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Year: 2016

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6 Potential Brain Benefits Of Bilingual Education

December 7, 2016Sophie Bellot

lb-bilingPart of our ongoing series exploring how the U.S. can educate the nearly 5 millionstudents who are learning English.

Brains, brains, brains. One thing we’ve learned at NPR Ed is that people are fascinated by brain research. And yet it can be hard to point to places where our education system is really making use of the latest neuroscience findings.

But there is one happy nexus where research is meeting practice: bilingual education. “In the last 20 years or so, there’s been a virtual explosion of research on bilingualism,” says Judith Kroll, a professor at the University of California, Riverside.

Again and again, researchers have found, “bilingualism is an experience that shapes our brain for a lifetime,” in the words of Gigi Luk, an associate professor at Harvard’s Graduate School of Education.

At the same time, one of the hottest trends in public schooling is what’s often called dual-language or two-way immersion programs.

5 Million Voices

5 Million Voices

How We Teach English Learners: 3 Basic Approaches

NPR ED

How We Teach English Learners: 3 Basic Approaches

Traditional programs for English-language learners, or ELLs, focus on assimilating students into English as quickly as possible. Dual-language classrooms, by contrast, provide instruction across subjects to both English natives and English learners, in both English and in a target language.

The goal is functional bilingualism and biliteracy for all students by middle school.

New York City, North Carolina, Delaware, Utah, Oregon and Washington state are among the places expanding dual-language classrooms.

The trend flies in the face of some of the culture wars of two decades ago, when advocates insisted on “English first” education. Most famously, California passed Proposition 227 in 1998. It was intended to sharply reduce the amount of time that English-language learners spent in bilingual settings.

Proposition 58, passed by California voters on Nov. 8, largely reversed that decision, paving the way for a huge expansion of bilingual education in the state that has the largest population of English-language learners.

Bilingual Education Returns To California. Now What?

NPR ED

Bilingual Education Returns To California. Now What?

Some of the insistence on English-first was founded in research produced decades ago, in which bilingual students underperformed monolingual English speakers and had lower IQ scores.

Today’s scholars, like Ellen Bialystok at York University in Toronto, now say that research was “deeply flawed.”

“Earlier research looked at socially disadvantaged groups,” agrees Antonella Sorace at the University of Edinburgh, in Scotland. “This has been completely contradicted by recent research” that compares more similar groups to each other.

So what does recent research say about the potential benefits of bilingual education? NPR Ed called up seven researchers in three countries — Sorace, Bialystok, Luk, Kroll, Jennifer Steele, and the team of Wayne Thomas and Virginia Collier — to find out.

Attention

It turns out that, in many ways, the real trick to speaking two languages consists in managing not to speak one of those languages at a given moment — which is fundamentally a feat of paying attention.

Saying “Goodbye” to mom and then “Guten tag” to your teacher, or managing to ask for a crayola roja instead of a red crayon, requires skills called “inhibition” and “task switching.” These skills are subsets of an ability called executive function.

People who speak two languages often outperform monolinguals on general measures of executive function. “[Bilinguals] can pay focused attention without being distracted and also improve in the ability to switch from one task to another,” says Sorace.

Do these same advantages accrue to a child who begins learning a second language in kindergarten instead of as a baby? We don’t yet know. Patterns of language learning and language use are complex. But Gigi Luk at Harvard cites at least one brain-imaging study on adolescents that shows similar changes in brain structure when compared with those who are bilingual from birth, even when they didn’t begin practicing a second language in earnest before late childhood.

Empathy

Young children being raised bilingual have to follow social cues to figure out which language to use with which person and in what setting. As a result, says Sorace, bilingual children as young as age 3 have demonstrated a head start on tests of perspective-taking and theory of mind — both of which are fundamental social and emotional skills.

Reading (English)

About 10 percent of students in the Portland, Ore., public schools are assigned by lottery to dual-language classrooms that offer instruction in Spanish, Japanese or Mandarin, alongside English.

