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Scaffolding Language, Scaffolding Learning: Teaching Second Language Learners in the Mainstream Classroom

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Recommended by the Ontario Ministry of Education Elementary classroom teachers with little or no specialized ESL training will learn how to integrate the teaching of English with the content areas of the regular curriculum

165 pages, Paperback

First published February 15, 2002

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181 people want to read

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Pauline Gibbons

34 books5 followers

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5 stars
67 (27%)
4 stars
109 (44%)
3 stars
57 (23%)
2 stars
8 (3%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews
Profile Image for Clare.
122 reviews10 followers
July 18, 2020
I'm SO glad we read this for ENL. Packed with applicable language scaffolds and strategies, I found my brain buzzing with ideas to ensure academic success for my emergent bilinguals. Definitely one I'll continue to pick up and refer to in all of my unit planning.
Profile Image for MrsMJ.
158 reviews
December 29, 2017
Easy, insightful, and practical read! Each section has practical ways to support ESL students in class, followed by specific, useful activities to try in class. It’s also not lengthy or verbose, which is nice because it allows more time for applying it. I hope to eventually lead a book study at my campus for this text because it is very insightful for supporting Language Learners of all grade levels, in all content areas.
Profile Image for Kyle.
464 reviews15 followers
October 13, 2015
I have reached the point in my studies where textbooks are less necessary for my research but more important for selecting readings for students I am fortunate enough to teach. Many of the chapters in the latest edition hit upon points that elegantly state how scaffolding works in elementary classrooms. While these chapters are brief, they cover a lot of theoretical ground, and even school me on a couple of new ideas (guess I will eventually find out who Mary Schleppegrell is and the impact of her studies on English language learners.
Profile Image for Blanca.
1 review
December 14, 2016
It is a must for any English teacher. Interesting for language teachers but also for teachers in general since it talks about language learning in the mainstrean classroom. Language is our main tool to construct thinking.
Profile Image for PleaseJustLetMeRead.
1,030 reviews30 followers
January 22, 2018
This is an amazing tool for a teacher. Great advice for teaching not only students with another first language than what they’re taught in, but also for teaching another language than the most common in a given area.
Profile Image for PleaseJustLetMeRead.
1,030 reviews30 followers
July 12, 2018
I actually prefer this to the Danish edition I've read on an earlier occation. It's as if a big chunk of information got lost in translation, so I get way more than expected when reading this edition.
Profile Image for Jen.
159 reviews37 followers
April 29, 2007
This is the best book on teaching English language learners that I have ever encountered. It is a good blend of theory and practice.
Profile Image for Torrie Tovar.
995 reviews39 followers
September 16, 2018
Great book! I am not usually a fan of textbooks but this one is easy to read and has great ideas for the classroom!
Profile Image for Jennifer Connell.
99 reviews4 followers
November 9, 2019
I love how practical this book is. It has great strategies you can immediately pull and use in the classroom with ELLs.
Profile Image for Andy Scott.
198 reviews1 follower
November 28, 2019
In this book, the author explains the different aspects of language learning that should be considered for students who are in school while trying to pick up or develop skills in a second language, and describes several techniques for assisting the students in their learning of the language.

