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When Is It Appropriate to Refer an ELL for Special Education?

This article discusses the appropriate circumstances for referring English Language Learners (ELLs) for special education, as well as providing a clear pre-referral process to follow. It addresses questions about honoring the teacher's concern, understanding language development, comparing ELLs to their peers, and involving parents. The article emphasizes the importance of providing linguistic support before considering special education referrals.

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When Is It Appropriate to Refer an ELL for Special Education?

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  1. When Is It Appropriate to Refer an ELL for Special Education? OSPI Staff Migrant and Bilingual Education January 23, 2009 K20

  2. 10 Questions to Consider • How have I honored the referring teacher’s concern? • Do we have a clear pre-referral process in place? • Who is the gatekeeper within the ELL program who is contacted for every pre-referral? • To what extent does everyone understand language development? • Is the ELL exhibiting atypical performance? • To whom is the ELL being compared? • What data should I look at for the peer comparison? • What role does Response-To-Intervention (RTI) play in the pre-referral process? • To what extent are parents involved? • To what extent are district ELL/Special Ed trends being scrutinized?

  3. 1. How have I honored the referring teacher’s concern? Do’s • Respect that the teacher wants the child to succeed. • Respect that the teacher is probably doing the best she can with what she knows. • Respect the teacher’s understanding of pedagogy. • Offer immediate assistance – observations, co-planning, modifications. Don’t • Dismiss the teacher’s concerns as unimportant or foolish (this leads to stealth referrals and a competition to qualify an ELL just out of spite). • Make the teacher feel ignorant because she doesn’t have a background in ELL issues. • Promise something that you can’t/won’t deliver on.

  4. A Quote from Research One of the most common reasons for referrals to special education has been limited English proficiency (Maldonado-Colón, 1986). This is the case despite the fact that limited English proficiency, when it stems from the presence of a non-English language in the child's home, has, in and of itself, no negative effects on learning. […] When, however, no accommodations are made to a child's lack of proficiency in the language of the EC [early childhood] setting, children are left without means of understanding what is being said or expressing what they need to say. Their performance then becomes similar to that of children with disabilities. SOURCE: Barrera, Isaura (1995). To Refer Or Not to Refer: Untangling the Web of Diversity,"Deficit," and Disability. In: New York State Association for Bilingual Education Journal v10 p54-66, Summer 1995

  5. 2. Do we have a clear pre-referral process in place? • Create a process with a multi-disciplinary team: Special Ed “best friend”, content and/or grade-level teacher, administrator, ELL staff. • Get approval for the process and communicate it often to all staff. • Avoid an overwhelmingly complex process if the majority of referrals are based on simple misinformation.

  6. Another Quote from Research If […] the child has intact learning abilities and an age appropriate repertoire of skills, but can not understand the language of instruction, it is equally inappropriate and wasteful of both financial and human resources to generate a complete interdisciplinary assessment and special education program instead of simply providing needed linguistic support. SOURCE: Barrera, Isaura (1995). To Refer Or Not to Refer: Untangling the Web of Diversity,"Deficit," and Disability. In: New York State Association for Bilingual Education Journal v10 p54-66, Summer 1995

  7. Sample Process Overview Process for Addressing Concerns Identify Concern  Modifications, Interventions, Consult with ESL Staff  Contact parents regarding concern  Complete Checklist and meet with Child Study Team  If no progress is made, return to Child Study Team  Other interventions, such as homework center, tutors, etc.

  8. Vancouver’s Checklist • Genesis of the pre-referral form • Iterations over time • Why the format of the form • Additional support and resources Lynne Gadbury, ELL/Bilingual Ed Specialist

  9. 3. Who is the gatekeeper within ELL who is contacted for every pre-referral? No one has all the knowledge about ELL/Special Ed referrals, but … • When a Special Ed or ELL staff person suggests that “Yes, this kid probably is Special Ed” before knowing all the facts, it is difficult to bring any contradictory information to the table. • Many ELLs are referred because they were referred at an earlier grade.

  10. 4. To what extent does everyone understand language development? Avoid these common fallacies: • No English = No intelligence/learning • Social, oral language (BICS) = academic language (CALPs) • Judging GLEs without ELD standards • Ignoring time as a crucial factor in language development • Ignoring the role of dominant language

  11. Dominant Language An English language learner has: • a dominant language for home, family, church, shopping (usually the first language, remains at a simple level unless child receives direct instruction in this language). • another dominant language for school and academic situations (usually the language of instruction, proficiency will continue to increase). howard.deleeuw@k12.wa.us

  12. 5. Is the ELL exhibiting atypical performance? • Franklin Bender “Difference vs. Disability: The Continuum of Working with English Language Learners” from National CEU. www.NationalCEU.com • Catherine Collier “Separating Difference from Disability” www.crosscultured.com • Evaluation and Assessment in Early Childhood Special Education: Children Who Are Culturally and Linguistically Diverse www.k12.wa.us/SpecialEd/pubdocs/CLD.doc

  13. Quote from SpEd OSPI document A formal referral to special services is only justified after it has been determined that a child’s behavior and performance cannot be explained solely by language or cultural differences, the acculturation process, or the learning environment. - pg. 22, OSPI pamphlet

  14. 6. To whom is the ELL student being compared? • A peer analysis is critical in determining if the student’s performance is atypical. • The ideal peer group are ELLs, same language background, same time in program, same grade of entry in school. • Scour district longitudinal data and find as large a peer group as possible

  15. Appropriate Comparison or Not? • ELL 3rd grader to all 3rd graders? • ELL to all ELLs in the district? • ELL Spanish speaker to all ELL Spanish speakers? • ELL to older or younger sibling?

