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Can children with developmental disabilities learn more than one language

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Title: Can children with developmental disabilities learn more than one language


1
Can children with developmental disabilities
learn more than one language?
  • Current research, policy issues, and best
    practices for serving children who are learning
    English as a second language in Early Childhood
    Special Education
  • Lillian Duran, M.A.
  • dura0061_at_umn.edu

2
The Answer
  • YES!
  • Evidence suggests that children with Language
    Impairments and other developmental disabilities
    can learn two languages to their ability level.
  • (Hakansson, Salameh, Nettelbladt, 2003)

3
Diversity in Learners
  • A childs ability to learn any language is
    constrained by their cognitive level and/or level
    of language impairment. However, research (and
    practical evidence) has shown that humans can
    learn more than one language and that learning
    two languages is not inherently more difficult
    than learning one language. Bilingual children
    have also demonstrated consistent advantages in
    both verbal and non-verbal cognitive tasks and
    metalinguistic abilities (Diaz Klingler, 1991).

4
International Examples
  • Over ½ of the worlds population is bilingual
    (deHouwer, 1995)
  • Many other countries have instituted and
    researched bilingual education including Canada,
    Norway, The Netherlands, Sweden, Australia,
    Mexico and China (Krashen, 1999)

5
Research on young simultaneous bilinguals
  • Young (middle class) bilingual children who
    acquire two languages from birth reach linguistic
    milestones at the same age as their monolingual
    peers.
  • (Genessee, 2001 Holowka et al., 2002 Petitto,
    2001)
  • Young bilinguals demonstrate interlocutor
    sensitivity indicating that they are aware of
    which language to use with different people
    (Maneva Genessee, 2002 Petitto et al., 2001)

6
Research on young simultaneous bilinguals
  • An abundance of translation equivalents have been
    documented in young bilingual children
    demonstrating that young children recognize that
    they need different words for the same concept in
    different contexts. (Genessee, 2001 Holowka et
    al., 2002 Petitto, 2001)
  • Code-mixing that follows grammatical rules is not
    evidence of language confusion, but has been
    found to be directly proportional to the rate of
    language mixing in the childs environment.
  • e.g. Spanglish
  • (Lanza, 1992 Petitto et al., 2001)

7
Simultaneous vs. Sequential Bilingualism
  • Simultaneous Two languages acquired from birth
  • Sequential No consensus in the field, ideas
    range from the introduction of the second
    language at the age of one month to 3 years.
  • (deHouwer, 1990 MacLaughlin, 1984)

8
Additive vs. Subtractive Bilingualism
  • Additive Situations where both languages are
    supported and languages develop in parallel.
    (Diaz Klingler, 1999)
  • Subtractive Situations characterized by a
    gradual loss of the first language as a result of
    increasing mastery and use of the second
    language. (Diaz Klingler, 1999)

9
Why should we worry about maintaining a childs
native language?
  • Doesnt every child need to learn English to be
    successful in school?
  • Isnt better for ELL children to learn English as
    quickly as possible?
  • If we dont use English as the only medium of
    instruction providing the most input in English
    as possible early on arent we doing the children
    a disservice by not preparing them for school?

10
Critical factors to consider for young bilinguals
  • Level of development of the first language
  • Familys SES/level of education
  • Minority language status in society (ie
    motivation and attitudes of the language learner
    about English and their native language)
  • Level and variation of input to the child in each
    of their languages
  • Childs ability level and how it impacts language
    development in general

11
Reframing the Question
  • The Question is not whether or not all children
    in the United States need to learn English
  • Of course they do!
  • The Question is how do we best teach young
    English language learners English and produce the
    best long term academic outcomes?

12
Investigating the Answer
  • A plethora of research currently exists that
    documents the advantages of Developmental
    Bilingual Education (DBE) over Transitional
    Bilingual and English-only programs.
  • (Rolstad, Mahoney, Glass, 2005 Thomas
    Collier, 2002 Christian, 1996 Cummins, 1979
    many more)

13
Evidence that instruction in L1 leads to better
academic achievement in English (L2)
  • In a recent National Study of School
    Effectiveness for Language Minority Students
    Thomas and Collier (2002) concluded
  • Enrichment 90-10 and 50-50 developmental
    bilingual education programs (programs that teach
    content through a childs native language) are
    the only programs we have found to date that
    assist students to fully reach the 50th
    percentile in both L1 and L2 in all subjects and
    to maintain that level of high achievement, or
    reach even higher levels through the end of
    schooling. The fewest dropouts come from these
    programs. (pg. 313)

14
Evidence that instruction in L1 leads to better
academic achievement in English
  • Thomas and Collier (2002) continue
  • In this study and all other research studies
    following ELLs long term, the minimum length of
    time it takes to reach grade-level performance in
    a second language is 4 years. Only ELLs who have
    had 4 years of schooling in their native language
    reach L2 grade level performance. (pg. 314)

15
Evidence that instruction in L1 leads to better
academic achievement in English
  • The strongest predictor of L2 student
    achievement is the amount of formal schooling in
    L1. The more L1 grade-level schooling, the higher
    the L2 achievement. (Thomas Collier, 2002, pg.
    314)