Jennifer Steele at American University conducted a four-year, randomized trial and found that these dual-language students outperformed their peers in English-reading skills by a full school year’s worth of learning by the end of middle school.

Such a large effect in a study this size is unusual, and Steele is currently conducting a flurry of follow-up studies to tease out the causality: Is this about a special program that attracted families who were more engaged? Or about the dual-language instruction itself?

“If it’s just about moving the kids around,” Steele says, “that’s not as exciting as if it’s a way of teaching that makes you smarter.”

'Invisible' Children: Raised In The U.S., Now Struggling In Mexico

NPR ED

‘Invisible’ Children: Raised In The U.S., Now Struggling In Mexico

Steele suspects the latter. Because the effects are found in reading, not in math or science where there were few differences, she suggests that learning two languages makes students more aware of how language works in general, aka “metalinguistic awareness.”

The research of Gigi Luk at Harvard offers a slightly different explanation. She has recently done a small study looking at a group of 100 fourth-graders in Massachusetts who had similar reading scores on a standard test, but very different language experiences.

Some were foreign-language dominant and others were English natives. Here’s what’s interesting. The students who were dominant in a foreign language weren’t yet comfortably bilingual; they were just starting to learn English. Therefore, by definition, they had much weaker English vocabularies than the native speakers.

Yet they were just as good at decoding a text.

“This is very surprising,” Luk says. “You would expect the reading comprehension performance to mirror vocabulary — it’s a cornerstone of comprehension.”

How did the foreign-language dominant speakers manage this feat? Well, Luk found, they also scored higher on tests of executive functioning. So, even though they didn’t have huge mental dictionaries to draw on, they may have been great puzzle-solvers, taking into account higher-level concepts such as whether a single sentence made sense within an overall story line.

They got to the same results as the monolinguals, by a different path.

School performance and engagement.

Wayne Thomas and Virginia Collier, a husband and wife team of professors emeritus at George Mason University in Virginia, have spent the past 30 years collecting evidence on the benefits of bilingual education.

“Wayne came to our research with skepticism, thinking students ought to get instruction all day in English,” says Virginia Collier. “Eight million student records later, we’re convinced,” Wayne Thomas chimes in.

In studies covering six states and 37 districts, they have found that, compared with students in English-only classrooms or in one-way immersion, dual-language students have somewhat higher test scores and also seem to be happier in school. Attendance is better, behavioral problems fewer, parent involvement higher.

Diversity and integration.

American public school classrooms as a whole are becoming more segregated by race and class. Dual-language programs can be an exception. Because they are composed of native English speakers deliberately placed together with recent immigrants, they tend to be more ethnically and socioeconomically balanced. And there is some evidence that this helps kids of all backgrounds gain comfort with diversity and different cultures.

Several of the researchers I talked with also pointed out that, in bilingual education, non-English-dominant students and their families tend to feel that their home language is heard and valued, compared with a classroom where the home language is left at the door in favor of English.

This can improve students’ sense of belonging and increase parent involvement in their children’s education, including behaviors like reading to children.

“Many parents fear their language is an obstacle, a problem, and if they abandon it their child will integrate better,” says Antonella Sorace of the University of Edinburgh. “We tell them they’re not doing their child a favor by giving up their language.”

Protection against cognitive decline and dementia.

File this away as a very, very long-range payoff. Researchers have found that actively using two languages seems to have a protective effect against age-related dementia — perhaps relating to the changes in brain structure we talked about earlier.

Specifically, among patients with Alzheimer’s in a Canadian study, a group of bilingual adults performed on par with a group of monolingual adults in terms of cognitive tests and daily functioning. But when researchers looked at the two groups’ brains, they found evidence of brain atrophy that was five to seven years more advanced in the bilingual group. In other words, the adults who spoke two languages were carrying on longer at a higher level despite greater degrees of damage.

