Name:
Curriculum-based Measure 8-EDU 203: Multicultural Education
- A learning activity is an example of
- Conceptual and context reduced activity
- A conceptual and context-embedded activity
- A surface-language form of learning
- A cooperative form of learning
- In promoting reading comprehension, which of the following would best apply
- Comprehension precedes production
- Teachers should focus on reading accuracy before reading fluency
- Teachers should focus on reading fluency before accuracy
- Reading decoding facilitates comprehension
- A transitional bilingual education program would be an example
- Keeping a student’s native language
- An Additive approach to bilingual education
- A Subtractive approach to bilingual education
- A dual language approach to bilingual education
- To benefit from bilingualism a student needs
- To learn enough of a new language for basic survival needs
- To be proficient in the first language first and begin learning the second language
- To be proficient enough in both languages
- To have full fluency in two languages
- Using English to know how to order a hamburger at McDonald’s would be an example
- Communicative interpersonal skills
- Academic language proficiency
- A common underlying proficiency in two languages
- Only happens when the student has achieved a threshold of bilingualism
- Using English to study a chapter in a text in English is an example of
- Communicative interpersonal skills
- Academic language proficiency
- A common underlying proficiency in two languages
- Only happens when the student has achieved a threshold of bilingualism
- “Every dialect, every language, is a way of thinking. To speak means to assume culture”; this quote comes from
- Maya Angelou
- Jesse Jackson
- Franz Fanon
- Lisa Delpit
- Children who speak Ebonics (Delpit, 2014) are found to have a difficult time becoming proficient readers largely because
- Ebonics is too similar to standard English
- Children get built in illiteracy speaking Ebonics
- Teachers teach reading standard English competently
- Teachers assess competency influenced by the language children speak
- Research on using teacher correction of Ebonics (Delpit, 2014) results in
- Improved reading comprehension
- Increased fluency with two languages
- Decreased use of Ebonics by children
- Decreased comprehension in pronouncing new language
- The Bridge series curriculum (Hobbes, 2017) to Ebonics speakers develop standard English skills is an example of
- A dominant language ideology
- An effective program of reading comprehension
- A failed reading curriculum
- An effective program of speaking standard English
- Ebonics as a language (Bouie, 2014) is rooted in
- 16th century African Slave languages
- Modern Africanized Standard English
- African resistance to slavery
- 17th century British English
- The “acting white” theory of dismissing intellectualism and academic achievement is found (Bouie, 2014) to be
- Primarily among Black students in honors classes
- Among White students rather than Black Students
- Mostly among urban Black students
- Both among White and Black youth