16
Evidence that instruction in L1 leads to better
academic achievement in English
  • Lastly in a recent Meta-Analysis of Program
    Effectiveness Research on English Language
    Learners
  • Rolstad, Mahoney, Glass (2005) conclude
  • Empirical evidence considered here indicates
    that bilingual education is more beneficial for
    ELL students than all-English approaches. It
    seems clear from the current study and from
    previous meta-analyses (Greene, 1998 Willig,
    1985) that bilingual education is superior to
    English-only approaches in increasing measures of
    students academic achievement in English and the
    native language. (pg. 590)

17
Preschool studies
  • Rodriguez, Diaz, Duran and Espinosa (1995) and
    Winsler, Diaz, Espinosa and Rodriguez (1999)
    investigated the language development of
    Spanish-speaking preschoolers from low-income
    families in CA.
  • They compared a group of students attending a
    high quality 50/50 bilingual preschool classroom
    with a control group who stayed home with
    Spanish-speaking care providers.

18
Preschool studies
  • Rodriguez et al. (1995) and Winsler et al.
    (1999) found that Spanish language development
    was similar in the two groups, but that the group
    that attended the bilingual preschool had the
    advantage of significant English language
    development.

19
Preschool Studies
  • In 1980 the Carpentería School District in
    California began a longitudinal study to compare
    the outcomes of four specific groups,(1)
    Spanish-speaking children who attended
    English-focused community preschool programs, (2)
    English-speaking children who attended an
    entitlement preschool program and (3)
    English-speaking children who did not participate
    in an entitlement program because they were
    primarily middle class and (4) Spanish-speaking
    children who attended a full immersion Spanish
    program.
  • Children were followed from Kindergarten to
    Junior High school and three sources of data were
    analyzed to quantify progress and achievement (1)
    school report cards, (2) school competency
    assessment data including referrals to special
    education, attendance, grade retention and
    suspensions, and (3) standardized assessment
    data.

20
Preschool Studies
  • Results indicated that the English-only
    non-entitlement (middle class) group outperformed
    all other groups significantly indicating the
    strong effects of SES on school achievement
    regardless of the language or cultural
    backgrounds of the students. However, when
    comparing the Carpentería Spanish-only preschool
    students to the other two groups they showed
    significantly higher scores on achievement tests
    at Kindergarten entrance than both the
    English-speaking children who attended
    entitlement programs or the language-minority
    preschoolers who attended English-only community
    programs. Overtime these effects continued and in
    fifth grade on the District Proficiency Test, 80
    of the Carpentería Preschool group passed
    compared to 30 of the language-minority
    comparison preschool group who attended other
    English-focused community preschool programs
    (Campos, 1985).

21
Applying this evidence to ECSE
  • Although this body of research comes from studies
    on the general education Pre-K-6 population there
    are some findings we can cautiously apply to ECSE
    practice.
  • Currently there is no body of research
    specifically addressing best practice with ELL
    students in ECSE settings. This is a huge gap in
    the literature!

22
Cautious applications to ECSE given the current
state of the research
  • Given that research on young simultaneous
    bilinguals indicates that being bilingual does
    not inherently cause language delay, the
    preliminary evidence supporting bilingual
    preschool practice, and the amount of evidence
    suggesting that supporting native language
    enhances long term academic outcomes it stands to
    reason that in ECSE we should move toward
    bilingual practice versus an English-only
    approach which has little to no sound empirical
    evidence.

23
Other reasons to support a childs native language
  • In early childhood a childs native language is
    still in the process of development. In ECSE we
    are often working on basic communication in the
    family context and it only makes sense to provide
    support in the language the child will need in
    their natural setting.

24
Other reasons to support a childs native language
  • The child must be able to communicate with
    his/her family and community so that he/she does
    not become socially isolated. Maintaining strong
    native language skills will allow parents to
    communicate affection, discipline and teach
    cultural values (Wong-Fillmore, 1991).

25
Other reasons to support a childs native language
  • The child will be surrounded with English
    speakers and will quickly recognize English as
    the language with higher status and power in this
    society. The greatest likelihood is actually that
    immigrant children will discontinue using their
    native language (Portes Hao, 1998).

26
Other reasons to support a childs native language
  • Given the global economy and increasing diversity
    in our country there is actually a great demand
    for fully proficient bilinguals. Why should we
    not support this capacity in native speakers?
    (Portes Hao, 1998 Valdes, 1997)

27
Specific suggestions for intervention for ELL
students with Language Impairment (Kohnert
Derr, 2004)
  • For the child who is bilingual, intervention in
    both languages yields the most progress and
    honors the fact that the child needs both
    languages to develop and to communicate
    effectively in all of his/her environments.
  • For the child who knows no English therapy is
    best provided in their native language. The
    question is Is the goal to teach English or
    develop the childs overall language skills?
  • In both of these scenarios it may mean the use of
    an interpreter and working through the family.

