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Published byLinette Jenkins Modified over 9 years ago
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Key ConsiderationsKey Considerations School/District’s ELL Population Size Languages number dominant languages State and Federal Regulations Funding & Available Resources
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Common Sub-GroupsCommon Sub-Groups Migrant “children of the harvest” highly mobile federally funded programs Refugee often SIFE (students with interrupted formal education) “involuntary” migration Immigrant voluntary (e.g. joining families) economic (better life) documented and undocumented
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Washington State PolicyWashington State Policy State Transitional Bilingual Instructional Program (STBIP) State law “Uses two languages, one of which is English, as a means of instruction to build upon and expand language skills to enable a student to achieve competency in English.” “Teaches concepts and knowledge in the primary language of a student, while the student also acquires English language skills” “Tests students in the subject matter in English” 2012-2013 – only 10% of ELLs in WA received primary language instruction
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Identification and Placement Home language survey * Washington language proficiency test within the first ten days Beginning, Advanced Beginning, Intermediate, or Advanced are eligible for TBIP; transitional level isn’t eligible Parents must be informed of program placement within 30 days
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Program OptionsProgram Options Districts choose a qualified program Program criteria *
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Dual Language (Two-Way Immersion or Two-Way Bilingual Education) Language and academic content integrated ELLs and non-ELLs together Goals High academic achievement First and second language proficiency (including biliteracy) Most effective model “when implemented with fidelity”
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Developmental Bilingual Education (Late-Exit) Enrichment program for ELLs Uses both L1 and English 4 to 6 years Goal High academic achievement Full academic language proficiency in L1 and English Very positive outcomes when well-designed and implemented
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Transitional Bilingual Education (Early Exit) Most common form of bilingual education in U.S. Academic instruction in L1 while students learn English then L1 support is removed Usually 2-3 years Modest outcomes – narrows achievement gap during period of L1 support than scores tend to decline; doesn’t tend to result in academic biliteracy
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Sheltered Instruction or Content-Based ESL Academic subjects taught in English with ELL support strategies “Pure” form SI is with a class of all ELLs, though sometimes can be a mixed ELL/non-ELL class Typical time in program – 2-3 years Modest outcomes; inconclusive research
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Newcomer ProgramNewcomer Program Temporary initial support program Short-term – often 1 semester to 1 year “school within a school” or separate building Goal Core academic knowledge/skills Help with adjustment and acclimation Inconclusive research base
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English as a Second Language Goal: rapid English-language acquisition Pull-out Students are removed from regular classroom instruction for special ESL instruction by an ESL teacher Push-In Special ESL support is provided in regular classroom – e.g. bilingual aide or ESL teacher Great variation in the nature of the support Generally, weakest outcomes in the research
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A Contrasting CaseA Contrasting Case Arizona’s Structured English Immersion Model Goal: “fluent English proficient” in one year Beginning and intermediate ELLs 4 hours of ELD (30 min grammar; 60 min reading; 60 min vocab; 30 min writing) English only http://www.npr.org/2011/01/04/132655441/state- mandated-english-policy-under-fire-in-arizona http://www.npr.org/2011/01/04/132655441/state- mandated-english-policy-under-fire-in-arizona http://www.tcrecord.org/Content.asp?ContentId=16588
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