Amaya Garcia
Director, PreK-12 Research and Practice
In a recent in The Atlantic, Amanda Ripley wondered why students have such little power in American education. Ripley covered a group of students in Kentucky who are attempting to persuade state lawmakers to give local school boards the option of including students on hiring committees used to select superintendents. After much effort the students were able to get their state legislators to pass their amendment only to be thwarted at the last minute by that insatiable old beast鈥攑olitics.
School leaders and educators often bemoan the fact that most education policies are created in a vacuum, sealed off from knowledge of the day-to-day realities of schools. Students have a similarly weak voice in influencing the policies that they must live with every day.
It鈥檚 worth keeping that core dynamic in mind when thinking about Proposition 203, Arizona鈥檚 English-only mandate. Proposition 203 was passed in 2000 and was an offshoot of the successful 鈥淓nglish for the children鈥 campaign in California (also known as , which completely dismantled bilingual education in the state). Arizona鈥檚 interpretation and implementation of Proposition 203 has given it the dubious distinction of being 聽the in the country.
Is it good for students? Well, the Structured English Immersion (SEI) program used in the state consists of a daily 4-hour block of English instruction focused on dual language learners鈥 (DLLs鈥) development of English grammar, vocabulary, reading and writing 鈥 but with no attention to content. Students are also expected to exit the program within one year 鈥 an expectation that runs contrary to suggesting that it takes at least 3-5 years to develop basic social English proficiency and 4-7 years to develop strong academic English.
The backstory behind the program鈥檚 design is a bit shady. Its origins lie in the fact that the early implementation of Proposition 203 was uneven, which spurred state legislators in 2006 to pass . That law codified the primacy 聽of English immersion for all language learners. 聽an English Language Learner (ELL) Task Force responsible for designing a cost-effective, research-based program that included a minimum of four hours of English language instruction.
The SEI program was developed by a consultant who (according to one source) helped numerous schools and districts design English immersion programs. However, in a 2012 , Mary Martinez-Wenzl, Karla P茅rez and Patricia G谩ndara called into question the consultant鈥檚 professional expertise. They note that the research summary prepared for the ELL Task force was not comprehensive – by the consultant鈥檚 own admission it was 鈥渕erely a search for supporting research鈥 – and did not include any 鈥渞esearch [on time on task] related to English learners.鈥 As Martinez-Wenzl, P茅rez and G谩ndara rightly point out, 鈥淕iven that the program commits most of the school day to extended time on task, and holds that this will result in rapid reclassification to English proficiency normally within one year, the lack of evidence is problematic.鈥
Essentially, the program was developed to adhere to the mandates of state laws rather than to provide students with an effective and proven program of English language instruction.
Perhaps not surprisingly, research on the impacts of SEI on Arizona鈥檚 DLL and ELL students has not documented significant gains in academic achievement or narrowing of the achievement gap. Lillie, Markos, Arias and Wiley鈥檚 of the implementation of SEI in five school districts found that the majority of students did not exit the program in one year. 鈥淎lmost every educator noted that students took more than a year and most likely three or four years to exit the program鈥 鈥 and that failure to exit within one year caused students to be behind in their high school graduation requirements due to missing out on necessary content. Moreover, SEI has led to and linguistic isolation of Latino and DLL/ELL students.
In an 聽last month, Karen Lillie attempts to give a voice to the 鈥渓ost generation鈥 of students educated in Arizona鈥檚 SEI program. She surveyed 1,322 ELL and reclassified (RC) middle school students about their perspectives of their English Language Development (ELD) classes. The majority of these students had gone to school in the U.S. for more than seven years. 麻豆果冻传媒 50 percent considered Spanish to be their first language, with a third reporting both English and Spanish as their joint first languages. Almost聽75 percent of students reported having participated in the SEI program for more than one year. While most of the ELL and RC students stated they were happy to learn English, their satisfaction with the SEI program decreased the longer they were enrolled.
Lillie draws out several implications from her research but here鈥檚 the bottom line: Arizona should change its model to better align with 鈥渨hat sheltered instruction really is: one where content is taught in conjunction with language learning so as to keep [ELLs] academically enriched along with their native-English-speaking peers.鈥
A recent by Eric Johnson and David Cassels Johnson shows just how distant Arizona鈥檚 policies are from students鈥 experiences. The authors explore how the state鈥檚 SEI model and Proposition 203 have shifted school leaders and educators鈥 mind frames and approaches to working with language learners. One telling quote comes from a school principal in Arizona, 鈥淲hen you don鈥檛 have a language, which many of our kids that are coming into us, they don鈥檛 have a language, there is nothing to build on.鈥 Another teacher opined “that the majority of the students at his school 鈥榳ere just fodder for factories鈥 and 鈥榠t is a shame that teachers should be expected to even waste their time on them.鈥欌 These quotes illustrate a shocking deficit perspective that often follows Arizona language learners through their years at school.
Have Arizona students embraced the 鈥渉ome language as a problem鈥 paradigm? Johnson and Johnson interviewed 30 middle school students and collected journal entries from an additional 10 students. They found that many of these students had internalized the notion that English was the language of power and a tool to help 鈥渋mprove your position in life.鈥 Here were one student鈥檚 words: 鈥淢y brother 鈥 is lokey [lucky] because he was born in the USA. I was born in Mexico my life there was hard. Here I couldn鈥檛 do my work in Spanish, but I tried. If my brother, Aldo was to go only on english schools I think he would have a better life then me.鈥 Johnson and Johnson argue that this student鈥檚 words mirror the core message in Arizona鈥檚 education discourse: English drives you forward and other languages hold you back.
Arizona鈥檚 current policies and practices for educating DLL and ELL students are clearly insufficient. The question is whether state policymakers will take notice of the on the harmful effects of their current SEI model and take necessary action to ensure future generations of dual language learners are not lost. Recent initiatives in and are changing the outdated 鈥渓anguage as a problem鈥 paradigm towards a . Hopefully, Arizona will follow suit.
Note: This post is part of 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Dual Language Learners National Work Group. for more information on this team鈥檚 work.“