1 / 41

New Jersey Profile of Limited English Proficient Students

New Jersey Profile of Limited English Proficient Students. Students. Language Minority Students 276,031 Limited English Proficient 66,451 Languages 151 Total Districts 500. District Programs. Districts with bilingual education 77 Full-time only 23

menefer
Télécharger la présentation

New Jersey Profile of Limited English Proficient Students

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. New Jersey Profile of Limited English Proficient Students

  2. Students • Language Minority Students 276,031 • Limited English Proficient 66,451 • Languages 151 • Total Districts 500

  3. District Programs • Districts with bilingual education 77 • Full-time only 23 • Part-time only 38 • Districts with full-time and part-time 16 • Districts with ESL only 232 • Districts with English Language Services 160

  4. Languages • Spanish 9. Urdu • Korean 10. Tagalog • Portuguese • Haitian Creole • Arabic • Gujarati • Mandarin • Polish

  5. Administrative CodeN.J.A.C.6A:15 • Bilingual Education • 20 or more LEP students of one language group • English as a Second Language • 10 or LEP more students of any language • English Language Services • 9 or fewer students

  6. Title III No Child Left Behind • Purpose: To help ensure that limited English proficient students attain English proficiency, develop high levels of academic achievement in English and meet the same academic standards as all students are expected to meet.

  7. Title III • Formula Grants to States and Districts • Apply through consolidated NCLB application process • Subgrants must be at least $10,000 or districts may form consortia to meet minimum

  8. Accountability • Annual Measurable Achievement Objectives for English Language Proficiency • Students must progress one level in English language proficiency for each year that they are instructed in a language assistance program. • Levels are : 1. Beginners; 2. Lower Intermediate; 3. Higher Intermediate; 4.Advanced; 5. English Proficient

  9. Accountability • Objective for Attainment of English Language Proficiency • Grades K-4 4 years or less in a program • Grades 5-12 5 years or less in a program

  10. Translating Law and Code into Meaningful and Effective Program Services Considerations: • Impact of No Child Left Behind (NCLB) • Goals of Bilingual/ESL Programs • Curriculum for Bilingual and ESL • Stand-Alone vs. Integrated Programs

  11. New Jersey TESOL/NJBE Chapter Roundtables - www.njtesol-njbe.org • English Language Proficiency Standards • Student Intake and Student Tracking • Scheduling

  12. Language Services for Limited English Proficient Students (LEP) • The Bilingual Education Law of 1974 (N.J.S.A. 35-15 to 26) stipulates that districts must establish bilingual education program when enrollment of limited English proficient (LEP) students from the same language reaches 20 or more students in one district. • New Jersey Administrative Code (N.J.A.C. 6A:15) outlines the programmatic and administrative requirements for school districts that enroll students who are limited English proficient.

  13. Program Plans • Program plans are required every three years for both Bilingual, ESL and English Language Services. • New Program plans will be request next spring for 2005 to 2008

  14. TYPES OF PROGRAMS There are four types of language assistance programs/services • Full time Bilingual program with an ESL support component. • Bilingual program alternative • ESL only • English Language Service (ELS)

  15. LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT (LEP)STUDENT ENROLLMENT TRACKING SYSTEMSCHOOL YEAR 2004-2005 Each year, the Office of Specialized Populations collects enrollment information on students who have a native language other than English and students who are limited English proficient (LEP). The department will continue to collect the data through the Internet to include the following types of date: • Data for three-and four-year-old preschool students; and • Data for LEP special education students in grades K-12. • Number of students from the total district population that speak a language other than English at home

  16. LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT (LEP)STUDENT ENROLLMENT TRACKING SYSTEMSCHOOL YEAR 2004-2005 The student information reported should be based on enrollment as of October 15, 2004, and the report must be submitted via the Internet to the Department of Education by November 19, 2004.

  17. LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT (LEP)STUDENT ENROLLMENT TRACKING SYSTEMSCHOOL YEAR 2004-2005 • Your DOE Net account will not provide access to the LEP data collection. LEP accounts must be assigned through the DOE Web Administrator System. Information regarding the Web Administrator System can be found at http://www.state.nj.us/njded/data/collections/. The form necessary to submit and create a Web Administrator Account is available at this site.

  18. LIMITED ENGLISH PROFICIENT (LEP)STUDENT ENROLLMENT TRACKING SYSTEMSCHOOL YEAR 2004-2005 • For technical assistance with the data collection system, please e-mail your questions to LEP@doe.state.nj.us or call (609) 292-8777.

  19. Immigrant Student Count • Each February, a count is requested on the number of immigrant students in districts. • The information requested is the number eligible immigrant students (Pre K-12) enrolled in the school district and the number of eligible immigrant students enrolled in nonprofit, nonpublic schools within the district.