The coda, and a caution

One theme that was striking in speaking to all these researchers was just how strongly they advocated for dual-language classrooms.

Thomas and Collier have advised many school systems on how to expand their dual-language programs, and Sorace runs “Bilingualism Matters,” an international network of researchers who promote bilingual education projects.

This type of advocacy among scientists is unusual; even more so because the “bilingual advantage hypothesis” is being challenged once again. A review of studies published last year found that cognitive advantages failed to appear in 83 percent of published studies, though in a separate meta-analysis, the sum of effects was still significantly positive.

One potential explanation offered by the researchers I spoke with is that advantages that are measurable in the very young and very old tend to fade when testing young adults at the peak of their cognitive powers.

And, they countered that no negative effects of bilingual education have been found. So, they argue that even if the advantages are small, they are still worth it.

Not to mention one obvious, outstanding fact underlined by many of these researchers: “Bilingual children can speak two languages! That’s amazing,” says Bialystok.

 

Anya Kamenetz

Lead Blogger, Education

6 Potential Brain Benefits Of Bilingual Education

 

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Tonight on PBS NewsHour : California Voters to Decide How Schools Teach English-Learners (An Education Week Report)

December 1, 2016Sophie Bellot

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In California, nearly 1 in every 4 children don’t speak English fluently. That’s almost 1.5 million students. How to best teach them is a topic of great concern among educators, because children who are learning English struggle more in school, trailing behind classmates who speak English in every academic measure.

On Election Day, California voters will decide whether to overturn a longstanding policy of teaching these children in English-only classrooms, or whether to embrace bilingual forms of teaching that show more promising outcomes for children over the long run.

Education Week Correspondent Kavitha Cardoza reports on the ballot question before voters, how the research and pedagogy have evolved around teaching English-learners and the value of bilingualism, tonight on PBS NewsHour.

For more coverage of how bilingual education is poised for a comeback in California’s public schools, see this recent Education Week article.

LEARN MORE TONIGHT ON PBS NEWSHOUR.

Check Local Listings

For more Education Week coverage of bilingual education and English-language learners, visit edweek.org.

Also checkout Teaching America’s English-Language Learners, an Education Week special report.

  From Education Week – PBS NewsHour

 

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Report: ELL students benefit from more instructional time

February 20, 2016Sophie Bellot

Report Recommends Longer School Day for English-Language Learners

A report from the National Center on Time and Learning explores how three U.S. schools are using expanded school days to provide extra support for English-language learners.

The report profiles two Massachusetts expanded-time schools—Hill Elementary in Revere and Guilmette Elementary in Lawrence—and Godsman Elementary in Denver, and examines the strategies educators used to boost the achievement of English-learners.

The study, Giving English Language Learners the Time They Need to Succeed, identified four best practices that worked in the schools:

  • Extended literacy blocks, with upwards of 2.5 hours per day focused on skills needed for reading and writing.
  • Using data to pinpoint areas where individual students struggle, then subdividing those students into small groups where staff can help address the challenges.
  • Maintaining support and services for fluent-speaking English-learners who need to boost their academic English skills
  • Ensuring that teachers meet often to align lesson plans, and identify and address student needs.

Capture ELL II.PNG

“The benefits of having more instructional time during the day and across the year to build in many layers of learning and mastering English are undeniable,” Jennifer Davis, the National Center on Time and Learning’s co-founder and president said in statement. “With substantially more time than the conventional schedule, the schools we document are able to provide the kind of deep support that traditional schools find much more difficult to do.”

The Boston-based research group advocates for an extended school day and school year. All three of the high-poverty schools have extended the school day as part of statewide efforts to boost academic achievement.

Hill Elementary is a member of the Massachusetts Expanded Learning Time Initiative, which allows staff to develop a longer school day and calendar. Slightly more than 25 percent of the students there are ELLs.

