How Can We Best Support ESL and Remedial Students?

I was an undergraduate student at Queens College in the late 1990s when remedial instruction was eliminated in four-year CUNY colleges.  One measure to alleviate the rigidity of the new policy was Prelude to Success, the program that allowed students needing remediation to be conditionally admitted to four-year schools.  These students’ determination to succeed in their first crucial semester at Queens was truly admirable.  Working closely with such students, I saw a vast majority of them, ESL or not, successfully exiting remediation and becoming full-time students at Queens. 

At Baruch, ESL students receive strong support in handling the curriculum of English and literature courses.  There are now several sections of Composition and Intro. to Literature courses (2100 and 2150) designed specifically for ESL students who attend a one-hour tutorial every week as a part of their class.  It was interesting and extremely rewarding for me to lead these tutorials as a Writing Center Consultant last semester.  This current semester I learned about the existence of 2800 “T” (Great Works of Literature with a Tutorial).  In fact, a big part of my Writing Fellow work now is 1 ½ – hour weekly meetings with 2800 “T” students.  Even though the population of this class can hardly be called ESL – there has been a registration glitch, and many students who don’t need the tutorial rushed to get into this section because it was open.  In my next post(s), I’ll gladly share my difficulties and pleasures in leading this unusual tutorial.  For now, I want to dwell on the place of ESL students in classes across disciplines. 

Transfer students from foreign schools who “fall through the cracks” and enroll in regular English and other courses with intensive reading and writing; freshmen who struggle in exhausting summer Immersion classes; continuing students who are making gradual progress in learning English – they all find their way into classrooms where they want to “sound American” and eliminate all grammar problems that prevent them from succeeding academically and socially.  They may be afraid to speak in class; they may want to get rid of their accents in speech and writing; they often simplify their thoughts because they can’t find the right words to articulate the full complexity of their thinking. They receive papers with many corrections and sadly agree that they don’t deserve to get above “B” because their “grammar is bad.” They run to the Writing Center or SACC for help, often hoping to get their papers cleaned up and polished.  They are used to hearing “Could you say that again?” or “I’m not sure I understand what you mean by ….”. 

Whether we set out to teach these students in our classrooms or lead workshops for them, we can’t overlook these interconnected issues.   I hope we can all exchange some constructive approaches to dealing with ESL writers and speakers.  I just want to share a few strategies that I found particularly useful: finding and praising a strong point in the writer’s/speaker’s thinking, resisting the urge to eliminate original formulations that do not “sound American,” and finally helping students see that the abundance of red marks in their papers does not mean that they make an abundant number of mistakes — it simply means they make a few recurrent ones. In my work as a tutor, I found it very useful to use a particular color for each type of error.  This way the student knew that he/she had 2 or 3 problem areas and not 20 or 30. 

One particular article has been especially helpful in my work with ESL students: “Editing Line by Line” by Cynthia Linville (ESL Writers: A Guide for Writing Center Tutors.  Shanti Bruce and Ben Rafoth, eds. Portsmouth, NH: Boynton/Cook Publishers, 2004.  84-93.).  Linville explains that there are “[s]ix error types that are treatable and are often frequent or serious in ESL college compositions”; these include subject-verb agreement, verb tense, verb form, singular/plural noun endings, word form, sentence structure.  When we focus on what’s treatable and teachable, we will help students to learn English more efficiently, build their confidence and preserve their unique voices. 

Comments

  1. Mikhail says:

    There's a tendency in the 4 year colleges within CUNY to write ESL off as a kind of remediation so that ESL becomes even less of a priority for upper administrators.

  2. Suzanne says:

    I am also curious as to why ESL has been put under the heading of remedial courses. It makes me wonder about what is the actual definition of ESL at CUNY or in academia in general.
    I have often encountered students who write in good clear English yet have great difficulty in speaking English. So they do not necessarily fit into a remedial course yet they need some sort of academic support.

  3. Jaime says:

    One day I was searching for help on how Baruch could help me to improve my English, especially pronunciation, on the College’s website and I couldn’t find any satisfactory results, but I did find this blog and I’ve been subscribed to your rss feed since that day.

    I’m a transfer student and have been here in the U.S for less than 4 years. There are many students in my position, and I know administrators are aware of it. Baruch is known as one of the most culturally diverse colleges in the U.S., one would think the college would offer especial programs for those non-native speakers, yet it seems so difficult for ESL students to the get necessary help to level up. We experience a lot of difficulties; the most uncomfortable, at least for me, is the pressure of speaking correctly in those classes where the teacher expects everyone to participate. I really wish there would be an Accent Reduction program for ESL students, student clubs, and special sections for courses which class participation counts considerably towards the final grade.  

  4. Suzanne says:

    I think Jaime's comment brings up a very interesting point, that ESL issues are not only different for each individual but there are also different ESL needs depending on which course a student is taking.

    I do know that at Baruch the Student Academic Consulting Center, SACC, does offer accent reduction and some Oral ESL tutoring. They can be found on the Baruch website.

  5. I'm glad you found my article helpful.

    Cynthia Linville

  6. Kim says:

    Could you give me a Beginners Program for remedial class ?

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