Title: Language Proficiency Assessment Committee
1LanguageProficiency AssessmentCommittee
Decision-Making Process
for Educators and Parents
of English Language Learners
LPAC Training 2005-2006
2Agenda
- Commissioners Rules
- Bilingual/ESL Program
- LPAC Membership, Roles, and Responsibilities
- Identification, Entry, and Placement
- Exiting/Monitoring
- Annual Review
- Assessment
- Special Education
- Questions
-
3OBJECTIVES
- To understand the rules and regulations for
Bilingual/ESL programs - To explain the procedures for Proficiency
Assessment Committees - To guide LPACs in making decisions regarding LEP
student identification, placement,
reclassification and instruction
4Required Policies 89.1201(a)
- It is the policy of the state that every student
in the state who has a home language other than
English and who is identified as limited English
proficient shall be provided a full opportunity
to participate in a bilingual education or
English as a second language program as required
in the Texas Education Code, Chapter 29,
Subchapter B.
5Commissioners Rules 89.1201 Policy What a
District Must Do
- (1) Identify Students
- (2) Provide Bilingual/ESL Program
- (3) Seek Certified Teachers
- (4) Assess achievement for essential skills and
knowledge to ensure accountability for LEP
students and schools that serve them
6How do we know if we should have a bilingual/ESL
program or an ESL program?
7Required Bilingual Education Programs (89.1205) a
- Each school district which has an enrollment of
20 or more limited English proficient students in
any language classification in the same grade
level district-wide shall offer a bilingual
education program.
8Goal of Bilingual Program (b)
- To ensure that LEP students become competent in
the comprehension, speaking, reading, and
composition of the English language through the
development of literacy and academic skills in
the primary language and English - Emphasize the mastery of English language skills,
as well as mathematics, science, and social
studies, as integral parts of the academic goals
for all students to enable LEP students to
participate equitably in school
9Curriculum (d)
- BE/ESL programs shall be integral parts of the
total school program - Shall use instructional approaches designed to
meet the special needs of LEP students - The basic curriculum content of the program shall
be based on the essential skills and knowledge
required by the state -- TEKS
10Program Content and Design 89.1210
- (a) The program shall provide each LEP student an
opportunity to be enrolled in the required
program at his or her grade level. - (b) The amount of instruction in each language
within the BE program shall be commensurate with
the students level of proficiency in each
language and their level of academic achievement. - (c) Program shall address the affective,
linguistic, and cognitive needs of LEP students.
11Required ESL Programs (d)
- All limited English proficient students for whom
a district is not required to offer a bilingual
education program shall be provided an English as
a second language program regardless of the
students grade levels and home language, and
regardless of the number of such students.
12Goal of English as a Second Language Program (c)
- To enable LEP students to become competent in the
comprehension, speaking, reading, and composition
of the English language through the integrated
use of second language methods - Emphasize the mastery of English language skills,
as well as mathematics, science, and social
studies, as integral parts of the academic goals
for all students to enable LEP students to
participate equitably in school
13ESL (d)
- In Pre-K-8, instruction may vary from the amount
of time according to instruction in English
language arts in the regular program for
nonlimited English proficient students to a
full-time instructional setting utilizing second
language methods. - In high school, the program shall be consistent
with graduation requirements.
14ESL Program (e) 1,2,3
- Shall address the affective, linguistic, and
cognitive needs of LEP students. - Same descriptors as for Bilingual except using
Second Language methods in English
15ESL Strategies(f)
- English as a second language strategies, which
may involve the use of the students home
language, may be provided in any of the courses
or electives required for promotion or graduation
to assist the LEP students to master the
essential knowledge and skills for the required
subject(s).
