3. What is (FULL) Partnership Teaching?
EAL Teacher Mainstream Teacher
Together
EAL and mainstream teachers
plan lessons/curriculum responsive to the needs of
all learners: monolingual, bilingual and
multilingual
lead the lessons together – both teachers deliver
different parts of the lesson
responsible for behaviour for learning of their class
responsible for AFL
co-mark students’ work and assess them together
follow a Partnership Cycle routine:
• Developing the curriculum whilst developing themselves
• Short term-goals
• Experimenting
• Evaluating
• Disseminating results to the school
4. Three modes
of
collaboration
Extends
Cooperative
Teaching.
Links the work of
the two teachers
with school plans
for curriculum
and staff
development –
Partnership Cycle
Process
Partnership
Teaching
The EAL teacher
and subject
teacher plan the
curriculum
together, taking
into consideration
the needs of all
learners.
Supporting roles
alternate
between the two
teachers.
Both teachers
have equal status.
Cooperative
teaching
The EAL teacher
works with
individual
learners or small
groups;
Lessons planned
and delivered by
the mainstream
teacher
Support teaching
6. Partnership Teaching Cycle
Set Goals
Experiment
EvaluateDisseminate
Review
Partnership Teaching:
• Around since 1990s (from DfE)
• Described as:
• Curriculum development
for mono- and bilingual
students
• A form of professional
development
• Most effective if school
heads and SLTs recognize
its potential and back it
up
8. In Practice…
What adverbs will I use? What will they describe?
Adverbs Actions (verbs) described
What similes will I use? Which things will I compare?
First noun
like
Second noun
What metaphors will I use? Which things will I compare?
First noun
is
Second noun
Make it alive – make it into a story!
Think of different senses: sight, hearing, smell, touch
Think of your person’s personality: what is this person like and how does he/she do
things?
How does this person react to other people?
WRITING FRAME – CHARACTER DESCRIPTION
Look at the description of our character:
Adjectives
Adverbs
Similes
A caramel-coloured, gorilla of a man, with a face like a grizzly bear, bounces like Tigger into
Twickenham Academy every morning from his home in London. He proudly sports
different, peculiar, bright socks, an upscale shirt (with a matching tie), and dark trousers.
As he solemnly settles himself into his desk, the sun hits his glasses, causing him to squint
his dark eyes. A friend leisurely walks by with a morning greeting, resulting in a smile that
reveals his cheeky grin and pearly whites. His bellowing laughter booms across the
classrooms when students ask him what he will be enjoying for lunch. His jolly attitude
carries him all the way to lunch, down the high street, as if on a sugar rush.
Adjectives
Adverbs
Similes
Metaphors
What adjectives will I use? What will they describe?
Adjectives Things / person or people described
9.
10. Literacy strategy
Having a language
specialist in the
classroom
EAL teacher’s
status elevated
Linguistic aspect
furthers all
students’
comprehension
Uses EAL teacher’s
linguistic expertise
ALL students
reflect on their
language / writing
Fun and interesting
lessons planned –
easy to plan!
Planning together
improves EAL
teachers’ own
practice
Social inclusion –
no singling out of
EAL learners!
Linguistic skills key
to GCSE success
Good to find
another teacher’s
ideas
11. Ofsted: EAL Briefing for Section 5 Inspection
9. Class/subject teachers should plan collaboratively with
EAL support teachers or teaching assistants. There should
be a focus on both language and subject content in lesson
planning.
Partnership Teaching
certainly fulfils this!
12. • Inservice pack for schools: Partnership Teaching:
http://www.collaborativelearning.org/partnershipteaching.pdf
• NALDIC (National Association for Language Development in the
Curriculum): http://www.naldic.org.uk/eal-advocacy/eal-news-
summary/140212
• Creese, A. (2005) Teacher Collaboration and Talk in Multilingual
Classrooms. Multilingual Matters Ltd: Clevedon, Buffalo &
Toronto
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