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New Research: Children of Immigrants Benefit from Integrated Support

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Last week, in which I explained one of the Dual Language Learners National Work Group鈥檚 primary challenges:

Now, as has usually been the case, our education debates are dominated by two considerations: race and class. This is, perhaps, as it should be. Those are traditional divides in this country. They are major factors in determining how children are treated in school and in society. And yet, in a moment when nearly one in three Head Start participants is a dual language learner, it seems as though we could stand to update our conversations about equity鈥.Too often, these kids are not included 鈥 and their unique linguistic and academic needs are almost never front and center in these debates.

This general dynamic means that effective educational responses to race and class inequities are usually better-researched and more widely-known than strategies aimed at closing language-driven equity gaps. This is why our team so about (DLLs).

And yet, as I noted in the same speech, 鈥淒LLs are sometimes implicitly included in these broader conversations about justice and educational equity鈥imply because language is a proxy for those other factors: race and class.鈥 That is, there鈥檚 between all of these groups: DLL children, children of immigrants, children of color, and low-income children. As such, efforts to improve educational opportunities and outcomes for any of these groups will be most effective if they can address the intersection of inequities driven by language, race, class, and immigrant generation.

That鈥檚 why a just-published study helmed by Boston College professor Eric Dearing, 鈥溾, is particularly useful. (Note: the study .)

The research tested the effects of a developmental support program, , on children of immigrants in high-poverty Boston schools. begins with an evaluation of their 鈥渁cademic, social-emotional, family, and physical well-being.鈥 This evaluation is then used to plan a targeted series of school- and community-based supports tailored to meet each child鈥檚 specific needs. The scope of this conversation is not limited to education; it includes health services, transportation access, family resources, and the student鈥檚 other available assets and pressing challenges. Program officials revisit the plan annually with teachers and families to check progress and adjust the slate of interventions in use. Students with particularly 鈥渋ntensive needs鈥 receive more comprehensive reviews 鈥 and ongoing support from program officials.

In a way, the program echoes the granular, data-driven approach used to develop Individualized Education Programs (IEPs) for students eligible for special education services. That said, IEPs customarily identify mostly school- or district-based resources for meeting each student鈥檚 needs. By linking school and community resources, the City Connects program actually expands on the individualized approach.

Just under 94 percent of the students were children of color and around 68 percent were formally recognized as dual language learners by the state

The study compared the outcomes of 292 children participating in the program with 375 children of immigrants who, for a variety of reasons, did not receive the program鈥檚 supports. (Note: the researchers implemented a series of statistical controls to account for the possibility that these two groups of children may have differed in ways other than receiving/not receiving the City Connects program.)

As I suggested above, the children of immigrants in the program fell into a number of other traditionally-underserved categories in American education. Nearly 80 percent came from families living at or below 125 percent of the federal poverty line, and an additional 9 percent came from families living at or below 185 percent of the federal poverty line (that is, nearly 90 percent of students studied qualified for free or reduced-price lunch subsidies from the federal government). Just under 94 percent of the students were children of color and around 68 percent were formally recognized as dual language learners by the state of Massachusetts. (Note: student demographics in the group that did not receive the program were similar, though not perfectly identical on several variables.) Students鈥 math and reading achievement was measured by their performance on the in fifth grade.

The results were encouraging. Children of immigrants who received the targeted supports during their elementary school years showed statistically significant improvements in math achievement after one year. Students鈥 math achievement continued improving steadily with ensuing years of support. Reading achievement also improved, but it took two years before these gains were statistically linked to the City Connects program. Interestingly, the researchers write, City Connects 鈥渨as associated with more than a 75% reduction in the math achievement gap and more than a 50% reduction in the reading achievement gap between鈥 DLL and non-DLL children of immigrants.

Viewed through another lens, however, these results are actually聽sobering. That is, while the City Connects program appears to be linked to higher achievement for children of immigrants, it鈥檚 important to consider its depth and breadth. It鈥檚 tempting to think of educational inequities in snake oil terms 鈥 this curriculum or that professional development or these key teacher skills will close the achievement gap 鈥 but most policies and practices can鈥檛 deliver that sort of effect. City Connects appears to considerably help children of immigrants and DLLs achieve, but it involves staff and resource support from beyond schools, intensive use and analysis of data on a student-by-student basis, regular oversight of these plans, coordination of school- and community-based services across a number of sectors, and much more. This is not an easy program for a district to invest in, idly implement, and subsequently ignore.

In other words, the strong early returns from such a program are exciting 鈥 but also serve as an echo of that I mentioned in : work to reduce educational inequity is never simple. It requires steady, unflagging, comprehensive effort.

This post is part of 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Dual Language Learners National Work Group. . To subscribe to the biweekly newsletter, , enter your contact information, and select 鈥淓ducation Policy.鈥

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Conor P. Williams
New Research: Children of Immigrants Benefit from Integrated Support