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Abstract It takes teachers many years to develop expertise in the complex set of knowledge, skills, and orientations needed to teach culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) students well. The process begins in preservice preparation and continues into the early years of teaching and throughout a teacher's career. This article examines preservice teacher education as the first phase in the continuum of teacher development for teaching ELLs. Drawing on our framework of orientations and pedagogical knowledge and skills for preparing linguistically responsive teachers (CitationLucas CitationLucas, Villegas, & Freedson-Gonzalez, 2008), we show how Feiman-Nemser's (2001) framework of central tasks for learning to teach can serve as a guide for identifying tasks for learning to teach CLD students and for guiding the construction of a coherent approach to preparing teachers of CLD students that begins in preservice programs, laying the foundation for continued development throughout the teaching career. Notes 1. We use the terms English language learners and culturally and linguistically diverse (CLD) students to refer to students whose home language is a language other than English. We use the term limited English proficient when it is used by sources cited. 2. See Villegas and Lucas (2002) for a discussion of the concept of sociocultural consciousness.
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Tamara Lucas
Ana María Villegas
Theory Into Practice
Montclair State University
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Lucas et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/69dd48b87d97b7e86940c997 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1080/00405841.2013.770327