FLIP On The LAMP: TIPS For Lighting The Way For ELLs In The Flipped Classroom
New Teacher Advocate|Spring 2017, Vol. 24, No. 3

The concept of flipped classrooms has been the focus of a significant number of recent articles in teaching journals (see the KDP Record, April–June 2015) and online. In a flipped classroom “students are introduced to content at home, and practice working through it at school” (TeachThought, 2014). For example, students might watch a brief prerecorded video at home as direct instruction on the concepts or topics and then apply that information the next day in classroom activities. Therefore, the amount of time spent learning is extended.

Madeline Kovarik
FLIP On The LAMP: TIPS For Lighting The Way For ELLs In The Flipped Classroom

What is the impact of a flipped classroom on an English language learner (ELL)? Does this methodology assist or hinder them? FLIP on the LAMP and learn some TIPS to help all of your students, including your ELLs.

Turn on the LAMP for students. Learning: In the flipped classroom, comprehension of subject matter often increases because students may rewatch sections of the video at home for clarification and take notes on only the information they personally need to remember or master. Class time is used for authentic learning and the clarification of misunderstandings. Students frequently work in pairs or groups on the topic, which provides support, increases peer interaction, and advances authentic language usage. This may help the ELL’s exposure to societal norms, slang, and the age-specific culture as well as understanding of the topic and vocabulary.

Attitudes: According to Hung’s (2015) research, ELLs in flipped classrooms have more positive attitudes toward learning and demonstrate a higher degree of motivation and effort.

Modes and Pacing: Videos incorporate both oral and visual stimuli, which increases the likelihood of teaching to the student’s preferred modality. Additionally, because the student may fast-forward or repeat sections of the video as needed, the pace of the lesson is individualized.

This story is from the Spring 2017, Vol. 24, No. 3 edition of New Teacher Advocate.

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This story is from the Spring 2017, Vol. 24, No. 3 edition of New Teacher Advocate.

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