Earlier this year, my colleague Denisa Superville wrote about the districtwide expanded learning time effort in the Lawrence schools.

Almost half the students at Guilmette are English-learners. In Denver, Godsman Elementary used their designation as a state “innovation school” to add a dual-language program and expanded the school day to 8 hours, up from 6.5.

The percentage of students who are English-learners at each school ranges from nearly 90 at Godsman to slightly more than 25 percent at Hill.

Here’s a look at the report:

   ell_report_12.14.15

 

By Corey Mitchell on December 16, 2015 1:42 PM

 

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Social-emotional learning enhances special ed and beyond

February 20, 2016Sophie Bellot
 Social-emotional learning programs come in different forms
 A Chicago Public Schools teacher leads a social emotional learning lesson in an elementary classroom.
A Chicago Public Schools teacher leads a social emotional learning lesson in an elementary classroom.

Social-emotional learning programs improve the grades and behavior of all learners—but special ed students may benefit even more from lessons on mindfulness, self-regulation and cooperation, experts say.

Social-emotional learning—also known as SEL, and sometimes called “character education” or “soft skills”—teaches students to: 1, understand and manage emotions. 2, set and achieve positive goals. 3, feel and show empathy for others. 4, establish and maintain relationships, and 5, make responsible decisions, according to the Collaborative for Academic, Social, and Emotional Learning.

Special needs students may be less likely to pick up on social cues or may struggle with emotion and behavior management, says Melissa Schlinger, the learning collaborative’s vice president of programs and practice.

“When a school focuses on SEL for all kids, it’s helping special ed kids in two ways,” Schlinger says. “Building the social and emotional consciousness of non-disabled kids promotes a climate of inclusion and tolerance of different needs. It also helps special needs kids develop their own social and emotional competence.”

Social-emotional learning programs come in different forms—some schools may bring a counselor into a classroom for a full lesson, while others embed the core curricula with practices such as problem-solving and mindfulness (activities promoting moment-by-moment awareness of thoughts, feelings, and bodily sensations).

Meeting multiple needs

Intermediary District 287, located 15 miles west of Minneapolis, is a collaboration of 12 metro-area school systems that provides smaller classes and social-emotional programs for students with multiple and complex needs.

Social-emotional learning for special education often involves more visuals and repetition of core concepts, says Charlene Myklebust, education consultant and the district’s former executive director of mental health. For example, students who lack strong language development may learn hand gestures to express their feelings and learn to classify others’ facial expressions.

Social-emotional instruction boosts success

Students in 213 social-emotional learning programs demonstrated significantly improved interpersonal skills and academic performance compared to their peers, according to a 2011 study published in the journal Child Development.

Another study published in November’s American Journal of Public Health examined 753 adults who had been evaluated for social competency 20 years ago as kindergartners.

Researchers found that kindergarten students who had scored high for sharing, cooperating and helping other children were more likely to have finished high school on time, graduated college, found full-time employment and stayed out of the judicial system than were their peers with lower scores.

“SEL recognizes that children are best viewed as whole persons, and that there are components beyond cognitive functioning and measurable skills, such as self-awareness, getting along with others, conflict resolution and problem-solving,” Myklebust says. “They are really important skills for all students to get along with others and to function in our social world.”

Expanding through K12

Buncombe County Schools in North Carolina, where more than half of the 25,000 students are eligible for free or reduced-price lunch, received a $1.2 million U.S. Department of Education grant in 2014-15 to implement social-emotional learning. The program covers K5, but the district will expand it through high school in coming years, says Director of Student Services David Thompson.

Many teachers introduce a social-emotional learning concept at the beginning of the day, and lead a mindfulness exercise, such as deep breathing. Some classrooms have “calming corners” with yoga mats and games that students can play to settle down before they can return to class.

Special education teachers also participate in social-emotional instruction, Thompson says. Though there is not yet data on academic performance or discipline rates, anecdotal evidence suggests that students act out less and aren’t referred as frequently to the principal’s office, Thompson says.