16Affective (1)
- LEP students shall be provided instruction in
their home language to introduce basic concepts
of the school environment, and instruction both
in their home language and in English which
instills confidence, self-assurance, and a
positive identity with their cultural heritages. - Shall address the history and cultural heritage
associated with both the students home language
and the United States
17Linguistic (2)
- LEP students shall be provided intensive
instruction to develop proficiency in
comprehension, speaking, reading, and composition
of the English language. - The instruction in academic content areas shall
be structured to ensure that the students master
the required essential knowledge and skill and
higher order thinking skills.
18Cognitive (3)
- LEP students shall be provided instruction in
mathematics, science, health, and social studies
both in their home language and in English. - The content area instruction in both languages
shall be structured to ensure that the students
master the required TEKS and higher order
thinking skills in all subjects.
1919 Texas Administrative Code (TAC) Chapter 89.
Adaptations for Special Populations. Subchapter
BB.
- The Commissioners Rules Concerning the State
Plan for Educating Limited English Proficient
Students state that all school districts that are
required to provide bilingual education and/or
English as a Second Language (ESL) programs
establish and operate a Language Proficiency
Assessment Committee (LPAC).
20LPAC Membership
- Language
- Proficiency
- Assessment
- Committee
21Language Proficiency Assessment Committee 89.1220
- (a) Districts shall by local board policy
establish and operate an LPAC committee. - Must have on file LPAC policy and procedures for
the - Selection
- Appointment
- Training
-
22Required Membership of LPACs (89.1220 (b)
- Bilingual Programs
- Required members
- A Campus Administrator
- A Professional Bilingual Educator
- A Professional Transitional Language Educator (a
Bilingual or ESL Teacher) - A Parent of a Limited English Proficient Student
- Recommended additional members
- General education teacher
- Counselor
- Other
23LPAC Membership for ESL (c)
- English as a Second Language
- Required members
- One or more Professional Personnel, including an
ESL Teacher - A Parent of a Limited English Proficient Student
- Recommended additional members
- Administrator
- General education teacher
- Counselor
- Other
24- LPAC Training
- All LPAC members must be trained
- If one of the members does not understand English
(parent), the training should be developed in the
members primary language - At the LPAC meeting, an interpreter should be
available in case the parent is not a fluent
speaker of English - The parent volunteers his/her participation in
the LPAC
25LPAC Parents89.1220. (d,f)
- Shall not be an employee of the district.
- Shall be a parent of a LEP student participating
in the program. - Shall understand that they are acting on behalf
of the district. - Shall observe all laws and rules governing
confidentiality of information concerning
individual students.
26FAMILY EDUCATIONAL RIGHTS AND PRIVACY ACT
- Information discussed in the Language Proficiency
Assessment Committee is considered confidential
information and falls under the guidelines of
FERPA therefore, all members will be asked to
complete a confidentiality statement to be filed
in the district office. - Sign the confidentiality statement at your
district.
27When Does the LPAC Meet?
- Upon initial enrollment- within the students
first 4 weeks (20 school days) - Immediately prior to state assessments to
determine the appropriate assessment option for
each LEP student - At the end of the year for annual review and for
the following years placement decision - As needed to discuss student needs
28Roles Responsibilities of LPAC Members (g)
- During initial enrollment and at the end of each
year - (1) designate the language proficiency level
- (2) designate the level of academic achievement
- (3) designate, subject to parental approval, the
initial instructional placement in the required
program - (4) facilitate the participation of LEP students
in other special programs for which they are
eligible, including GT - (5) classify students as English proficient in
accordance with established criteria and
recommend their exit from the program.
29Other LPAC Roles and Responsibilities
- Maintain records
- Document test data, meetings, decisions, etc.
- Ensure LPAC representation in ARDs
- Communicate with PEIMS
- Establish yourself as an advocate
- (h) Determine appropriate assessment options for
TAKS - Evaluate effectiveness of program
- Conference with parents who deny services
- Monitor the academic progress of exited and
students
30- Identification
- Entry
- Program Placement
31Identifying LEP Students
- Home Language Survey (89.1215)
- Testing
- Evaluate (LPAC Meeting)
- Notify parents, seek permission for program
placement
32Step 1- What starts the Process
HOME LANGUAGE SURVEY 89.1212
- (a) One HLS for students new to the district.