I was looking for a book to help give me ideas of how to support my international students who sometimes struggle with the language tasks in my classes, especially Statistics which is more reliant on understanding context and technical language. The book was a bit technical/theoretical at times, and I'm not sure I agreed with some of the philosophies presented, and the strategies seemed largely directed at elementary students. However, I think the best part of the book is the glossary of teaching activities at the back of the book. Just read through that and you'll get a good idea of how to add activities to your teaching to help these students.
Profile Image for Turquoise Brennan.
586 reviews1 follower
March 7, 2024
Read this through a book talk with colleagues and so glad someone suggested it. Wish I had read it when I first started teaching bc it has so many practical tasks that are engaging and simple to replicate. This book doesn't only speak to ELs but also all students. Great addition to an educators toolbox
Profile Image for David Fox.
437 reviews6 followers
April 25, 2019
A 3 star grad school book is like a 4.5 star regular book. So, good job Pauline.
Profile Image for Jessica.
192 reviews5 followers
August 5, 2020
A lot of skimming. Repeated concepts from trainings I’ve had with EL Achieve and Constructing Meaning but with less depth.
Profile Image for Kelly.
45 reviews
April 14, 2021
A must read for any teacher of MLLs. Theory and science is presented practically and fully approachable for non-TESOL professionals. Will be keeping on my shelf for reference.
Profile Image for Jon.
413 reviews
December 18, 2021
Not a particularly riveting read but helpful in providing content. It’s a good textbook and accomplishes what it sets out to do.
Profile Image for Eileen Gonzalez.
8 reviews1 follower
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May 11, 2025
We used this book as part of an in-service course's required reading. It gave rationale for using scaffolding for English Learners. It was an easy read with tons of activities in each chapter.
Profile Image for Anna.
936 reviews106 followers
February 6, 2009
I learned a lot from this book and recommend it to anyone who teaches English Language Learners in a mainstream classroom. This concept of "scaffolding" was new to me. I had been used to making all kinds of modifications for special ed students but this idea of providing scaffolding rather than "dumbing down" material for ELL students really got me to reevaluate the kinds of tasks I give to my ELLs. Although I am currently working on an ESL endorsement and have a lot of empathy for ELLs (as I used to be one!), I felt like this book gave me much greater insights into teaching of reading, writing, listening, and the importance of discourse in the classroom.

Some of the reviews for this book say that it just restates stuff that you could read "anywhere." I disagree. I think that if you read the text and really stop and think about it (and perhaps discuss it with other teachers) you'll find that there's a lot you can take away from this short and sweet text. I read it with a study group so we discussed each chapter and talked about practical applications in our own classrooms. I got a lot out of this and gained new insight into how I can scaffold content and language learning for ELL students.
Profile Image for Sunday.
1,022 reviews55 followers
August 28, 2015
This is my new "go to" book when I'm thinking about my work with English Learners. Gibbons inspired me in the first chapter with the following: "Treating EL learners as the people they can become means that we see students not in terms of what they lack--in their case, full control of academic English--but as capable and intelligent learners who, with the right kind of support, are as able to participate in learning and achieve academically as their English-speaking peers."

Gibbons' writing is clear and concise. The layout and design of the book make it easy to access concrete ideas for instruction for immediate use in the classroom AS WELL AS to increase our understanding of language development--the theoretical basis (the why) for our instructional moves.
Profile Image for RuthAnn.
27 reviews
August 8, 2008
This book will assist you in scaffolding curriculum to meet the needs of ESL students and really every student in your classroom! I have really enjoyed developing lessons and using the ideas gleaned from this book!
Profile Image for Becca.
223 reviews9 followers
August 29, 2008
This is a good one for activities and such. Otherwise, it's stuff you can read just about anywhere else.
Profile Image for Kelsey.
107 reviews
November 24, 2009
ELL Methods, kind of a waste of time... seems to be "well, duh!" stuff or things I don't really need to know!
53 reviews
August 1, 2012
informative and fairly straight forward. It got a bit boring and tedious in the last chapter.
Profile Image for Erika Monaghan.
131 reviews5 followers
April 5, 2015
A must have for EAL and home room teachers with English Language Leaners. Lots of good strategies and sound reasoning behind each strategy. A fantastic resource.
Profile Image for Fiona.
50 reviews
January 19, 2017
Have read and reread this book in no particular order. I know it's like blasphemy in world of EAL to say this: not a fan of her style of writing- feels like it's a little over simplistic.
Profile Image for sasha.
285 reviews7 followers
December 20, 2015
Super useful and accessible for teachers of bilinguals/language learners.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 30 reviews

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