Drawing distinctions between English-learners who struggle with the language and those who have learning disabilities is difficult.
Educating English-learners or students with disabilities often requires special training and a firm grasp of sometimes complex federal policy. The prospect of identifying and supporting dual-identified students鈥攚ho are eligible for extra support for both English-language acquisition and learning with a disability鈥攐ften leaves teachers feeling underprepared and overwhelmed.
It鈥檚 a refrain that researchers from New America, a Washington-based think tank, heard repeatedly while interviewing teachers across the country as part of their work centered on improving educational access, quality, and outcomes for English-learners.
A new brief from New America, , offers a series of recommendations to help educators 鈥渕ore accurately identify ELs with disabilities and provide appropriate instructional services鈥 by addressing gaps in educator knowledge, and inherent weaknesses in student referral strategies and assessment tools.
鈥淒elivering appropriate services and supports for students with disabilities from monolingual, English-speaking families, is by itself, a complex challenge for schools,鈥 the report authors write. 鈥淭he work of appropriately identifying and serving students becomes all the more complicated when a student is learning across multiple languages.鈥
New America鈥檚 recommendations call on schools to:
- provide clear policy guidance on how to identify English-leaners in need of special education services; (.)
- train educators to identify and support the 鈥榙ual-identified鈥 students; (It鈥檚 a blind spot in teacher professional development.)
- improve evaluation and assessment practices; (.) and
- support a child鈥檚 home language. .)
The paper also addresses trends in over- and under-identification of English-learners with disabilities, noting that in the years before 3rd grade, English-learners are generally under-identified but tend to be over-identified in middle and high school.
The New America brief is the latest in a series of research and policy papers that address the education of English-learners with disabilities.
A report from the National Center on Educational Outcomes takes a national look at which states have manuals on and finds that many don鈥檛 have one. California, the state with the nation鈥檚 largest English-learner population, recently released its .
The Regional Educational Laboratory Northeast & Islands produced a two-page guide that offers guidance to determine whether a student鈥檚 in-school struggles stem from their .
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Image Credit: New America