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Contours of the Field: Dual Language Learners and Immigration

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Note: this is the first in a series of posts explaining the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine鈥檚 (NASEM) recent report on the education of dual language learners (DLLs) and English Learners (ELs),聽. To read 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 coverage of the report鈥檚 publication,聽click here. This series is designed to serve as a companion document to the report. Each post will explore how one of the report鈥檚 key themes relates to DLLs/ELs鈥 success at school.聽Click here to read the second post.

A note on terminology: the NASEM report covers the full range of students who speak a non-English language at home. It uses 鈥渄ual language learners鈥 to refer to students five years old or younger, as these students begin learning English before they have reached basic proficiency in their home languages. It uses 鈥淓nglish learners鈥 to refer to English-learning students 5鈥21 years old. Finally, it uses 鈥淒LLs/ELs鈥 to refer to language learning students from 0鈥21 years old. Our blog series follows this convention.聽

The relationship between DLLs/ELs and immigration is complicated. Immigration rates unquestionably contribute to the numbers of DLLs/ELs in U.S. schools. Many immigrants to the United States speak a language other than English as their native tongue, so many immigrant children are DLLs/ELs. However, it is also the case that, as the NASEM report notes, 鈥淭he majority of children in the U.S. EL population are born in the United States and are birthright citizens鈥 (3-9). This is particularly true for the youngest cohorts of ELs, as indicated in this chart from the report (3-9):

In other words, many DLLs/ELs are simultaneously children of immigrants and native-born American citizens. These two identities intersect with one another to influence DLLs/ELs鈥 educational experiences in complex ways that vary according to a diverse set of factors.

For instance, as the report notes, 鈥渃hildren in immigrant families are more likely than their counterparts with U.S.-born parents to grow up in economically disadvantaged circumstances…fully 65 percent of all ELs meet the threshold for free or reduced-price school lunches, compared with 36 percent of non-ELs鈥 (3-14鈥15). Further, DLLs/ELs 鈥渁re more likely to live in families in the lowest-income quintiles鈥 (3-14). In addition, compared to non-EL peers, DLLs/ELs are more likely to have parents who have not completed high school. Finally, the controversial and uncertain politics of immigration in the United States often contribute significant stress to DLLs/ELs鈥 families, which can damage their relationships with school and become an obstacle to academic success.

But averages do not capture the range of experiences that DLLs/ELs have in their families, communities, and schools. Their families frequently have diverse cultural and linguistic backgrounds, levels of formal parental education, religious affiliations, and socioeconomic statuses. Furthermore, they arrive and live in an array of communities with different attitudes towards immigration in general and linguistic diversity in particular.

These diverse factors intersect to produce a wide range of DLLs/ELs experiences in U.S. society. This can make generalizations about what DLLs/ELs need from public institutions 鈥 including schools 鈥 more difficult. For an example, consider variations between different Vietnamese immigrant families. These are, as the report puts it, 鈥渁 bifurcated group: a significant portion are poorly educated and have not graduated from high school, and another significant portion are highly educated and have attained at least a college degree鈥 (3-26). Children from each of these portions of the group are likely to have different levels of exposure to English and Vietnamese, and those differences are likely to influence their vocabulary and early language development.

This is just one example, of course. There is some evidence that DLLs/ELs with different native languages develop their English proficiency in different ways 鈥 DLLs/ELs who speak Spanish at home may develop their bilingualism differently than DLLs/ELs who speak Hmong at home, for instance. There is some evidence that a DLL/EL鈥檚 native language (and his or her levels of native language proficiency) can have a significant influence on their academic trajectories and rate of English acquisition in various instructional models, such as bilingual education or English as a Second Language programs.

All children have unique educational strengths and needs, but the diversity of immigrant and DLLs/ELs experiences can pose challenges for teachers, administrators, and policymakers. Current data sources can make it even more difficult to get a clear view of different groups of children in U.S. schools. For instance, national data on DLLs/ELs is often an aggregation of state data on the number of DLLs/ELs in their schools, but states use different assessments and set different benchmarks for identifying DLLs/ELs. Census data relies on a variety of different national surveys to provide a view of American households where English is spoken (to varying degrees).

Unsurprisingly, these different data sources can present a confusing picture of demographic trends for American DLLs/ELs and children of immigrants. The NASEM report concludes that 鈥淸the] limitations of current data sources compromise the capacity to provide a more comprehensive description of the population鈥檚 characteristics鈥 (3-28鈥9). In response, it recommends better federal guidance on assessments for DLLs/ELs and calls for the development of 鈥渁 common definition鈥 of the group (13-3 and 13-7). Ideally, these moves could help national policymakers get a clearer picture of the nation鈥檚 DLL/EL population, allow researchers to better evaluate the efficacy of different DLL/EL instructional practices and policies, and inform educators鈥 pedagogical approaches.

Further Reading from 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Dual Language Learners National Work Group:


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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Contours of the Field: Dual Language Learners and Immigration