On January 21, 1974, in the case of Lau v. Nichols, the United States Supreme Court unanimously decided that the lack of supplemental language instruction in public schools for students with limited English proficiency violated the Civil Rights Act of 1964. Today, English learners (ELs) represent 10 percent of the total K-12 population in the United States, a 4.8 million number that continues to increase in both size and diversity. To meet the growing demographics of ELs, many of the challenges confronting school districts today aim at ensuring equity and excellence for this special population.
English Language Learners, Culturally and Linguistically Diverse Students, Emergent Bilinguals, Multilingual Learners - these are terms that we may use to describe learners who speak a language other than English at home. Our ELs are a diverse group of students, with varying linguistic, academic, and social-emotional needs. While Spanish is the most widely spoken language (77.1 percent), there is a wide variety of native languages among ELs. Consider the data shown in the table below:
Our ELs may have been born in their home country or in the United States. They may have had little formal schooling or have experienced an interrupted education. Some ELs will have limited knowledge of English, while others will have high levels of social language skills in English and appear native-like in conversations. All ELs, regardless of their proficiency with conversational English, require a rigorous, integrated curriculum with targeted language instruction. In order to promptly advance their English language development and obtain academic growth and achievement, ELs need exposure to grade-level content and advanced placements that focus on academic language instruction in all four language domains: speaking, writing, reading, and listening.
Often as educators we have limited control over our schools’ demographics and our classroom rosters, but there are simple, yet powerful ways we can immediately support our ELs in the classroom. Guiding our work are the Five Essentials of School Improvement (Bryk et al., 2012):
These Essentials inform the work of districts and schools. They serve as a roadmap for creating schools that demonstrate value for all students by ensuring that teachers and staff are prepared to educate their learners through challenging and focused learning opportunities supported with language instruction in a parent-school-community partnership. By fostering relationships and valuing students and communities through our own self-reflection and the language we choose, we can build an inclusive and joyful learning environment. Over the years, teachers, school leaders, colleagues, and even individuals outside of education have posed questions around how to best support ELs. If you, too, are curious, you are in good company.