  16. 7. What data should I look at for the peer comparison? • Years in program • Entry grade • WLPT-II levels • WASL scores • Mobility • Parent input • There is always more to find out…

  17. District Data Example Comparison of Test History to Peers (same language group, same entry grade, same time in US) WLPTII Spring 2006 • 55 ELL 7th graders completed the test • 1 Level 1, avg. years in program – 1 / 12 Level 2s, avg. years in program – 2.4 • 31 Level 3s, avg. years in program – 4.9 (Student X is in this group) • 11 Level 4s, avg. years in program – 5.6 Currently have 25 Russian ELLs in 8th grade. Average length of time in program has been just over 4.1 years. • Of the 57 8th graders in the district who used to be in ELD, the average length of time in program prior to exit was 4.3 years. Of these, 29 are Russian speakers, who were in the program an average of 4 years. • Of the 33 ELLs who have exited the program, and who started in 2nd grade, the average years in program prior to exit was 4.1 years. • Of the 17 Russian ELLs who took the 7th grade WASL last year, the reading scores were: 8 Level 1s (Student X is in this group), and 9 Level 2s. • The math scores were: 10 Level 1s (Student X was in this group), 6 Level 2s, and 1 Level 3.

  18. 8. What role does Response-To-Intervention (RTI) play in the pre-referral process? There is great promise […] in using an RTI approach for many reasons. First, the universal screening and progress monitoring called for in the RTI process allow for comparison of students to other similar or “true” peers in their local cohort rather than to national norms. Second, an effective RTI model requires collaboration among all educators (e.g. speech and language therapists, school psychologists, counselors, English as a second language/Bilingual specialist) thereby providing increased opportunities for professional dialogue, peer coaching, and the creation of instructional models integrating best practices of the various fields of education and related services. Source: “A Cultural, Linguistic, and Ecological Framework for Response to Intervention with English Language Learners” Julie Esparza Brown, Portland State University, 2008.

  19. Culturally Responsive RTI with Students Learning English Considerable research demonstrates that bilingualism may facilitate the development of reading skills in a second language & that bilingual learners benefit from heightened metalinguistic awareness (August & Shanahan, 2006; Lesaux, 2006, e.g., Bialystok, 1997; Cummins, 1991). www.nccrest.org

  20. Culturally Responsive Secondary & Tertiary Interventions What? Ongoing professional learning for teachers around types of supports students require Curricular & instructional resources to utilize with diverse learners Research-based interventions are grounded in culture’s essential role in teaching & learning. Time and space for educators to examine & reflect on practices. Who? Collaborative teams of educators with expertise in subject matter and types of support determined appropriate for students who require it. Where? In general education classrooms through collaborative methods of instruction. www.nccrest.org

  21. Interventions that are Culturally Responsive… • …are constructed by intervention design teams • …consider students’ language, background experiences, preferred ways of interacting, and home literacy practices and integrate all of these factors in curricular materials, instructional methods, educational environment, involvement of families, and both formative and summative progress monitoring. • …are based on a theory of culture in learning • …are informed by cultural brokers (Gay, 1993). www.nccrest.org

  22. Progress Monitoring In Culturally Responsive RTI Frameworks Helps Educators… www.nccrest.org

  23. Progress Monitoring in the Classroom: Designing & Selecting Appropriate Progress Monitoring Tools • Desired outcomes for students come first! • Multiple pathways for producing the • desired product or performance • Students’ diverse backgrounds, • experiences, skills and abilities www.nccrest.org

  24. Ensuring Progress Monitoring is Culturally Responsive Incorporate performance assessments • Developing items/performance tasks • Rating performance • Piloting the Assessments Develop, select, and interpret tools and performance both quantitatively and qualitatively; Ensure measures are truly aligned with what student have actually been taught, not just what curriculum is being utilized, or what the grade level standards are; Link instructional decisions and changes to performance patterns across student factors (e.g., primary language proficiency, English proficiency) that may be linked to struggling performance, ensuring that students’ opportunities to learn are being met, and that curriculum and instruction is culturally responsive. Utilize tools that assess skills in the language in which they have been taught- (e.g., it is not enough to assess phonemic awareness in Spanish if a student’s primary language in Spanish, but she has never been taught Spanish phonemes). www.nccrest.org

  25. Quote Students who have disorders that interfere with the teaching and learning process should be referred to special education programs that will allow them to develop the skills necessary for full participation in society. However, it is vital to distinguish students who are experiencing difficulties in school because of limited English skills from students who are handicapped. Inappropriate referral to special education can be stigmatizing and costly, and can inhibit limited-English-proficient students from achieving their full academic potential. SOURCE: Olson, Paula. (1991) Referring Language Minority Students to Special Education. ERIC Digest. ED329131 Mar 91

  26. 9. To what extent are parents involved? • Parents need to be contacted early in a language they understand regarding the teacher’s concerns. • Parents need to be educated about language development and differences between siblings, the role of 1st language literacy, etc.

  27. 10. To what extent are district ELL/Special Ed trends being scrutinized? Sometimes individual schools and staff are unable to notice trends in referrals across the district. Here are some Spokane examples.

  28. Spokane Public SchoolsSpEd Statistics

  29. Spokane Public SchoolsSpEd/ELL Statistics

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