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Reparable Harm:

This article discusses the challenges faced by long term English learners and provides strategies to meet their unique needs. It also explores relevant research and data on the topic.

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Reparable Harm:

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  1. Reparable Harm: Laurie Olsen, Ph.D. lolaurieo@gmail.com CDE Accountability Institute December 2012 Meeting the Needs of Long Term English Learners

  2. English Learners “There is no equality of treatment merely by providing students with the same facilities, textbooks, teachers and curriculum…for students who do not understand English are effectively foreclosed from any meaningful education…” Lau v. Nichols, Supreme Court

  3. Their double challenge – our legal responsibility “English learners cannot be permitted to incur irreparable academic deficits during the time in which they are mastering English” “School districts are obligated to address deficits as soon as possible, and to ensure that their schooling does not become a permanent deadend.”

  4. Building Block#1:Know who your English Learners are --the extent and magnitude of the LTEL issue in your schools

  5. III’s Forever Long Term English Learner The 1.5 Generation Protracted English Learners The 5 Plusers ESL Lifers Struggling Readers

  6. English Learner Typologies • Newly arrived with adequate schooling (including literacy in L1) • Newly arrived with interrupted formal schooling - “Underschooled” - “SIFE” • English Learners developing normatively (1-5 years) • Long Term English Learner

  7. Californians Together Survey (2010) • Data from 40 school districts • Data on 175,734 English Learners in grades 6 - 12 • This is 31% of California’s English Learners in grades 6 – 12 • Districts vary in EL enrollment, size and context

  8. Across all districts59% of secondary school ELs are long term(103,635 in sample) Differs significantly from district to district (21% - 96%)

  9. Definition: An English Learner in secondary schools who….. Has been continuously or cumulatively enrolled in US schools for 6+ years Not met reclassification critera Evidence of inadequate progress (e.g., slow, inadequate or stalled progress in English language development Is struggling academically (e.g., GPA of 2.0 or below; grades of D or F in two or more core classes)

  10. Action Steps  • A formal definition of “EL Types” • Designated annual benchmark indicators/ expectations • A data system that can disaggregate achievement data by # of years in U.S. schools and by English proficiency levels • A calendar of regular reviews of LTEL data to inform and trigger planning AND to trigger supports for students

  11. Building Block #2: Understand the characteristics of “Long Term English Learners”

  12. Contributing Factors • 3 of 4 spent at least two years in “no services” • Trend has increased in past decade • Weakest EL program models • Inconsistent program placements • Inconsistent implementation within programs • Social segregation and linguistic isolation • Transnational moves – transnational schooling • Narrowed curriculum • Core approaches inadequate • Inappropriate interventions as solution

  13. Resulting in typical profile • Struggling academically (accumulated gaps), • Distinct language needs, basic social functioning English, stuck in progressing towards English proficiency, English dominant but very weak language

  14. The continuum: learning English as a second language 1 – 3 years 7 – 10 years LTELs STUCK HERE _______________________________________________________________________ No English CELDT Proficient Proficient for Academic work Oral, social English CST Basic I II III IV V

  15. Big discrepancy between CELDT Proficiency and Basic on CST/ELA Percent English Learners attaining these benchmarks statewide

  16. What is an AMAO?Annual Measurable Achievement Objective • AMAO #1 – progress towards English proficiency measured by CELDT levels (target 56%) • AMAO #2 – attainment of English proficiency which is defined as “CELDT proficient” (overall Early Advanced, no domain less than Intermediate) - (target: 45.1% those <5yrs) • AMAO #3 – academic performance in English measured by scoring proficient on CST in ELA and Math (target: 67%)

  17. Which levels on CELDT are meeting growth targets?

  18. Typical profile: Behavior, attitudes • Habits of non-engagement • Silent • Don’t ask questions or ask for help • Tend not to complete homework or understand the steps needed to complete assignments • Not readers • Typically desire to go to college – high hopes and dreams but unaware of pathway to those dreams • Do not know they are doing poorly academically – think they are English fluent • Needs unrecognized, unaddressed

  19. Typical profile: Academics • Several grade levels below actual grade level in both English and L1 • Cumulative high school GPA is very low (D+ average) – credit deficient by end of 9th grade • More than one in five have F averages • Grade retention frequent • Gaps in academic background

  20. In secondary schools….. (from the Californians Together survey) • 3 of 4 districts have no approach to serving Long Term English Learners • Majority of CA districts place their Long Term English Learners into mainstream • Three CA districts place Long Term English Learners by English proficiency level with other English Learners (in NYC, this is the common placement)

  21. Typical program placementsfor English Learners SDAIE Intensive or strategic interventions! Still English Learner, but in Mainstream 1 – 3 years      _______________________________________________________________________ No English Oral, social English CELDT Proficient Proficient for Academic work CST Basic I II III IV V

  22. Placements NOT designed for them….. • Placed/kept in classes with newcomer and normatively developing English Learners – by CELDT level • Unprepared teachers • No electives – and limited access to the full curriculum • Over-assigned and inadequately served in intervention and reading support classes

  23. For you to do….. • Be sure there is understanding about what constitutes sufficient English proficiency for academic access – clarify the terms • Check your AMAOs – for movement (#1) and for LTELs reaching CELDT Proficiency (#2b) • Analyze grades and GPAs • Analyze CELDT levels and growth/stagnation/loss • Shadow – check for engagement/participation • Student Voice and surveys • Interventions designed FOR LTELs

