Texas Administrative Code
Title 19 - EDUCATION
Part 2 - TEXAS EDUCATION AGENCY
Chapter 128 - TEXAS ESSENTIAL KNOWLEDGE AND SKILLS FOR SPANISH LANGUAGE ARTS AND READING AND ENGLISH AS A SECOND LANGUAGE
Subchapter C - HIGH SCHOOL
Section 128.36 - English Language Development and Acquisition (ELDA) (One Credit), Adopted 2017
Universal Citation: 19 TX Admin Code ยง 128.36
Current through Reg. 49, No. 38; September 20, 2024
(a) General requirements.
(1) Students shall be awarded
one credit for successful completion of this course. This course must be taken
concurrently with a corequisite language arts course as outlined in Chapter 110
of this title (relating to Texas Essential Knowledge and Skills for English
Language Arts and Reading) or this chapter. Recommended corequisites: English I
for Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL I) and English II for Speakers of Other
Languages (ESOL II).
(2) Students
may take this course with a different corequisite for a maximum of two
credits.
(b) Introduction.
(1) English Language
Development and Acquisition (ELDA) is designed to provide instructional
opportunities for secondary recent immigrant students with little or no English
proficiency. These students have scored at the negligible/very limited academic
language level of the state-approved English oral language proficiency tests.
This course enables students to become increasingly more proficient in English
in all four language domains. It addresses cognitive, linguistic, and affective
needs in compliance with federal requirements and the provisions of Chapter 89,
Subchapter BB, of this title (relating to Commissioner's Rules Concerning State
Plan for Educating English Language Learners) under the Texas Education Code,
§§
29.051 -
29.064.
(2) The English Language Development and
Acquisition (ELDA) course will validate a student's native language and culture
as a valuable resource and as a foundation to attain the English language. It
will develop social language, survival vocabulary, and the basic building
blocks of literacy for newly arrived and preliterate students.
(3) Through comprehensible input, students
have access to curriculum that accelerates second language acquisition.
Students are challenged to apply higher-order thinking skills in all four
language domains.
(4) Current
research stresses the importance of effectively integrating second language
acquisition with quality content area education in order to ensure that English
language learners acquire social and academic language proficiency in English,
learn the knowledge and skills, and reach their full academic potential.
Instruction must be linguistically accommodated in accordance with the English
Language Proficiency Standards (ELPS) and the student's English language
proficiency levels to ensure the mastery of knowledge and skills in the
required curriculum is accessible. For a further understanding of second
language acquisition needs, refer to the ELPS and proficiency-level descriptors
adopted in Chapter 74, Subchapter A, of this title (relating to Required
Curriculum).
(5) The development of
communicative competence occurs through targeted lessons based on students'
needs, although academic language proficiency is the focus of
instruction.
(6) Statements that
contain the word "including" reference content that must be mastered, while
those containing the phrase "such as" are intended as possible illustrative
examples.
(c) Knowledge and skills.
(1) Developing and sustaining
foundational language skills: listening, speaking, discussion, and
thinking--oral language. Students develop oral language and word structure
knowledge through phonological awareness, print concepts, phonics, and
morphology to communicate, decode, and encode. Students apply knowledge and
relationships found in the structures, origins, and contextual meanings of
words. Based on the student's language proficiency level, and with
appropriately provided English language development scaffolding, the student is
expected to:
(A) distinguish and produce
sounds and intonation patterns of English;
(B) recognize print directionality of the
English language such as reading left to right or top to bottom;
(C) develop knowledge of relationships
between sounds and letters of the English language to represent sounds when
writing in English;
(D) process and
use basic academic English language interdisciplinary vocabulary;
(E) understand the general meaning, main
points, and important details of spoken language ranging from universally
familiar to unfamiliar topics;
(F)
identify people, places, objects, events, and basic concepts such as numbers,
days of the week, food, occupations, clothing, colors, and time;
(G) learn relationships between sounds and
letters of the English language and decode (sound out) words using a
combination of skills such as recognizing sound-letter relationships and
identifying cognates, affixes, roots, and base words;
(H) identify and use words that name actions,
directions, positions, sequences, and locations;
(I) develop basic sight vocabulary, derive
meaning from environmental print, and comprehend English vocabulary and
language structures used routinely;
(J) use print or digital resources such as
glossaries, English dictionaries, bilingual dictionaries, thesauri, and
available technology to determine meanings and usage;
(K) listen actively and ask relevant
questions to clarify understanding; and
(L) share prior knowledge with peers and
others to facilitate communication and foster respect for others.
(2) Comprehension skills:
listening, speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts.
