Struggles and Challenges of English Language Learners
English language learners face a unique set of challenges within
their educational experience. Bilingual students have a wealth of knowledge and
skills that often goes unrecognized and underdeveloped in English-centered
education settings. ELLs can struggle with academic reading and writing
according to standardized test scores and other types of formative assessments
and fall short of the levels of their English-only peers, but these conclusions
are not reflective of their intellectual, creative, or social abilities. In
this blog, I will explore some struggles and challenges that ELL students face
in their academic careers, including some strategies that have been identified
by the research as possible aides.
One struggle for ELL students is
high academic, creative, or other potential being overlooked because of a perceived
lack of literacy skills. Academic language differs from language spoken at
home; therefore, teachers must take into account all students’ home literacy
skills, but especially those of English language learners. Most language
acquisition in early childhood and elementary school occurs informally
(Pereira, 2015). ELL students are often more than able to use the English
language to communicate with others, but they may not be proficient in academic
language usage (p 209). English language learners are also underrepresented in
gifted classrooms. A study conducted by Yoon and Gentry (2009) examined the
racial and ethnic representation in gifted programs and concluded that Hispanic
students were underrepresented in 43 out of 50 states (Pereira, 209). High
potential English language learners are often not identified as gifted because
of a lack of proficiency in English, and their talents and skills are
overlooked.
“In contrast to monolingual
English-speaking students, language-minority students bring an additional set
of resources or abilities and face an additional set of challenges when
learning to read and write in English as a second language” (Grant et al., 601)
One way that teachers can help
their bilingual students is to view their literacy skills as essential
resources to the classroom, and work to understand the prior knowledge (or
funds of knowledge, which will be mentioned later) that these students bring to
school. In English-dominant reading instruction, ELLs run the risk of losing
their first language before acquiring a second, in what one researcher called
“subtractive bilingualism” (Lambert, 1975, as cited in Grant, 2015). In
subtractive bilingualism, the student’s first language is replaced by English,
rather than the student becoming proficient in both languages. In an additive
approach, the “heritage language is respected and maintained and English is
taught as an additional language” (Grant et al. 601-602). Reading instruction
in both languages is important in order to keep this from happening.
In addition to instructional materials being
primarily in English, standardized tests present academic language that is not
always explicitly taught, which creates a problem for ELLs. There exists a gap between English-only
students and ELL students in vocabulary knowledge, which leads to problems with
comprehension. During reading, students often learn new words by incidental
vocabulary learning, which occurs by using context clues in the text, rather
than explicitly being taught vocabulary words or using a dictionary or
glossary. Carlo et al. (2009) found that “ELLs are less able to use context to
disambiguate the meaning of unfamiliar words because a higher proportion of
words in text is likely to be unknown to them”, and “are less able to exploit
linguistic clues to word meaning as an English-only speaker would (p 191). This
can be helped by teaching explicitly how to use context clues, teaching
morphological analysis, and teaching about cognates (Carlo et al., 204).
English language learners are negatively
affected by a definition of literacy that only includes reading and writing standards
that are rigid and traditional. Grant et al. (2007) notes that “Some are in the
process of losing the home language without having fully developed academic
literacy in English” (Grant et. al. 603). The definition of literacy has
expanded within the last 20 years to include multiple modes by which to learn. Academic
English and English-centered reading and writing standards, as established
earlier, often do not leave room for students to use their funds of knowledge
from their home lives and culture in a way that will advance them academically.
Some literacy research on English language learners draws from Vygotsky’s
(1978) theory of the zone of proximal development, which posits that learning
occurs first in purposeful social interactions within the zone of proximal
development and is gradually appropriated and internalized, which enables
learners to co-construct understanding (Koelsch, 2014, 643). Reading and
learning in general are social acts, and it especially benefits ELL students to
emphasize co-constructing of knowledge. Partner work and individual
conferencing with students will help them co-construct knowledge.
Grant et al. note that “the social
mediates literacy development” (p 602). Not only is it beneficial to encourage
students to work together to co-construct their knowledge in class, it is
important to understand student’s culture and socioeconomic status. The social
context of literacy development for English language learners differs greatly
from that of students that speak only English. The development of literacy
skills for second-language learners in the United States “must take into
consideration the sociological dimensions of literacy, including issues of
power such as the intersections of gender, race, and class” (Grant et al., 600).
