Research on Making Policy Reforms Work for Dual Language Learners
It’s one thing to get the policies right for supporting dual language learners. It’s quite another to implement those policies well.
It’s one thing to get the policies right for supporting dual language learners. It’s quite another to implement those policies well.
Our new report calls for policies that are aimed at improving the quality of interactions between teachers and children.
As exhausting as they can be, today’s children are a critical economic resource.
The last few years have been particularly good ones for advocates of greater investments in early education access.
While there’s increasing evidence that DLLs follow unique patterns of linguistic development, these do not constitute deficits.
There’s a common assumption lurking in discussions about education reform: Instruction in basic skills is somehow in tension with enrichment
The needs of dual language learners rarely get a foothold in education debates.
And now there’s evidence that the state—and New York City—are preparing to lead on another element of education policy.
The de Blasio administration deserves credit for including an extra emphasis on dual language learners as part of its progress reports.
Why is pre-K such an easier sell?