It
is often said that if you want something done, ask a busy person.Like, for instance, children who began school
with limited or no English language skills, yet who succeed in learning enough
to be redesignated as proficient in English, and moved into the mainstream.
In
California, these children, termed Reclassified – Fluent English Proficient
(R-FEP) students, are among the highest achievers in the public education
system.They regularly outperform state
averages for all students, having done so on the standardized CAT/6 test in all
subjects in each of the past three years (the test is given to third and
seventh graders).
In
fact, they even outscored students who are native English speakers, in every
subject and grade level, over the same period.Actually, the two groups tied in reading in 2005 at the seventh grade
level.But, even then, students who had
previously been English learners outscored native English speakers by 11 points
in spelling.
The
process of students becoming proficient in English and being redesignated into
the mainstream happens slowly in California.Statewide, less than 10 percent of English learners are redesignated
annually.In other words, most of them
will remain in bilingual education, or other special language programs, for
over 10 years. By contrast, redesignation rates in Florida and New Jersey are
more than three times higher.
Why
does this process happen so slowly in California?Experts have cited factors including funding
formulas for schools that are tied to numbers of English learners, high-stakes testing
incentives and arrangements, and a general belief by many educators that
children should be held back until they are deemed ready, even if other
criteria have been met. Success rates, and policies, vary significantly from
one school district to next.
Sacramento
County’s Elk Grove school district, the state’s third largest, has consistently
had among California’s highest annual redesignation rates for English learners
over the past several years.Elk Grove’s
R-FEP seventh graders have also regularly posted among the states’ best CAT/6
test scores in reading, language arts, math and spelling.
Meanwhile,
Los Angeles USD has tripled its redesignation rates over the past 4 years, to
well above the state average.Its CAT/6 test
scores for former English learners, however, stayed generally the same at the
seventh grade level, while third grade scores fell only slightly.Los Angeles has emphasized early English
proficiency through policy changes and teacher training.
There
is no more important factor for the assimilation of these children into
America’s educational and economic mainstream than English proficiency.Most of them are not even immigrants
themselves: two-thirds of English learners belong to the second or third
generation in their family to live in this country.Those who become proficient in English in
elementary school face far better chances of avoiding academic failure than
those who do not.And for those that do,
as these test scores indicate, their success can be very convincing indeed.