This approach has roots in critical race theory, and is necessary for an
equitable education for all students. Taking into account the sociological
dimensions of literacy will enable teachers to understand their ELLs and
provide them with an education that will benefit them more throughout their
lives and provide them with more opportunities for advancement. Teachers have
the ability to foster an equitable learning environment and “build on ESOL
students’ diverse ways of knowing to not only build a bridge from the known to
the unknown for racial, ethnic, and linguistic minorities, but also to expand
the canon for all U.S. students” (Grant, 606). A classroom environment where students
understand and appreciate each other’s cultures and backgrounds is mutually
beneficial. Grant notes that “mainstream curriculum too often seeks to
assimilate minority students into the curriculum rather than draw from the
diverse and multiple epistemological traditions of students” (p 606). A
critical literacy lens is beneficial for teachers and administration to utilize,
but professional development and other training can often fall short in
educating school leadership in this regard. There is a level of responsibility,
then, that literacy researchers must take to conduct studies on best practices for
teachers to implement critical literacy, and more specifically, ways that
English language learners can be best supported. Grant et al. note that “literacy
researchers must make genuine efforts to capture the lived reality of history,
culture, and power that permeate the individual, family, and community” (p 605).
In addition, ELL students also can
be misidentified for special education programs, due to intervention strategies
that have not been validated with English language learners, and instead are
implemented broadly in schools (Moore & Klingner, 394). They may be placed
into special education simply because the interventions are not meeting their
language and learning needs (Orosco & Klingner, 2010, as cited in Moore
& Klingner, 2014). ELL students are at risk of being overrepresented in
certain special education categories, and can fall further behind their peers, as
their language learning needs are not properly met by special education programs
that do not necessarily involve proper bilingual instruction. “Students who
fail to respond to evidence-based general education literacy instruction should
receive more intensive, explicit, evidence-based reading interventions prior to
placement in special education” (Torgeson et al. 2001, as cited in Moore &
Klingner). It is imperative that reading intervention and explicit teaching of
vocabulary are utilized before placing students into a program that may or may
not meet their needs.
English language learners face challenges in their academic careers due in part to a structural failure to validate their funds of knowledge and integrate their literacy skills into the perception of their general abilities. They can be underrepresented in gifted programs, and in general classrooms they often experience being identified as low-level readers and writers. Mainstream curriculum can often force ELL students to assimilate to the curriculum without drawing on the resources they bring from their culture and literacy skills. Traditional literacy standards that focus on basic reading and writing skills can be difficult for English language learners to master, due in part to how similar or dissimilar cognates in their primary language are to English, and also the difficulty of incidental vocabulary learning. Comprehending a text written in English can be more difficult for ELL students because inferring meaning built on prior knowledge will come more easily to a student that has been taught English since birth. There are many strategies that can be utilized by teachers to ensure that their ELL students can excel, using critical literacy theory and critical race theory as a lens. Explicit vocabulary teaching, including using advanced texts that offer exposure to higher-level words, and presenting materials in both English and the student’s primary language can also be used. I will be detailing best practices for teachers found in literacy research that will help their English language learners in another blog.
References
Carlo, M.S, August, D., McLaughlin, B., Snow,
C., Dressler, C., Lippman, D., & White, C.E. (2009). Closing the Gap:
Addressing the Vocabulary Needs of English-Language Learners in Bilingual and Mainstream
Classrooms. Journal of Education (Boston, Mass.), 189(1-2),
57-76.
Grant, R., Wong,
S., & Osterling, J. (2007). Developing Literacy in Second-Language
Learners: Critique from a Heteroglossic, Sociocultural, and Multidimensional
Framework. Reading Research Quarterly, 42(4), 598-609.
Koelsch, N., Chu,
H., & Rodriguez Bañuelos, G. (2014). Language for Learning: Supporting
English Language Learners to Meet the Challenges of New Standards. TESOL
Quarterly, 48(3), 642-650.
Moore, B.A.,
& Klingner, J.K. (2014). Considering the Needs of English Language Learner
Populations. Journal of Learning Disabilities, 47(5),
391-408.
Pereira, N.,
& De Oliveira, L.C. (2015). Meeting the Linguistic Needs of High-Potential
English Language Learners. Teaching Exceptional Children, 47(4),
208-215.
thanks.
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