28
Screening and Assessment
  • The knowledge, sensitivity, and care of the
    person giving an instrument and interpreting the
    result is ultimately more important than the
    specific tool that is used. Technical adequacy
    does not assure an unbiased assessment.
  • (Unbiased Assessment Manual, Minnesota Department
    of Education)

29
Screening and Assessment
  • Standardized screening instruments that have been
    normed on a culturally and linguistically diverse
    population are difficult to find or non-
    existent. It is therefore up to us to use
    professional judgement and utilize the tools we
    have in an appropriate manner. The scores that
    are derived from a childs performance on a
    standardized instrument can serve as a guideline,
    but not as a determining factor in referral for
    assessment and eligibility determination.

30
MN State and Federal Guidelines
  • Whenever possible the child should be seen at
    home at least once where both the parents and the
    child will be more comfortable. It is also
    important to see a child over a period of time
    and in different settings if appropriate i.e.
    home, child care and preschool to help determine
    if a child is truly disabled.
  • If the parents are concerned with their childs
    development, the childs skills should be
    evaluated.

31
MN State and Federal Guidelines
  • Tests that are translated should not be scored.
    Scores from a standardized test that is given in
    a nonstandardized manner (i.e., translating it
    into another language) should not be reported.
  • If it is thought that lack of exposure to certain
    materials or tasks may be the cause of the
    childs underperformance, a test-teach-retest
    approach may be useful to rule out lack of
    exposure with certain skills.

32
MN State and Federal Guidelines
  • A decision-making model should be employed to
    determine eligibility if standard scores are not
    reported and the evaluation report should provide
    information about which data sources had the
    greatest relative importance for the eligibility
    decision. These data sources can include
    teacher comments, previous testing, observational
    data, ecological assessments, parent report and
    other developmental data.

33
MN State and Federal Guidelines
  • Special Education assessment must be done in the
    childs primary language or languages.
  • Communication to the parents and due process
    forms must be in the parents primary language,
    either written or orally translated.
  • No single procedure should be used to determine
    eligibility.
  • Testing materials and procedures should be used
    that are not racially or culturally
    discriminatory.

34
Evaluation Plan
  • The team should answer the following questions
  • How will the family be involved?
  • Where and how will observations in the childs
    natural settings be conducted?
  • How will the team determine the childs language
    level in both their native language and English?
  • How will the team locate an interpreter?
  • What assessment tools will be used? What other
    data sources will be used?
  • Overall will the evaluation plan provide enough
    information gathered from multiple data sources
    in a culturally sensitive manner, over several
    sessions and across the childs natural settings
    for the team to make an informed and unbiased
    decision regarding the childs need for special
    education services?

35
Implications for administrators and policy-makers
  • 1. Recruit, hire and retain more bilingual staff!
  • 2. Use cultural liasons in addition to
    interpreters
  • 3. Provide research-based training for ECSE staff
    including specialists
  • 4. Provide research-based training for
    administrators and policy-makers in your own
    community

36
Implications for administrators and
policy-makers Try something new!
  • Design and implement inclusive bilingual
    preschool classrooms in your community
  • Involve your local higher ed faculty in ECSE
    teacher preparation so that they can better
    prepare future teachers.
  • Be creative and open to new ideas. Visit places
    in the country that have strong bilingual Early
    Childhood Programs network, read, use the
    internet, seek funding

37
In my own community
  • Beginning a Bilingual Preschool Classroom in
    Sleepy Eye, MN in collaboration with ECSE, ECFE,
    Head Start and the Public School District
  • Rural town population 3,000
  • Elementary school population 40 Latino
  • Primarily children from families who are Mexican
    migrant farm workers who have decided to stay in
    MN

38
What I have found
  • Community partners in Early Childhood are willing
    and just waiting for someone with energy to
    initiate a project to serve young ELL students
  • There is a significant amount of grant money
    available for bilingual programming serving
    immigrant children from low income families
  • Give yourself two years to plan, fund, staff and
    implement the program

39
Language Rights as Civil Rights
  • Lau v. Nichols 1974
  • recognized language rights as civil rights and
    the relationship of equal educational
    opportunities to the language of education
  • Dyrcia S. et al. v. Board of Education of N.Y.
    (1979)
  • judgement issued calling for the provision of
    appropriate bilingual programs for all children
    with both high and low incidence disabilities.
  • Nieto (1992)
  • equity rather than equality
  • equity includes equal educational opportunities
    ---the need for equality of outcomes, for a
    broad range of students

40
No Child Left Behind
  • In 1968 the Bilingual Education Act passed
    indicating federal government support for
    bilingual education and it initiated federal
    funding for these programs.
  • The passage of NCLB in 2001 repealed The
    Bilingual Education Act and replaced it with
    The English Acquisition Act dramatically
    altering the focus of federal support and funding
    for the education of ELL students.

41
What are your next steps in your community to
better serve young English Language Learners?
  • What are your personal philosophies regarding
    this issue and how do they influence your work?
  • What information impacted you from todays
    presentation?
  • What do you want to do or what can you do in your
    community?
  • Who can help?
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