Administrators should first assess individual school needs and resources, and provide professional development to bolster social-emotional learning curricula, says Schlinger, of the learning collaborative. “The effective leaders we’ve seen have been clear about their vision, communicated it, and been willing to allocate human and financial resources to achieving it,” she says.

 By Alison DeNisco –District Administration, January 2016
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Parents can help, but children take a DIY approach to learning language

January 20, 2016Sophie Bellot

Language learning is not a passive process in which children simply absorb and copy their parents.
from www.shutterstock.com
Parents can help children develop their language. But when it comes to building the linguistic structure that undergirds the language, new research shows that children would rather do it themselves.

Perhaps one of the oldest debates in the cognitive sciences centres on whether children have an inborn faculty of language. This faculty makes it possible for children to learn the language of their community.

Evidence for its existence comes from the richness of the system that language users come to have as compared to the finite set of sentences that any one learner is exposed to.

But, in many cases, it is hard to tell how this faculty operates because children’s language environment contains many cues to linguistic structure. And, of course, children learn precisely the language of their community. Nobody exposed only to English ever learned Japanese.

In the rare and unfortunate cases that children are not exposed to a language – as, for example, with deaf children who are not exposed to a signed language – previous evidence suggests that children nonetheless develop a communication system with some key structural features of natural languages. These kinds of situations suggest that children do have an innate faculty of language and that language can emerge even in the absence of experience.https://theconversation.com/parents-can-help-but-children-take-a-diy-approach-to-learning-language-53035

Children invent their own language structure

New research with four-year-old learners of Korean shows that, even when children are fully immersed in a language, they acquire linguistic features that are missing from their environment.

In essence, this work suggests that all children are, in some sense, isolated from the structures that underlie the language of their environment. And, like the deaf-isolates, all children (re)invent the structure of their language.

The study focused on how Korean parents and children interpreted a series of negative sentences. It found, first, high variability among both adults and children in how they interpret these sentences. Although people were consistent in their interpretations across multiple sessions, they often differed from each other.

Second, the study showed that the interpretation of any given child was not predicted by the interpretation of their parent.

The fact that the variability was maintained in the children, but was not passed on from parent to child, suggests that speakers of Korean do not learn this feature of the language from their parents.

This was a small-scale study examining an obscure part of the Korean language. We focused on this feature because of its unpredictable variability among adults.

Most points of variation within a language can be predicted by geographical or other social features. Think tom-ay-to vs tom-ah-to, soda vs pop, or whether you get in line or on line.

Children have an innate language-making capacity. from www.shutterstock.com

The fact that this variability is unpredictable among adults made it a perfect test case for asking whether children learn from their parents. And the fact that the variability was independent in children and parents suggests that parents do not provide all of the information about their language to children. Instead, children are able to fill in the gaps, using their innate language faculty.

In the normal course of development, typical children do hear evidence about the structure of their language. This evidence comes from the speech of everyone around them – parents, teachers, adults and other children.

When children do sometimes make errors, they typically overcome them by the time they get to school age. Those errors that remain eventually disappear simply because they don’t match the language of the community.

What this new research shows is that language learning is not a passive process in which children simply absorb and copy all of the features of their environment.

Instead, children actively construct their language using a combination of their experience and their innate language-making capacity

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A fast growing market

January 7, 2016Sophie Bellot

infograph-bilingual-education-trendsThe enrolment market for International schools is near to attaining 60 billion dollars between now and 2022

With the expansion of the international schools market, ICEF Monitor, in their March 2013 edition, reviewed some revealing statistics as well as the factors behind this latest trend.

Nicholas Brummit, founder and director general of the Conseil des Ecoles Internationales (ISC_International School Consultancy) Research Ltd, presents findings which estimate the total  number of English speaking international schools at 6 533.

