Meaningful multilingual approaches in the EY, a case study of the Dual Language Programme in Wellington International Shanghai
It sits alongside the bilingual nursery but has its own identity as part of the family of schools within China. Since opening almost 10 years ago, the Chinese language had been taught as a specialist lesson for just under an hour per day. However, differentiating between those pupils who were new to Chinese and the majority who were native speakers or, at least, very fluent was not only a challenge for teachers but didn`t reflect the overall, child-centred and responsive approaches throughout the rest of the day.
Observing the impact of bilingual education on the social-cultural competence of the young learners next door in the sister nursery, we decided to pioneer a Dual Language Programme from 3 year olds upwards which would then feed into the Dual Language track from year 1 in the main campus. The programme aims to support our young learners to be bilingual and biliterate in English and Chinese and, at the same time, ensure the overall offer was enriched even further by children seeking to understand different people and cultures and learn to embrace differences.
I asked the leaders of the EYC to share the journey so far as the result is an outstanding example of early years practice at its best with the child and multilingualism at the heart of their strategic direction of this section of school. Lucy Qu, Ass DH of the EY and Charlotte Knight-Benjafield, Exec Head of both the international and bilingual nurseries in Shanghai describe their aims and impact so far..
The Philosophy behind the programme:
With this unique age group, using what we know from research into early childhood development and how children acquire more than one language is key to its success. Therefore, a strong sense of attachment to familiar learning environments and adults plus building on the child`s first language are the foundations of the model. Moreover, transforming what used to be specialist Chinese teaching into more meaningful project-based learning and applying a child-centred pedagogy where pupils can make choices in their learning matches the chosen approaches in the EYC. This will not only prepare those who will be in the DL track from Y1 upwards but also enhance the cognitive benefits of multi- language learning in all our pupils. Finally, a greater focus on the dual culture aspect of the programme mirrors the Wellington values and acknowledges the breadth of Chinese teaching in the College. We believe supporting children to grow passion and understanding of Chinese culture is the long-term sustainable way of learning Chinese.
The curriculum also focuses on achieving excellent standards of Chinese for native speaking children within the additional accelerated literacy programme as well as introducing higher levels of Chinese for non-native speakers. High standards of English are maintained alongside the Dual Language model at all times. This will not only prepare our EYC learners for the Y1 dual language track, but also enhance learning more generally through the cognitive benefits of multilanguage learning.
The Curriculum and its delivery
A Chinese Culture Curriculum, Reception Chinese Literacy Curriculum and Non-Chinese Speakers Intervention Curriculum have been designed to effectively target and enhance children’s overall Chinese ability. Native Chinese speaking Dual Language teachers work with the main classroom teacher on the same class project and they join in weekly planning meetings together.
Timetables allow for sustained periods of time for meaningful teaching alongside play based learning as well as regular small group, adult initiated adult interventions and the following approaches support the differentiation needed;
• Team collaboration and reflections occur daily between Chinese practitioners as well as linking the planning which is led by our foreign teachers to ensure continuity and connections in the use of vocabulary, expressive language and understanding Chinese culture.
• Tracking progress carefully via classroom observations to ensure accurate scaffolding of learning and suitable levels of challenge for each child.
• Assigning specific Chinese teaching teams to each class and year group and managing the amount of time allocated to native and non-native speakers to embed and practice new learning as well as extend those pupils who are ready to increase their fluency.
• Planning and delivering interventions in small groups and using verbal reasoning and BLANKS questioning techniques daily. These range from the introduction of new vocabulary to asking pupils to express and present their views in Chinese.
• Resources: Using differentiated resources to link children`s prior knowledge with current learning. These include books to support early literacy in Chinese for home use.
The on-going monitoring of the progress data provided by the Wellington College China EY Framework and its bespoke IT platform, Power BI ensures that the conditions for teaching and learning we create maximise the multilingual capacity of all our pupils. From timetables to curriculum mapping, embedding the model proposed plus any necessary changes will be based on the premise that:
• Progress and attainment in Chinese communication, language and literacy is better from Sept 2021 onwards than in the previous academic year.
• Progress and attainment in English communication, language and literacy is at least as good as it was in the previous academic year.
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