  20. Federal Definition of Immigrant Student • Aged 3 to 21 • Were not born in any state, Puerto Rico, U.S. Virgin Islands (St. Thomas, ST. Croix and St. John • Have not been attending one or more schools in one or more states for more than three full academic years.

  21. LEP Annual Progress/Exit • Each spring or close to the end of the school year, districts are required to report to NJDOE the results of the language proficiency test. ALL DISTRICTS WITH LEP STUDENTS MUST REPORT. • The results that are reported are the number of students that scores in each of the 5 proficiency levels. • Reporting must be done by grade level and time in program.

  22. Recording Language Proficiency Data on ELP • Maintain records of scores and proficiency levels for all students on all sections of the test • Maintain records of continuous date language instruction began and grade level of the student

  23. Reporting ELP and Exit Data • By school • By grade • By time in program receiving English language instruction (Less than 1 yr, first year, second year, etc.) • Number of students at each level of English language proficiency (Levels 1,2,3,4 & 5) • Number of students exiting • Number of students improving at least one level from previous year

  24. TITLE III Parental Notification • NCLB provides specific instructions and requirements that districts must, no later than 30 days after the beginning of the school year, must inform the parent or parents of a limited English proficient (LEP) student that their child has been identified for participation in a language instruction educational program. • Districts not receiving Title III funds still must notify parents according to NJAC 6A:15-1.13.

  25. Assessment • Language Proficiency • State Assessments

  26. Language Proficiency Tests • Approved Tests: • IDEA Proficiency Test (IPT)- Ballard and Tighe Publishers • Maculaitis II (MACII) Test of English Language Proficiency –Touchstone Applied Science Associates • Language Assessment Scales (LAS)- CTB/McGraw-Hill New Test ( Spring, 2006)- ELDA

  27. Use of Language Proficiency Tests • Identification of LEP Students upon Enrollment • Measure Progress in Learning English • Determine Readiness for Exit (multiple indicators)

  28. Statewide Assessments • LEP students may take assessments with accommodations • Extra time • Bilingual dictionary • Translated instructions • Exemption from Language Arts Literacy test during 1st year in U.S. school (tentative)

  29. New Jersey English Language Proficiency Standards • Previous standards aligned the TESOL ESL standards to New Jersey’s Language Arts Literacy Standards • NJ Language Arts Literacy Standards were revised in 2002 and in 2004 • No Child Left Behind mandates ELP standards that: • address the four domains of listening, speaking, reading and writing and • are linked to the academic content and achievement standards in reading/language arts, mathematics and science (by 2005-06)

  30. The Goal • To teach English Language Learners (ELLs) to use English to achieve academically in all content areas

  31. The Purpose • Indicate what students should know to develop competence in English as a result of instruction • Assist curriculum developers • Review, revise, or develop ESL curriculum

  32. The Components • TESOL’s ESL Standards • New Jersey Language Arts Literacy Core Curriculum Content Standards • New Jersey Five Language Proficiency Levels • Sample Classroom Tasks

  33. Standards Template

  34. Grades 3-5Reading English Language Proficiency Standard– Students will be able to read (decode and comprehend) texts for recreational and academic purposes.

  35. http://www.nj.gov/njded/bilingual/resources/elp.pdf

  36. http://www.nj.gov/njded/bilingual/resources/elp.pdf

  37. Professional Development • ESL Reading – 10/27, 11/18, 12/14 • ESL Content • Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol (SIOP) • Setting Up A Data Tracking System • English Language Learners in the Mainstream Online Tutorial • Second Language Model Program Resource Centers • NJTESOL-NJBE – www.njtesol-njbe.org

  38. How To Use The Online Tutorial • Formal ongoing in-service activity (3-4 weeks, 15 PD hours) • Hybrid activity (partially conducted by a district PD facilitator, partially going online to participate in course and complete assignments) • Learn on your own completely online

  39. New Jersey Department of Education Office of Specialized Populations Bureau of Bilingual/ESL Education James F. Curry, Acting Director, james.curry@doe.state.nj.us Raquel Sinai, Bilingual/ESL Coordinator, raquel.sinai@doe.state.nj.us Louis D’Amato, Bilingual/ESL Education Program Specialist, louis.damato@doe.state.nj.us Lori Ramella, Bilingual/ESL Education Program Specialist, lori.ramella@doe.state.nj.us www.state.nj.us/education www.nj.gov/njded/bilingual (609) 292-8777

  40. Atlantic City Board of EducationMaryAnn MenaDistrict ESL/Bilingual Teacher(609) 343-7200 ext. 5055

More Related