Students use metacognitive skills both develop and deepen comprehension of
increasingly complex texts. Based on the student's language proficiency level,
and with appropriately provided English language development scaffolding, the
student is expected to:
(A) summarize texts
and retell in English or the native language (L1) as needed;
(B) self-monitor using pre-reading supports
such as graphic organizers, illustrations, and pre-taught topic-related
vocabulary to enhance comprehension of input from various sources;
(C) demonstrate comprehension of English by
participating in shared reading, responding to questions, and taking notes that
are commensurate with language acquisition;
(D) make connections to personal experiences,
ideas in other texts, and the larger community;
(E) listen to and derive meaning from a
variety of media such as video, DVD, CD, or other technology to build and
reinforce concepts and language; and
(F) make inferences and use evidence to
support understanding.
(3) Response skills: listening, speaking,
reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. Students react and respond
to a variety of sources that are read, heard, or viewed. Based on the student's
language proficiency level, and with appropriately provided English language
development scaffolding, the student is expected to:
(A) formulate and provide effective verbal
and non-verbal feedback;
(B) speak
using a variety of increasingly complex grammatical structures, sentence
lengths, sentence types, and connecting words with increasing accuracy and ease
as more English is acquired;
(C)
ask for and give information such as directions, address, name, age, and
nationality;
(D) express ideas and
feelings such as gratitude, needs, opinion, and greetings;
(E) communicate non-verbally to effectively
and appropriately engage in formal and social interactions;
(F) express opinions, ideas, and feelings
ranging from communicating single words and short phrases to participating in
short discussions;
(G) respond
orally to information presented in a wide variety of print, electronic, audio,
and visual media to reinforce concept and language attainment; and
(H) organize information in a variety of ways
such as graphics, conceptual maps, and learning logs.
(4) Multiple genres: listening, speaking,
reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. Students recognize and
analyze genre-specific characteristics, structures, and purposes within and
across increasingly complex traditional, contemporary, classical, and diverse
multicultural texts. Based on the student's language proficiency level, and
with appropriately provided English language development scaffolding, the
student is expected to:
(A) compare
characteristics of cultures represented in various linguistic and
non-linguistic sources;
(B) read
and listen to adapted or linguistically accommodated modified classical,
traditional, contemporary, and multicultural works in English or native
language (L1) in alignment with grade-level student expectations;
(C) use text features, including titles,
headings, subheadings, paragraphs, fonts, styles, index, glossary, table of
contents, and graphics to locate, explain, or use information; and
(D) compare and contrast how events are
presented and information is communicated by visual images such as graphic art,
illustrations, or photographs versus non-visual text.
(5) Author's purpose and craft: listening,
speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. Students use
critical inquiry to analyze the purpose of authors' choices and how they
influence and communicate meaning within a text. Students will analyze and
apply author's craft purposefully in order to develop their own products and
performances. Based on the student's proficiency level, and with appropriately
provided English language development scaffolding, the student is expected to:
(A) determine and interpret an author's or
speaker's intended message;
(B)
determine the target audience; and
(C) determine the purpose of the
message.
(6)
Composition: listening, speaking, reading writing, and thinking using multiple
texts. Students use the modes of writing/discourse and the writing process
recursively to compose multiple texts that are meaningful and legible and use
appropriate conventions. Based on the student's proficiency level, and with
appropriately provided English language development scaffolding, the student is
expected to:
(A) produce legible work that
demonstrates increasing accuracy in the use of the English alphabet, spelling,
and the correct use of the conventions of punctuation and
capitalization;
(B) spell familiar
words with increasing accuracy and employ English spelling patterns and rules
with increasing accuracy as more English is acquired;
(C) demonstrate increasing control over
grammatical elements such as subject-verb agreement, pronoun agreement, and
verb forms;
(D) use prewriting
strategies to generate ideas, develop voice, and plan;
(E) write effectively in first
person;
(F) apply oral and written
conventions in English with increasing fluency during classroom presentations,
compositions, and dialogue;
(G)
arrange phrases, clauses, and sentences into correct and meaningful
patterns;
(H) compile written ideas
to form complete sentences and paragraphs;
(I) organize and convert information into
different forms such as charts, graphs, and drawings;
(J) convey intended meaning while recognizing
the meanings and uses of the other registers in English that are often
expressed through colloquialisms, idioms, and other language forms;
(K) create, revise, edit, and publish using
various technology applications;
(L) use study tools, including writing,
labeling, and sketching, to clarify and remember information;
(M) evaluate writing for both mechanics and
content; and
(N) use cohesive
devices with increasing accuracy.
(7) Inquiry and research: listening,
speaking, reading, writing, and thinking using multiple texts. Students engage
in both short-term and sustained recursive inquiry processes for a variety of
purposes. Based on the student's language proficiency level, and with
appropriately provided English language development scaffolding, the student is
expected to:
(A) locate appropriate print and
non-print information using texts and technical resources, periodicals, and the
internet;
(B) compile information
using available technology;
(C)
discover, organize, and support in writing what is known and what needs to be
learned about a topic; and
(D)
compare and contrast coverage of the same event in various media such as
newspapers, television, documentaries, blogs, and the internet.
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