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bELonging: Do Students Classified as English Learners Feel Included?

Published Year
2023
Resource Type
Journal
Target Audience(s)
Educators of English Learners
Administrators
Policy makers

These authors analyze student survey data related to sense of belonging and relationships with teachers and adults within and across the fastest growing subgroup of K–12 public school students: students classified as English learners (ELs).

Leveraging CA MTSS to Support English Learner-Classified Students: Insights from Three CA Districts

Published Year
2023
Resource Type
Brief
Target Audience(s)
Educators of English Learners
Researchers
Administrators
Policy makers

This brief is part of the Landscape of Language Learners in California’s MTSS (Multi-Tiered System of Support). This brief highlights findings from a study focused on how California’s Multi-Tiered System of Support (CA MTSS) framework serves English- Learner (EL) classified students1.

Charter schools and English learners in the lone star state

Published Year
2023
Resource Type
Report
Target Audience(s)
Educators of English Learners
Administrators
State Education Agencies
Researchers

Thanks to rapid increases in the state's Hispanic and Asian populations, the number of Texas students classified as English Learners has surged in the past decade, from approximately 830,000 in 2010 to more than 1.1 million today. In the charter sector, change has been even more rapid.

A critical GIS analysis of English learner enrollment

Published Year
2023
Resource Type
Journal
Target Audience(s)
Educators of English Learners
Policy makers
State Education Agencies

In many ways, Arizona is on the forefront of school choice: in addition to a state-wide open enrollment law, it was one of the first states to adopt charter school legislation in 1994 and currently has the second-highest percentage of public school students attending charter schools in the

Equity and English Learners Post-Pandemic

Published Year
2022
Resource Type
Journal

During the COVID-19 pandemic, immigrant and linguistically diverse families have both borne the brunt of America's job losses and are overrepresented in professions that are considered essential to the country's response and recovery.