Ukrainian English Reading Comprehension worksheets for Refugee Students

 
Ukrainian English ESL Activities, ELL, Ukrainian refugee products

Welcome to our Ukrainian English Reading Comprehension worksheets designed for Ukrainian refugee students.

Are you a ESL teacher looking for a way to help your students learn English, or connect with American classrooms in meaningful ways? Our activity is perfect for you! It includes ten pages of reading topics all about spring, written in English. Each page has a paragraph written at a third grade level and key terms translated into Ukrainian. This is a great way for students to learn English while also learning about spring themes.

Ukrainian English ESL Activities, ELL, Ukrainian refugee products

 

But that's not all! At the end of each page, there is a sentence for students to trace. Tracing helps young students practice their pre-writing skills and build a foundation for writing letters and words. This is a fun and easy way for kids to improve their skills in both English and Ukrainian.

Ukrainian English ESL Activities, ELL, Ukrainian refugee products

 

As a teacher, you know how important it is to save time. Our Reading Comprehension activity is a great way to do just that. It's already prepared for you, so you don't have to spend hours creating materials. Just print out the pages and you're ready to go!

The number of students learning English in American schools is getting bigger each year, but these students aren't doing as well as they should be on academic tests or tests to see how good they are at English. Studies have shown that it can be helpful for students to use their own language when they are learning English. This can help them understand more about how language works, learn more in school, and do better at speaking English. It can also help them feel good about themselves and their culture. However, it can be hard for teachers to use students' own languages in the classroom, especially if there are a lot of different languages or if the teacher only speaks English. It can also be a sensitive topic because some people think that English should be the main language in America. Despite these challenges, it is important for teachers to find ways to use students' own languages when they are teaching, because it can make a big difference in how well English Language Learners do in school.  

Nowadays, we are starting to use teaching methods that are more sensitive to different cultures and that help preserve those cultures. But in the past, some schools had rules that said you could only speak English. These kinds of rules were not helpful because they made it seem like other languages weren't important.

ESL strategies for Ukrainian students, ELL, ENL, Ukrainian English reading comprehension, close reading, reading comprehension, reading strategies

 

When students who speak more than one language go to school, they might only hear English spoken there. What message does this send to them? It's better to have an "additive" approach to language, which means that students can learn a new language without forgetting the ones they already know.

We hope you and your students enjoy our Reading Comprehension activity. Happy learning!

Investigating the Ice Age Beringian Standstill Hypothesis

   


The Bering Land Bridge (Beringia) Standstill Hypothesis posits that a population of ancient humans, known as "Ancient Beringians," lived in isolation on the east Beringian Arctic steppe-tundra during the last glacial maximum (LGM, 36,000 12,000 years ago). According to the hypothesis, this population is the sole ancestral source of all Native Americans. The hypothesis is still being studied and debated by scholars and researchers.

Researchers from Brown University, with help from the Shared Beringian Heritage Program, are trying to find proof of a new idea about when and how people first came to America. Professor Yongsong Huang and his team believe they discovered signs of human poop and fire from more than 30,000 years ago in northern Alaska, which is way earlier than when people were thought to be there. The lab's analysis of sediment from as far back as 200,000 years has not been published yet, but Dr. Huang's research over the last five years has added a lot of new information to the argument over how people got to America via Beringia, which is a land bridge between Siberia and Alaska during the Ice Age.

 Scientists can test the Beringia Standstill Hypothesis by examining a variety of biomarkers found in Pleistocene humans, fauna, flora, pollen, charcoal, and fire-related chemical markers in the sediment cores of two volcanic lakes in Bering Land Bridge National Preserve. Additionally, they can reconstruct past climates and fire history to determine if Ancient Beringians used fire to hunt, heat, or cook during the LGM.

Some researchers have argued that the Bering Land Bridge, a strip of land between Asia and Alaska that emerged in the last Ice Age, was a highway for human migration. Scientists don't know for sure when people went from Asia to America or for how long. We do know that people were in Siberia about 45,000 years ago because of archaeological findings. But the only proof of humans living in North America is from 14,500 years ago. Some people think that during the Ice Age, the Bering Land Bridge, which was a land connection between Asia and Alaska, was used by people to travel between the two places.

There are lots of theories about why it took so long for people to move from Beringia to North America. Some people think that people stayed in Beringia for at least 20,000 years before they started to move south. That's why we don't have evidence of people living in North America before 14,500 years ago. Most of the Native Americans were still living in Alaska, Beringia, and Siberia at that time.

Some researchers think that people might have lived in Eastern Beringia during the Ice Age, separated from the rest of North America by an enormous sheet of ice. Analyses of bones found in the 1980s and 1990s at the Bluefish Caves in the Yukon Territory suggest that they could be from 25,000 years ago, which goes against the common idea that people came to North America quickly. DNA tests also show that the genetic makeup of modern Native Americans comes from a population that was isolated in Beringia for a long time. Plus, studies of the climate say that Beringia was a better place for people to live than Siberia. Even though scientists, geneticists, climate experts and biochemists are discussing the different evidence about the first Beringians, there is still some uncertainty about how and when humans came to the Americas.

In the last few decades, a new theory has been suggested called the Beringian Standstill Hypothesis (BSH). The BSH suggests that the Bering Land Bridge was a place where people lived for a long time. It's possible that people lived in Beringia, which was a large area that included parts of Siberia, Alaska, and Canada, for thousands of years during the Ice Age (about 25,000 BCE) before they moved south into North America. This theory suggests that people stayed in Beringia for a while, instead of or in addition to quickly moving into North America. While they were there, they became different from the people in Eurasia in terms of their genetics and culture. 

The Beringian Standstill hypothesis suggests that the Bering Land Bridge was a place where people lived for a long time, allowing them to become genetically and culturally distinct from their Siberian ancestors. During this time, the populations in Beringia experienced genetic drift and natural selection, which are processes that can lead to genetic differences between populations. This period of isolation likely caused the Native Americans to develop a unique genetic makeup that is distinct from their Siberian ancestors. 

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