麻豆果冻传媒

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LEAP-ing from Legislation to Implementation for Minnesota鈥檚 Dual Language Learners

New paper explores the successes and challenges of Minnesota's recent DLL reforms.

Minnesota, Pluralism on the Prairie

By some counts, the Midwest has been in one or the other version of 鈥渄ecline鈥 for. From Pittsburgh to the plains, the region鈥檚 mettle has corroded in the face of. Worst of all, in many places, the Rust Belt鈥檚 economic struggles have led to lagging population growth 鈥 and even declines 鈥 as struggling families leave the region in search of opportunity. Shrinking labor pools mean fewer taxpayers, which only contributes further to the Midwest鈥檚 flagging economic fortunes.

To reverse that spiral and reinvent its economy, . That鈥檚 why immigrant attraction, integration, education, and retention efforts have become so critical for states across the region.

Minnesota is uniquely blessed in this regard. The state is growing faster than the rest of the Midwest, largely because it has been able to attract immigrants: this century, of the state鈥檚 population growth is due to new foreign-born residents. This is an outstanding demographic and economic advantage, provided that the state recognizes it as such. Even more encouraging: these new Minnesotans are establishing their own families..

In a paper published today, , I explore Minnesota鈥檚 recent efforts to make the most of the considerable energy and abilities of their state鈥檚 new racially, ethnically, and linguistically diverse student body.

These trends are driving new racial, ethnic, cultural, and linguistic pluralism in Minnesota鈥檚 schools. Around 15 percent of students speak a language other than English at home and 7 percent are formally classified as DLLs. The state reports that its DLL population is three times larger than it was in the mid-1990s. Nearly one-quarter of Minneapolis Public Schools students and one-third of St. Paul Public Schools students are DLLs鈥innesota鈥檚 immigration demographics lead to unique linguistic diversity. In the 2013鈥14 school year, one in three Hmong-speaking DLLs in American schools was enrolled in Minnesota. The state also boasted approximately one in three of the Somali-speaking DLLs in the U.S. In sum, Minnesota鈥檚 demographic patterns are not just changing how the state鈥檚 schools look鈥攖hey are changing how they sound.

In 2014, Minnesota鈥檚 state legislature passed the Learning English for Academic Proficiency and Success Act, or LEAPS. The law established a series of state DLL mandates. It required districts to begin monitoring DLLs鈥 native language abilities, the state鈥檚 teacher licensure board to establish new DLL-related criteria for licensure applicants, teacher training programs to include DLLs鈥 linguistic development as a discrete part of their curricula, and much more.

The law鈥檚 co-authors, Representative Carlos Mariani Rosa and Sen. Patricia Torres Ray, describe LEAPS鈥 passage as the result of political opportunism, luck, and grassroots outreach. But if LEAPS was a political breakthrough codifying important state priorities for Minnesota DLLs, it is also just the first of many steps towards changing how these students are educated in the state. In , I explore the current state of 鈥 and apparent prospects for 鈥 LEAPS implementation.

As is often the case in policymaking, there is considerable distance between LEAPS鈥 priorities and the ensuing series of steps (and resources) it takes to make those priorities matter for children鈥╥n classrooms. For instance, the LEAPS Act asks 鈥╰he board to require that teachers renewing their licenses have 鈥渇urther preparation in English language development and specially designed content instruction in English for English learners.鈥 Nearly a year after LEAPS became law, the Minnesota Board of Teaching published their version of the new requirement, noting that, since the state鈥檚 鈥渆lectronic reporting system鈥 for tracking teachers鈥 in-service training was not set up to track professional development related to DLLs, renewing candidates would be required to provide 鈥渢heir own assessment of professional growth鈥 in these areas. It will not be clear for some years whether this approach will be sufficiently consequential to ensure that teachers continue to grow new expertise for helping DLLs succeed.

While Minnesota policymakers and educators have much to learn from their own experience with LEAPS, their example is also instructive for leaders in other states. In , I identify key lessons for states eager to follow Minnesota鈥檚 path 鈥 while also avoiding some of its pitfalls.

Minnesota鈥檚 new immigrants and their children will play a key role in the state鈥檚 future. Minnesota鈥檚 schools have only a short window in the present to help make their prospects as bright as possible. The state is fortunate to have the LEAPS Act on the books, but laws are only as good as their implementation. If LEAPS is going to shift how schools, communities, and the state treat DLLs, a host of education leaders will need to take further steps to put the law fully into place.

This post was written by Conor P. Williams, founder of the Dual Language Learners National Work Group. You can find him on Twitter at . Click here for more information on this team鈥檚 work. To subscribe to the biweekly newsletter, click here, enter your contact information, and select 鈥淒LL National Work Group Newsletter.鈥

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Conor P. Williams

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LEAP-ing from Legislation to Implementation for Minnesota鈥檚 Dual Language Learners