developing proficiency in
English by providing students with rich language experiences that integrate
speaking, listening, reading, and writing (Christian, 1995; Rivera &
Zehler, 1991); and providing skills that are necessary to function in
real-life situations, such as the utilization of context for meaning,
the seeking of support from others, and the comparing of nonverbal and
verbal cues.
Instructional Conversations
The instructional conversation (IC) is an extended discourse between the
teacher and students in areas that have educational value as well as relevance
for the students. It is initiated by students to develop their language
and complex thinking skills, and to guide them in their learning processes
(Tharp et al., 2000). Rather than limiting expectations for Hispanic students
by avoiding discussion during instruction, instructional conversations
emphasize dialogue with teachers and classmates (Durán, Dugan,
& Weffer, 1997). Hispanic students may not have full control of the
English language, which may prevent them from participating in classroom
discussions. One major benefit of using instructional conversations with
Hispanic students who are learning English is that ICs provide students
with this opportunity for extended discourse, which is an important principle
of second language learning (Christian, 1995).
Cognitively-Guided Instruction
Cognitively-guided instruction emphasizes learning strategies that enhance
students' metacognitive development. It focuses on the direct teaching
and modeling of cognitive learning strategies and giving students opportunities
to practice them. Through explicit instruction, students learn how to
monitor their own learning by tapping various strategies to accelerate
their acquisition of English or academic content (Waxman, Padrón,
& Knight, 1991). This instructional approach is beneficial to Hispanic
students who are not doing well in school because the students can remove
some of the individual barriers to academic success by learning how to
use cognitive strategies effectively.
One example of effective cognitively-guided instruction is reciprocal
teaching, a procedure in which students are instructed in four specific
reading comprehension-monitoring strategies: (1) summarizing, (2) self-questioning,
(3) clarifying, and (4) predicting. These cognitive skills can increase
reading achievement and help students master their school-based knowledge.
Technology-Enriched Instruction
Technology-enriched instruction incorporates more active student learning
and is more student-centered. Instead of delivering knowledge, teachers
are facilitators of learning through the use of multimedia and other technology
(Padrón & Waxman, 1999). Technology can be especially helpful
for Hispanic students learning English. Web-based picture libraries can
promote Hispanic students' comprehension in content-area classrooms (e.g.,
science and mathematics). Multimedia can facilitate auditory skill development
by integrating visual presentations with sound and animation (Bermúdez
& Palumbo, 1994). Digitized books are also effective tools that allow
Hispanic students to request pronunciations for unknown words, request
translations of sections, and ask questions. Technology-enriched instruction
also helps students connect learning in the classroom to real-life situations,
thereby creating a meaningful context for teaching and learning (Means
& Olson, 1994). It allows Hispanic students to connect classroom instruction
that may be beyond their everyday experiences to a rich and interactive
medium that may be more familiar.
Conclusion
The effective instructional practices described above can significantly
improve the academic success of Hispanic students. They respect the students'
desire to learn and the collective knowledge students bring to the classroom.
Changes in classroom practice, however, need to be accompanied by changes
in policy that reflect the diversity in classroom settings. Instructional
practices are key components, but not recipes for improving schools. No
single approach will be a solution for all of the educational challenges
facing Hispanic students. Each school should be considered unique, and
educators should choose among research-based practices according to the
needs of the Hispanic students they serve. Educators should recognize
the importance of family and community influences and other critical out-of-school
factors that influence the outcomes of schooling in addition to integrating
these practices into the school environment.
References
Bermúdez, A. B., & Palumbo, D. (1994). Bridging the gap between
literacy and technology: Hypermedia as a learning tool for limited English
proficient students. The Journal of Educational Issues of Language Minority
Students, 14, 165-84.
Christian, D. (1995). Two-way bilingual education. In C. L. Montone (Ed.),
Teaching linguistically and culturally diverse learners: Effective programs
and practices (pp. 8-11). Santa Cruz, CA and Washington, DC: National
Center for Research on Cultural Diversity and Second Language Learning.
Durán, B. J., Dugan, T., & Weffer, R. E. (1997). Increasing
teacher effectiveness with language minority students. The High School
Journal, 84, 238-46.
Johnson, D. W., & Johnson, R. T. (1991). Classroom instruction and
cooperative grouping. In H. C. Waxman & H. J. Walberg (Eds.), Effective
teaching: Current research (pp. 277-93). Berkeley, CA: McCutchan.
Means, B., & Olsen, K. (1994). The link between technology and authentic
learning. Educational Leadership, 51, 15-18.
Padrón, Y. N., & Waxman, H. C. (1999). Effective instructional
practices for English language learners. In H. C. Waxman & H. J. Walberg
(Eds.), New directions for teaching practice and research (pp. 171-203).
Berkeley, CA: McCutchan.
Peregoy, S. F., & Boyle, O. F. (2000). English learners reading English:
What we know, what need to know. Theory into Practice, 39, 237-47.
Rivera, C., & Zehler, A. M. (1991). Assuring the academic success
of language minority students: Collaboration in teaching and learning.
Journal of Education, 173, 52-77.
Tharp, R. G., Estrada, P., Dalton, S., & Yamauchi, L. (2000). Teaching
transformed: Achieving excellence, fairness, inclusion, and harmony. Boulder,
CO: Westview.
Waxman, H. C., Padrón, Y. N., & Arnold, K. A. (2001). Effective
instructional practices for students placed at risk of failure. In G.
D. Borman, S. C. Stringfield, & R. E. Slavin (Eds.), Title I: Compensatory
education at the crossroads (pp. 137-70). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum.
Waxman, H. C., Padrón, Y. N., & Knight, S. L. (1991). Risks
associated with students' limited cognitive mastery. In M. C. Wang, M.
C. Reynolds, & H. J. Walberg (Eds.), Handbook of special education:
Emerging programs (Vol. 4, pp. 235-54). Oxford, England: Pergamon.
This brief draws from CREDE Educational Practice Report 8, Educating
Hispanic Students: Obstacles and Avenues to Improved Academic Achievement,
by Yolanda N. Padrón, Hersh C. Waxman, and Héctor H. Rivera.
To learn more about this research, contact Dr. Yolanda Padrón at
Ypadron@UH.edu, College of Education, University of Houston, TX 77204-5872,
or visit www.coe.uh.edu/crede.
This work is supported under the Educational Research
and Development Center Program (Cooperative Agreement No. R306A60001-96),
administered by the Office of Educational Research and Improvement (OERI),
U.S. Deparment of Education. The findings and opinions expressed here
do not necessarily reflect the position or policies of OERI.
For a printable version of this Practitioner Brief in Adobe's PDF format,
click here.
(Download and install Adobe's free Acrobat Reader here.)
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