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Early childhood education programs in California have a critically important role to play in preparing children whose first language is not English to succeed in kindergarten and beyond, according to a new EdSource report.
Titled “Promoting Success for Dual Language Learners: The Essential Role of Early Childhood Education Programs,” the report outlines seven challenges these programs face in meeting the needs of children under the age of 5 from diverse language backgrounds.
These include balancing the need to promote fluency in a child’s home language while also moving the child to becoming proficient in English, finding staff with facility in a language in addition to English, and engaging families who are not fluent in English in their child’s education from an early age. Meeting those challenges will require coordinated efforts at the local, regional and state levels, the report asserted.
In recent years, California has taken the lead nationally in promoting a variety of strategies for how early learning programs — from infant and toddler care to preschool programs — can more effectively serve dual language learners. California has more English learners than any other state. Nearly 1 in 4 children in the state’s public schools are classified as “English learners,” and the percentage is thought to be even higher in preschool and other early learning programs.
But the state is now at a pivotal moment in the implementation of a range of reforms that are putting additional pressure on educators to ensure that dual language learners succeed. These include the state’s passage of the Local Control Funding Formula, which gives districts more money for English learners. In return, districts are expected to be more effective in serving them. The Every Student Succeeds Act signed by President Barack Obama last December also requires districts for the first time to report on their successes with English learners to receive federal Title 1 funds for low-income children.
The importance of early childhood programs in reaching these children is getting increasing attention nationally. Last week, the White House held a regional “summit meeting” on the subject in Miami, and issued a new federal policy statement on supporting the development of dual language learners in early childhood programs.
It also issued a “dual language learners toolkit” targeted at a range of constituencies.
The policy statement pointed to what it called a “mismatch between the learning experiences these children need to meet their potential, and the quality of the experiences they are currently receiving.” Ensuring that they are prepared for school, the policy statement said, “will directly influence the competitiveness of the U.S. in an evolving global economy.”
As the issue gets more attention, there is an ongoing debate about what to call children who are gaining mastery over English. Traditionally, they have been called “English learners,” or ELs, and before that “English language learners,” or ELLs. But currently the preferred term is “dual language learner” because it reflects the fact that young children are gaining mastery over two languages — both English and their native language. However, children who are still gaining proficiency in English in kindergarten and above are still called “English learners.”
The EdSource report notes that simply aiming for fluency in English without encouraging mastery of a child’s home language as well could impede children’s future academic success, as it flies in the face of research that clearly shows that proficiency in a child’s home language is likely to lead to better rather than worse academic outcomes.
To ensure that gains made in supporting dual language learners are maintained, the report also underscores the importance of helping a child successfully make the transition from infant or toddler care to preschool, and then from preschool to kindergarten.
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Comments (3)
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Early childhood education 7 years ago7 years ago
This is would be a great step to help a child learn better. Anyone is more comfortable to learn in their home language rather than the language they are not familiar with. English is a universal language and must be taught in schools so that children could also interact with the outer world.
J. Sanders 8 years ago8 years ago
Since the authors of the report are writing this article, where is their ownership of it? Instead of writing “a new EdSource report, would it be more transparent to write “our new EdSource report”?
Replies
John Fensterwald 8 years ago8 years ago
Thanks for the suggestion, J. Sanders. Susan Frey and Louis Freedberg also did write the report, as would be apparent to readers who turned to it.