case study #2 - brian

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    Case Study #1: Brian

    (For the sake of privacy, Brians last name is omitted.)

    1. Description of students physical, linguistic, creative, social, and academic strengths and

    weaknesses noted through my personal observations and interactions with him.

    Firstly, Brian has been suspected of having a learning/processing disability. His mother

    is up front about his sibling being in la clase especial. He is slow to commit new information to

    memory, which is exponentially more difficult when also acquiring a second language. Simple

    number recall causes a challenge, though he is completely unaware of the fact. In teaching a

    subtraction is which we ate cookies to make the cookies disappear, he struggled to remember

    how many were present before one was eaten. Then, we represented the take away with proper

    notation. By writing it down, he was given access to the problem. This demonstrated that the

    issue did not lie in number recognition, rather in recall. In this light, Brian benefits from multiple

    modalities. Chances are, the neurons will fire with at least one.

    Brian displays the typical characteristics of a young boy. For free choice, he runs straight

    to the train set or blocks. In social situations, he exhibits the traits of a leader, taking charge in

    the goings-on of his peers. He is expressivemakes himself known by calling out in group

    instruction and by making sure that he loudest in social conversations. Though his expression is

    admirable and even encouraged, it can be disruptive. Brian is slow to think and fast to respond.

    He is considerably more engaged when using manipulatives. His capacity to acquire vocabulary

    was increased in the implementation of my hands-on science lesson (see Culturally Responsive

    Unit). By providing the experience, he was given something tangible to relate to the vocabulary.

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    Brians soft side is demonstrated when his mam is present for family reading time. She

    reads with him nearly everyday, even acting as the surrogate to students whose parents could

    not be there. She is in actively developing English-language skills, even makes a point of

    conversing with the teacher and the other English-dominant adults. She displays concern of

    grammar, asking the teachers for clarification. These qualities are echoed in Brian. He flourishes

    when given the opportunity to work in cooperative groups. He is concerned with correctness,

    which is most often demonstrated in academic situations. For example, he displays considerable

    discomfort was asked to spell independently. He simply responds, I cant, when asked to use

    invented spelling in journal writing. This pain will be eased over time, the more he is encouraged

    to generate his own thoughts. Up until recently, most writing activities involved copying the

    teachers model off the whiteboard. It comes as no surprise that he is uncomfortable when he is

    suddenly required to write on his own. With his take-charge personality, I do not anticipate that

    this issue will continue for long.

    2. Administered SOLOMS and specific analysis regarding their English language fluency.

    In formal/academic setting, Brians English-language capacity is fairly low as detailed by

    the SOLOM assessment below. In terms of comprehension, he benefits greatly from teacher

    speech adjustment. The teachers soft, slow, and repetitive speech patterns are well-received as

    demonstrated by his ability to generate his own thoughts. For example, the teacher asked

    students to complete the following sentence: I like Peter Rabbit because... She paused for a

    considerable amount of time before asking the student to respond. For Brian, this lapse of time

    allowed time for processing. He responded with, ...because he is sweet. In terms of oral

    fluency, Brian is not easily forced into silence because of his outgoing nature. However, when

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    the question is perceived to have a right answer, he often freezes with the fear of getting it

    wrong. In terms of vocabulary, his academic language is very limited (especially terms of

    comparison). For example, the terms bigger/smaller were challenging descriptors for Brian to

    understand. Though he could easily name the characters Peter Rabbit and Benjamin Bunny

    (tangible stuffed animals the teacher had on hand), he struggled to identify which one was

    bigger/smaller. In terms of pronunciation, he is compelled to repeat himself even though he is

    well-understood. This goes back to his obsession with correctness. In terms of grammar, he is

    limited to basic patterns. He generates short, practiced sentence structures such as the cat ran

    fast (noun-verb-adjective).

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    In non-formal/play settings, Brians language capacity is a mixed bag detailed by the

    SOLOM assessment below. The social interaction observed included expression in both Spanish

    and English. In terms of comprehension, his score is considerably higher because he engaged

    himself with Spanish-dominant speakers (his peers being the most resistant to the use of

    English). In terms of fluency, he had little trouble searching for the correct manner of expression

    because he had two languages to pull from. He responded in English, then felt compelled to

    repeat himself in Spanish (often with more detail). In terms of vocabulary, he is a culprit of

    misusing words, most often a result of simple translation. In terms of pronunciation, his mind

    speaks faster than his words. For this reason, he slurs words together occasionally leading to

    misunderstanding. In terms of grammar, Brian misuses conventions in both languages. There is

    little consistency in sentence structure, which is a matter of practice.

