Literacy
Pre-Institute
Wednesday, June 2nd, 2004
9:00 am - 5:00 pm,
McKimmon Center
Registration for the symposium does not
include the literacy pre-institute.
If you wish to attend both the symposium and the literacy pre-institute, two
separate registrations are required.
Regular registration:
May 10 - May 27, 2004
Registration closes Thursday, May 27th at 5:00 p.m.
$90.00 for literacy pre-institute, lunch on your own
Please note that registration caps at 50 participants for the literacy pre-institute
K-12 Morning General Session:
Teaching English Language Learners
to Read

Debbie Linville is an instructor in the
Graduate Studies’ Language & Literacy Program at Salem College in Winston-Salem. She
is a certified NC Reading Specialist and has been a classroom teacher at the
elementary level for twenty years. Debbie is currently pursuing a PhD in
Curriculum and Instruction at the University of NC at Greensboro.
Her dissertation focus is the English language learner and literacy identity
construction. She is a self-made bibliophile, and shamelessly admits her guilt.
Reading instruction in American schools has never been more challenging than it
is today. How we define reading, and the curricular decisions we make based on
that definition, are critical to the future literacy success of our students.
As classrooms become increasingly populated with culturally and linguistically
diverse learners and teachers are faced with mounting pressure to teach
according to mandated standards, a closer look at our beliefs, assumptions, and
instructional practices is warranted. Principles of literacy learning that
support the reading needs of students whose primary language is not English,
coupled with practical, effective, research-based instructional strategies will
be the focus of this session.
K-12 Afternoon General Session:
Powerful Practices that Facilitate Language
Development

Dr. Debra Von Sprecken is the
Principal of Dr. Jonas E. Salk Elementary School in the Magnolia School District
and Adjunct Professor in the Department of Secondary Education at California
State University, Fullerton (CSUF). She previously served as a middle school
principal and assistant principal and Title I Bilingual Resource Teacher. She
taught seventh, sixth, and third grades and served as a mentor teacher. Dr. Von
Sprecken obtained a Ph.D. from the University of Southern California in
Language, Literacy, and Learning. She also holds a Master’s Degree in
Educational Administration from California State University, Long Beach, and a
Bachelor’s Degree in English from California State University, San Diego. Her
research interests are in the areas of reading attitudes and reading motivation,
sustained silent reading, and second language acquisition.
Morning
Breakout Session
for K-5 Educators
Improving the Comprehension of ELLs through Interactive Read-Aloud
Debbie Linville, Salem College
Elementary teachers know the value of reading aloud on a daily basis from quality literature from all genres and content areas. Learn the benefits from putting a “new twist” on a familiar classroom practice that can promote enhanced comprehension for the English language learners. Additionally, criteria for text selection and issues relevant to using multicultural literature will be addressed.
Morning Breakout Session for Middle and High School Educators
"I am agree" - Intersections of L1 and L2 Literacy
Dr. Christiane Bongartz, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte
This presentation will discuss how L2 writers use knowledge and processing resources from both their L1 and L2. Writing samples and current research findings inform suggestions for teacher strategies, including issues of feedback and inside- and outside-the-classroom support. Student need oriented approaches will be emphasized, with pointers to the effective implementation of a literacy-rich school environment with access to data bases and web-based grammar and writing resources in all classroom languages.
Afternoon Breakout Sessions for K-5 Educators:
The Second Year and Beyond
Karen Fiumara & Jeannie Humburg,
Wake County Public Schools
Designed for the elementary school teacher who wants to take ESL students to the
next level. This session will discuss and demonstrate reading strategies to
improve fluency, vocabulary and comprehension for students who have basic
language proficiency. Attendees will participate and handouts will be provided.
Reading Motivators and Inhibitors
Dr. Debra Von Sprecken,
Jonas E. Salk Elementary and California State
University, Fullerton
Afternoon Breakout Session for Middle and High School Educators:
The Middle and High School ESL Reader
Dr. Lynn Warren, North Carolina
Department of Public Instruction
This workshop will share literature-based strategies that facilitate NCSCS
content learning for middle grades and high school LEP students in the regular
classroom.
While the emphasis will be on strategies to support learning in core subjects,
the dimensions of language proficiency and the second language acquisition
process will be explained.
Language Teaching with Authentic Language - Project MORE as a Resource for ESL Practitioners
Dr. Christiane Bongartz & Kim Bailey, The University of North Carolina at Charlotte
In this talk, we will outline Project MORE, a faculty development initiative for ESL teachers in Charlotte's urban schools. We will demonstrate audiovisual properties of the extensive narrative collection at the core of Project MORE, and we will share how teachers have used the narratives to enhance their ESL teaching. A practical demonstration of how to access to data base and generate teaching strategies is also included.