- (a) Must be signed by the students parent or
guardian in grades Pre-K-8, or by the student in
grades 9-12. - (a) The original must be kept in the students
permanent record. - (b) Shall be administered in English and Spanish
and ask the following questions 1. What
language is spoken in your home most of the
time? 2. What language does your child (do you)
speak most of the time? - Must test if HLS indicates a language other than
English
33Step 2- Testing and Classification 89.1225 --
Pre-K- K- 1st
- Oral Language Proficiency Test (TEA approved)
- In a bilingual district, must administer test in
English and in Spanish - OLP tests shall be administered within four weeks
of enrollment
- (c) All oral language tests shall be
administered by professionals or
paraprofessionals who are proficient in the
language of the test and trained in Language
Proficiency testing.
34Step 2- Testing and Classification 89.1225 --
2nd- 12th Grade
- 1) Oral Language Proficiency Test (TEA approved),
if the district is bilingual, it must administer
the test in English and in Spanish AND English
reading and the English language arts sections
from a TEA approved norm-referenced measure, or
another test approved by TEA, unless the students
ability in English is so limited that the
administration of the test is not valid.
- (c) All oral language tests shall be
administered by professionals or
paraprofessionals who are proficient in the
language of the test and trained in Language
Proficiency testing. - OLP tests shall be administered within four weeks
of enrollment.
35STEP 3 The LPAC MeetingClassification and Status
- Pre-K- K- 1st students whose OLPTscore
indicates limited English proficiency are
identified as LEP.
36STEP 3 The LPAC MeetingClassification and Status
- Grades 2-12 students are identified LEP if their
OLPT score indicates limited English proficiency - If they score below the 40th percentile on the
reading and language arts sub-test of a
state-approved norm-referenced standardized
achievement test even if their OLPT score
indicates Fluent English Speaker (FES)
37STEP 3 The LPAC MeetingClassification and
Status Continued
- The Committee.
- 1) Reviews all necessary information on each
student with limited English proficiency,
including test data from Oral and Written
Language Proficiency Tests, as well as,
achievement tests - 2) Recommends appropriate program placement
and makes suggestions for accommodation - 3) Seeks written parental approval/explains
benefits - 4) Upon parent denial, the district shall
contact the parent, explain benefits, and
document outcomes
38Parental Rights
- Parents notification includes information
- regarding the English proficiency level of the
student and a description of the program, as well
as, the benefits of the program. - These benefits are to be described on each parent
notification form and supplemented through
brochures or other publications in the community. - Bilingual/ESL program brochures are available in
English and Spanish through the Texas Education
Agency at www.tea.state.tx.us
39LPAC responsibilities include
- Ensuring that documentation is complete,
forms/letters are signed and dated. - Recognizing that recommendations for
curriculum/instruction accommodations and
intervention strategies are not only beneficial,
but vital to individual students classroom
performance.
40Program Exit
- (h) For exit from a BE or ESL program, a student
may be classified as English proficient at the
end of the school year in which a student would
be able to participate equally in a regular, all
English, instructional program.
41The LPAC Meeting Classification and Status
- To exit a student from the program, the student
must meet the following criteria - 1) Oral English proficiency AND
- Written English proficiency
- 2) Meeting state performance standards for the
English language state criterion referenced test
(TAKS), OR scores at or above the 40 in
reading/language arts on a TEA approved
norm-referenced test. - In prekindergarten through grade one, a student
MAY NOT be exited-- 89.1225(h-j)
42Exit and Monitoring
- All exited students are reclassified in PEIMS as
non-LEP. These students shall be monitored for
academic success for two consecutive years. - During the monitoring period, any student not
successful in the regular curriculum must be
reviewed by the LPAC and can be recommended for - Reentry (if problems are due to language) and/or
- Compensatory/accelerated programs
- Special language programs
43Monitoring documentation
- Grade reports
- Pass/fail slips submitted frequently by
content-area teachers - Discipline referrals
- Attendance history
- TAKS
- Other
44- Yearly Reviews
- at the end of each school year, the LPAC shall
review all pertinent information on all LEP
students including students with parental denial,
and students on monitor status.