Not only are new schools constantly opening, but their numbers are growing each time existing schools convert to an international programme, begin delivering lessons in a foreign language ( usually English), or open a satellite campus in another country. The rate of growth for the period 2011-2012 was 6.7%, and the rate of expansion over twelve years has reached the amazing figure of 153%.

This huge growth goes against current economic trends, but seems to follow. At the last Ecoles Internationales et de l’Enseignement Privé forum, Brummit states :

” « Based on the continued market demand, in the next 10 years (now until 2022), the number of international schools will reach 11 331, the number of students will grow to 6.2 million, the number of employees 529 000, and the yearly turnover will approach 60 billion dollars. »

As much as teaching in English dominates international schools, it is interesting to note that other countries are also present in the market. France is such an example. Teaching completely in French is offered in some schools in China, Tunisia and Vietnam. There are also French international schools which offer bilingual teaching in French and English in the UK and in America.

Population Growth as a Contributor

International schools first appeared as education for mobile international families. Whilst until very recently, in the last thirty years, these schools had a mainly expatriate pupil population, the tendency has completely inverted. Today, local residents account for about 80% of places in international schools and make up about two thirds of the market expansion.

In a November  interview with Re :locate Magazine, Brummit cites both local and expatriate influence for this increase :

 « The next ten years will see , no doubt, a huge growth in the international school market, a demand resulting from the growth of the expatriate market and the growing number of wealthy local families who recognise the value of teaching in English for their children. »

Other Factors for Growth

If this demographical factor is key, it is closely linked to profitable aspect of the market: the value of the entire international school market is thought to be just over 30 billion dollars. As Brummit indicates below, if the current trend is confirmed, the annual turnover could reach 37 billion US dollars between now and 2015, and 60 billion between now and 2022.

Similarly, a third driving factor for the international school market growth is the role they play in the host country’s economy. As international Primary or secondary school is often seen by families in developing countries as a stepping stone for foreign universities, governments promote international education as a way to stem a country’s ’brain drain’, allowing them to hold onto their top students.

Fees are on the up and places are in decline

L’ISC Research underlines the fact that international schools respond to the 5% most wealthy non Anglophone people. That will remain so for a certain period of time, as the fees have gone up everywhere due to insufficient numbers of international primary and secondary schools. The economic crisis has hit locals and expats. Waiting lists are the order of the day everywhere, and according to the Telegraph, the lack of school places has led to some expatriate families leaving Hong Kong.

According to a more recent article, the problem is so bad that some expatriate families will not accept a job placement without the guarantee of a school place for their child first.

Quality is feeding the growing trend

Lastly, Brummit draws our attention to « the growing trend of sending children to local international schools rests on the quality of teaching and learning which many schools offer, linked to the recognised value placed by local families on teaching in English. »

 

Therefore, the international bilingual market, of which Latitude Bilingual ® is a part, responds to a growing expectation of parents looking for excellent local teaching combined with a mastery of the English for their child. Current difficulties of everyday life and those foreseen in the future ( high levels of unemployment, especially for young people is a preoccupation for parents) need solutions for children’s schooling to be found in order to prepare them for the world of tomorrow. Despite the economic crisis, parents are always willing to put money into their children’s schooling and quality activities. This concern is evident in parents’ worry and desire for their children to succeed and do well.

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  • 6 Potential Brain Benefits Of Bilingual Education
  • Tonight on PBS NewsHour : California Voters to Decide How Schools Teach English-Learners (An Education Week Report)
  • Report: ELL students benefit from more instructional time
  • Social-emotional learning enhances special ed and beyond
  • Parents can help, but children take a DIY approach to learning language

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  • 6 Potential Brain Benefits Of Bilingual Education
  • Tonight on PBS NewsHour : California Voters to Decide How Schools Teach English-Learners (An Education Week Report)
  • Report: ELL students benefit from more instructional time
  • Social-emotional learning enhances special ed and beyond
  • Parents can help, but children take a DIY approach to learning language
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