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The Larger Public Policy Debate

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Policy Page. Research Base for Language Minority Education ... Policy Page. The K-12 Timeline. for Bilingual Learners Under 227 ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Larger Public Policy Debate


1
The Larger Public Policy Debate
  • Language Policy
  • Education Policy
  • Human and civil rights
  • Intergroup competition and conflict
  • Status quo vs. progress
  • Defining global citizenship in a democratic
    society

2
Language Policy
  • Treatment of domestic foreigners
  • Assimilation vs. acculturation
  • De jure and de facto segregation of ethnic
    minorities
  • National unity vs. pluralism
  • Democratic processes and inclusion for shared
    decision making

3
Social Dominance Theory Patterns of Prejudice
  • Provides a paradigm for understanding the
    bilingual education debate
  • Intergroup relationships of power
  • Images of ingroup and outgroup
  • Nature of conflict
  • Prejudice formation as a strategy in group
    conflicts over power and dominance

4
Mobilization for ConflictChallenged Dominance
  • Ingroup coalesces to fend off a perceived threat
    to cultural hegemony
  • Ingroup rationalizes attacks on outgroup through
    derogation and negative stereotypes, such as the
    bilingual industrial complex

5
Education Policy
  • Theoretical foundations and knowledge-base of
    program models
  • Allocation of personel and material resources
  • Support for program implementation
  • Acountability and assessment
  • Educational equity and social justice

6
Research Base for Language Minority Education
  • More than 30 years of accumulated research on
    effective schooling practices for language
    minority students (August Hakuta, 1997)
  • Practical experience and expertise in design of
    pedagogically sound models factors in effective
    program implementation

7
Academic Needs of L2/Bilingual Learners
8
The K-12 Timeline for Monolingual English
Speakers
  • 5 years of language learning before beginning
    formal literacy instruction
  • 3-5 years allocated for acquisition of literacy
    skills
  • Content learning all along, with emphasis
    shifting to content instruction in grade 4 and
    beyond

9
False Assumptions
  • A second language is acquired quickly and easily
    when the L2 learner is not allowed to depend on
    his or her first language
  • Oral proficiency in L2 is the basis for further
    learning. Therefore, once L2 oral proficiency is
    attained the bilingual advances academically like
    a monolingual learner.
  • Content knowledge is stored and retrieved in the
    language in which it was learned.

10
The K-12 Timelinefor Bilingual Learners Under
227
  • One year of intensive English language learning
  • Literacy instruction on the basis of one year of
    language development
  • Content learning to follow oral English language
    acquisition with an anticipated delay of 2-4
    years
  • Subsequent learning without adjustments for
    literacy and content delays

11
Faulty Program ModelsBased on False Assumptions
  • No effort to utilize and build on L2 learners L1
    language proficiency
  • Focus on short-term intensive L2 language
    instruction
  • Decontextualized L2 language instruction
  • L2 language instruction devoid of literacy and
    content instructional components
  • Exaggerated expectations for rapid L2 acquisition
    and low expectations for mastery of literacy and
    content knowledge

12
Negative Consequences for Language Minority
Students
  • Increased levels of in-grade retention, which in
    turn lead to a two-times greater probability of
    dropping out of school
  • Low levels of literacy and content knowledge that
    slow students academic progress in high school
    sufficient to compete for opportunities in higher
    education

13
Normal Distribution CurveA Band of Scores
68
95
99
0
-1?
1?
-2?
-3?
2?
3?
MEAN
? Standard Deviation
14
Normal Distribution CurveTwo Populations of
Students
NES
LEP
34 NPR
LEPLimited English Proficient NESNative English
Speakers
15
Impact of Proposed Education Policies
  • Lowered criteria and non-uniform redesignation
    criteria lead to under-serving language minority
    students in literacy and content learning
  • High school graduation exit exam to be
    implemented in AY 2002 will further penalize and
    disadvantage students who began school classified
    as LEP

16
School Environment Factors in Effective Language
Minority Schooling
  • A supportive school-wide environment in which
    students language and culture are valued
  • A customized learning environment with special
    attention to linguistic factors in students
    academic achievement
  • Some use of students native language and culture
    in instruction
  • High levels of parental involvement and
    parental/community support for the program

17
Instructional Factors in Effective Language
Minority Schooling
  • A balanced and clearly articulated curriculum
    that incorporates both basic and higher- order
    thinking skills
  • Explicit basic skills instruction with
    opportunities for practice and use of strategies
    to enhance understanding
  • Highly qualified teachers who receive ongoing
    staff development and support
  • Opportunities for student-directed activities
  • Systematic student assessment and program
    evaluation

18
Proposition 227 is a Public Policy Failure
  • 227 fails to provide solutions to challenges of
    cultural integration of language minorities
  • 227 fails to improve the quality of education or
    educational equity to language minorities
  • 227 has long-term negative effects on LM
    education that will be very difficult to reverse
    once the cause-effect relationships become obvious

19
(No Transcript)
20
Range of Public OpinionSOUND POLICY MAKING
HIGH
INFORMATION
(Wisdom)
U - I
I - I INFORMED INVESTED
INVESTMENT
I - U
U - U
LOW
21
Range of Public OpinionPOOR POLICY MAKING
HIGH
INFORMATION
(Wisdom)
I - I
U - I
U - U UNINFORMED UNINVESTED
INVESTMENT
I - U
LOW
22
Long-Term Detrimental Effects of Language
Restrictionist Policy
  • Short-term and long-range impact on the teaching
    force
  • Pedagogically unsound program model and
    implementation mandates resulting in incoherent
    and ineffective curricula
  • Increased in-grade retention resulting in
    decreased academic engagement and higher dropout
    rates
  • Rigid policies that prevent local districts
    adaptations to meet particular characteristics
    and needs of their diverse populations

23
Patterns of Choice in Language Minority
Programs(García, 2000)
  • 5 of Californias school districts had
    structured English immersion (SEI) programs
    before 227
  • 21 eliminated their bilingual program
  • 32 maintained their bilingual program
  • 42 provided choice to parents and schools to
    have SEI or bilingual programs
  • LM program decisions based on ideology of
    principals teachers, stability duration of
    previously implemented bilingual programs, and
    the availability of bilingual program expertise
    (BCLAD teachers administrators)

24
Proposition 227s Impact on the California
Teaching Force
  • 32 fewer bilingual credentialed teachers are
    teaching in classrooms assignments where they are
    using their BCLAD credential after 227 passed in
    1998
  • A 52 decline in the number of teacher candidates
    seeking a BCLAD credential
  • Underutilization of bilingual teachers in
    assignments with beginning ELL students where
    they are prohibited from using L1 as a medium of
    instruction
  • Increased demands on monolingual CLAD teachers
    for which they are ill-equipped by lack of
    linguistic and pedagogical skills
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