45Important Reminder
- The use of ESL strategies shall not impede the
awarding of credit toward meeting promotion or
graduation requirements. -- 89.1210(f)
46What to Review
- The progress of the student with limited English
proficiency at the end of each year to determine
future placement. - For end of the year LPACs, the committee monitors
and documents the progress of students who have
been exited out of the program for two
consecutive years. - The appropriateness of an extended program beyond
the regular school year.
47The LPAC MeetingStudent Achievement and
Development
- The Committee.
- Reviews all necessary information on each student
regarding student attainment of - Linguistic skills based on teacher report, OLPT,
anecdotal data - Cognitive skills based on teacher report, report
cards, and anecdotal data - Affective attainment based on teacher report and
anecdotal data
48Important Reminder
- Parental notification of yearly review and new
year placement/continuation, or exit must be
evident in student folders. - Do not ask for parental approval each year. Only
seek parental approval at initial placement.
49Permanent Record
- Identification of student as LEP
- Level of language proficiency
- Recommendation of program placement
- Parent approval/denial
- Date of entry into the program
- TAKS info
- RPTE Results
- TELPAS Results
- Date of exit/parent notification
- Results of academic monitoring
50The State Assessment Program
- Refer to updated LPAC Manual from TEA.
- 3 year exemptions are allowed from 3rd-10th
grades if students meet the requirements in the
LPAC Assessment Manual - EXIT level/one-time postponement only.
51General Exemption CriteriaLEP Students in
grades 3-10 must meet all five general criteria
before an LPAC may consider the need for a LEP
Exemption from TAKS.
- LEP Status- The student is identified as LEP, as
defined by state law in Section 29.052 of the
Texas Education Code. - Program Participation- The student is in a
state-approved bilingual or English as a second
language (ESL) program.
- TAKS Immigrant Status- At some point in his or
her history, the student has resided outside the
50 U.S. states for at least 2 consecutive years. - Years In U.S. Schools - The student is in his or
her first three school years of enrollment in
U.S. schools. - RPTE Rating- The student has not yet received a
rating of advanced or advanced high on RPTE.
52Special Education and ARDs
- LPAC member shall serve as ARD member --
89.12309b
53www.tea.state.tx.us
- It is highly advisable that LPAC training/
meetings occur regularly and frequently. All
LPAC members shall fulfill the required duties
according to Texas Administrative CodeANDshould
remain updated and current on state agency rules
and guidelines for limited English proficient
students. (especially during/after state
legislative sessions!)
54Tips for Successful Programs
- Train front office staff about the importance of
the HLS and procedure for notification of a
language other than English - Establish a system to process LEP paperwork from
HLS to PEIMS - Locate textbooks in Spanish and distribute to
teachers - Read and follow Chapter 89
- Utilize ELLEP database
55Tips for Successful Programs Continued
- Join Region 13 Bilingual/ESL listserv
- Distribute a list of LEP students and their
language levels to ALL teachers - Send communications in language of parents
- Create a welcome packet for parents and conduct
periodic information meetings in native language - Highlight Bilingual/ESL programs
- Label entrance, hallways, offices, etc. in
languages of your students
56Questions????
- Contact
- Adelita Acosta at 919-5480
- adelita.acosta_at_esc13.txed.net
- Dr. Jennifer Holling at 919-5286
- Jennifer.holling_at_esc13.txed.net
- Janet OKeeffe at 919.5333
- Janet.okeeffe_at_esc13.txed.net