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    3. Additional assessment or activity completed along with a summary of what it tells me about

    the student and how this information is useful to me as a teacher.

    The interests inventory pictured below was created by Brian, but details facts about

    Alvaro. The activity was created to evaluate his ability to dialogue and record the responses

    appropriately. The order of events were as follows: (1) trace partners hand, (2) ask given

    questions, and (3) record responses. The questions were generated by me, but it was the

    students job to ask them to each other. The questions were as follows:

    (1) What is your favorite book?

    (2) How many siblings do you have?

    (3) What is your favorite color?

    (4) What is your favorite animal?

    (5) What is your favorite holiday?

    Similar activities often encourage a sense of all about me. In dialoging and recording with a

    partner, the sense is rather all about we. First, the product assesses the student on his ability to

    organize the given information. I modeled how to do so by recording my partners responses, one

    on each finger (angled vertically). Though Brian did not organize the information in the exact

    same way, his is no less valid. However, his product demonstrates an inability to both organize

    and record Alvaros responses appropriately. The lack of structure was not beneficial for Brians

    success. In the future, I would provide structure by simply asking Brian to record his partners

    responses on the backside of the paper. Moreover, Brians use of drawing to communicate

    Clifford the Big Red Dog(thumb) demonstrates resourcefulness. Especially in the lower grades,

    drawings should be validated as a mode of communication. Third, the completed product

    demonstrates ability to effectively interview a classmate. Even though the questions were

    generated by me, Brian dialogued with the proper call/response technique.

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    4. Any additional documents or activities and how they were or were not useful to you in

    determining their strengths and weaknesses.

    With the teachers direction, I implemented a whole class instructional lesson in thestudents writing journal. At the start of every journal entry, the students write the date in a

    sentence. The format is consistent and is modeled by the teacher. Second, the class generates one

    sentence collaboratively. In this case, the class butterflies hatched out of their crysallis over the

    weekend. The students had the opportunity to observe and talk about the event amongst

    themselves. The collaborative sentence was generated and written on the whiteboard for the

    students to copy. Then, the students had to generate one sentence on their own with the prompt,

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    They are... Brians writing sample (below) demonstrates that he has not processed word/

    sentence structure. Many of the words blend together, demonstrating that he needs additional

    reminders to add a space or finger between each word. His self-generated sentence is short, but

    demonstrates an understanding of phonemes. I can attest that this spelling was generated

    personally (I sat beside him, exaggerating each letter sound).

    Today is Monday, May 2, 2011. The butterflies came out of the crysallis. They are cute.

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    The following are document copies fromBrians cumulative files and are intended for my

    personal use only. The initial identification (to the

    left) details his scores on the California English

    Language Development Test (CELDT). The

    purpose of the test is to identify new students who

    are ELs, monitor student progress, and help decide

    when students are fully proficient in academic

    English. Brian was assessed before he entered

    kindergarten, providing the school information for

    placement. Surprisingly, his scores are on par with

    his late bird counterparts. This is most likely

    because of expressive nature.

    The second document (below) detailsBrians basic phonics skills, ability to read one syllable words, and oral blending. In his first

    assessment of the Basic Phonics Skills Test (BPST), it is evident that Brian had little or no letter

    recognition. The records demonstrate a series of guesses, even saying numbers for letters.

    However, his records of phonemic awareness demonstrates an understanding of sound blending.

    He appropriately responded six times out of ten, a score expected in his first trimester. The

    disparity between the scores lies in the mode of assessment. He struggles with visual processing

    demonstrated by his inability to recognize the written letter with its name. He is linguistically

    gifted demonstrated by his ability to respond accurately to oral prompting.

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    5. List of instructional recommendations that I would make to the teacher to address the needs

    and strengths of the student.

    In content-oriented lessons, limit the teacher-talk. Brian benefits from a conversational

    approach to learning. He is much more likely to process the new knowledge if he

    verbalizes his thoughts to the teacher and his peers.

    Brian would benefit from increased practice with sentence patterning (i.e., the song-based

    activity summarized here). This sentence patterning chart is used similar toMadLibs in

    that the students fill in the appropriate words. The sentence is sung to the tune of The

    Farmer in the Dell. For example,

    The creepy, crawly spider The creepy, crawly spider The creepy, crawly spider lays in the web.

    Adjective Noun VerbPrepositional

    Phrase

    Creepy

    Crawly

    Brian needs encouragement to be independent in his writing. The teacher-directed format

    of the writing journals is of no benefit to him. Far more important is his ability to

    generate and record his own thoughts. Simply, he needs to be released from his concern

    with correctness.

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