  24. Building Block #3: Know the research and undo myths that lead to harmful practices

  25. New generation of research • National Literacy Panel on Language Minority Children and Youth • California Department of Education: Research-based Practices for English Language Learners (commissioned papers)

  26. 1. Importance of rich oral language development • Producing language encourages learners to process language more deeply than just listening or receptive. • Verbal interaction is essential in the construction of knowledge • Oral language is the bridge to academic language and the development of literacy • It is not enough to teach reading skills alone to language minority students; extensive oral English development must be incorporated into successful literacy instruction

  27. So…… • Multiple and frequent structured opportunities for students to be engaged in producing oral language should be features of classroom instruction • The amount, type and quality of student talk that is generated is a mark of good instruction • Emphasize complex vocabulary development • Model rich, expressive, amplified oral language

  28. #2: Academic Language is essential • “Academic language” is different from social language, is discipline specific and takes longer to develop • Academic language and literacy for ELs develops most powerfully where background knowledge is also being built • Learning a second language for academic success requires explicit language development across the curriculum (ELD alone is not sufficient)

  29. So……. • Identify key academic vocabulary and discourse patterns – and explicitly teach them • Monitor the rigor and complexity of the language used in text and instruction • Set a high bar for sophisticated, complex, precise language in both social and academic domains

  30. #3. Language develops in context • An enriched environment is important for stimulating language development and making language comprehensible for all English Learners • Academic language develops in the context of learning academic subjects. A strong EL program infuses intentional language development throughout the entire curriculum.

  31. So…… • Attention to the classroom environment • Intentional language development across the curriculum • Full curriculum – including rich science and social studies • Hands-on activities, realia, visuals provide context for learning language.

  32. 4. To access the curriculum, English Learners need specially designed instruction • Along the continuum, as they are developing English, an English Learner cannot access grade-level academic content without specially designed instruction and support. • The support that is needed differs depending on where along the continuum – pacing, questioning, activities, forms of participation, etc. need to be differentiated

  33. So…… • SDAIE strategies/differentiation is essential • Language objectives for content lessons based on analyzing the linguistic demands of the content • Identify key academic vocabulary and discourse patterns and explicitly teach them • Professional development related to making content accessible to English Learners • Home language support

  34. #5: ELD instruction can advance knowledge and use of English • Sequential, predictable steps along continuum from no English to English proficiency • Carefully planned, dedicated ELD instruction facilitates and accelerates movement towards proficiency • ELD instruction should emphasize listening and speaking, explicitly teach foundational elements of English • ELD instruction should continue at least through Early Advanced levels of proficiency

  35. These are related – but not the same – they need all three English Language Arts (scaffolded) ELD instruction Academic language across curriculum

  36. #6: Development of the home language is powerful – but neglected • The best foundation for literacy is a rich foundation in language - not necessarily in English, but in the language strongest for the child and his or her family. • Link between L1 reading ability and L2 reading ability is the most direct cross-linguistic relationship • Effects of L2 literacy are long-lasting and extend to performance on 8th grade assessments

  37. Students have more extended and complex vocabulary and language skills if their home language is developed • 1st and 2nd language are interdependent - and they transfer; instruction in the first language facilitates proficiency in English. • English Learners make more academic progress when they have the opportunity to learn in both their home language and English • Systematic, deliberate exposure to English + ongoing development of L1 = highest achievement in both languages by end of 3rd grade and beyond.

  38. Does introducing native language instruction in secondary schools have benefit?

  39. The case for Native Language classes • Activates the language system facilitating meta-linguistic benefits • Bolsters English • Can increase college preparation and college-going rates • Develops skill with personal, family, labor market and societal benefits • Addresses identity and culture

  40. So…… • Home language instruction and development whenever possible to high levels of proficiency • Native speakers classes through Advanced Placement • Transfer focus and contrastive analysis • Parent education about the crucial role of developing the home language and what can be done at home to support that • Two-way/dual language programs if you can

  41. Action Steps  • Know the research • Determine which aspects of the research are most important to make known at this point in to order to clarify myths/misconceptions that may be in the way of delivering a strong EL research-based program

  42. Building Block #4Understand the implications of the Common Core Standards

  43. Old Paradigms then Academic content Learn English OR Academic vocabulary Academic Content Language

  44. New CCS Paradigm MATH SCIENCE language • instructional discourse • express and understand reasoning LANGUAGE ARTS

  45. Speaking and Listening • Comprehension and Collaboration Day to day, purposeful academic talk one to one, small group and large group setting • Presentation of Knowledge and Ideas Formal sharing of information and concepts, including through the use of technology for all students, across the curriculum

  46. Language focus across the curriculum • The CCSs call upon all academic content teachers to focus on academic vocabulary, oral language and discourse patterns that are essential for participation in academic work within their disciplines (Anchor standards: Language #1-5, Reading #4, Speaking and Listening #1, 4 & 6)

  47. Active engagement in collaboration • The CCSs recognize that students need to develop skills to collaborate in academic work – skills for teamwork, active and skillful participation in discussions, and inquiry-based collaboration. (Anchor standard: Speaking and Listening #1)

  48. Three converging forces Long Term English Learner Research The Common Core Standards English Learner Research

  49. Shared Imperative • More focus on structured, rich oral language • More focus on writing • More emphasis on language in and through social studies and science – a full academic curriculum • More focus on interaction, collaboration, discussion • More focus on academic vocabulary and discourse

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