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Creating the Perfect Setting: Prescribed Environments to Maximize DLLs’ Inclusion and Learning

Ice Cubes

Certain environments produce certain outcomes.聽Take, for example, a freezer, a refrigerator, and the kitchen counter. These different environments would drastically change the outcome of an ice cube.

The same concept can be applied to children: different structured environments produce different outcomes for children. And it goes without saying that educators should do their best to create the ideal environment for student growth and learning.

In June, the Administration of Children and Families聽聽(ECLKC) released a聽聽for administrators, educators, and families of Dual language learners (DLLs) in which it emphasizes the need for a聽聽聽聽This type of approach includes research-based early literacy and language strategies and intentional and consistent family engagement. It is an approach that serves all children 鈥 DLLs and monolinguals.

ECLKC further differentiates the planned language approach and introduces the idea of聽聽鈥 a set of four different pre-set classroom environments that might be suited for an early childhood setting depending on the demographics of the students.

Research presented in the toolkit and previously done by ECLKC has found that 鈥渢here was not one way to succeed. Classrooms should have different approaches based on program goals, the needs and skills of the children, and the skills of the teaching staff.鈥 Due to the inherent variety that exists in聽聽DLL classrooms 鈥 students of varying ages and levels of English proficiency speaking a variety of home languages 鈥 these models provide a prescribed, yet flexible, setting.

The four classroom settings are聽English with Home Language Support,聽Dual Language,聽Home Language as a Foundation for English Development, and聽English only.

English with Home Language Support聽鈥 this is an acceptable model for classrooms that serve students who speak a range of languages. Ideally, at least part of the teaching team would be bilingual and development of home languages 鈥 regardless of teacher comprehension 鈥 would be embraced, not discouraged. The Center advocates that, whenever possible, teachers should explore literature or stories with children in their home language and make every effort to educate parents on the importance of continual home language growth. ECLKC stated that the model鈥檚 primary goal is that 鈥渁ll children will learn to respect and admire other languages so they will thrive in an increasingly multicultural and multilingual society.鈥

Dual Language聽鈥 This model is intended to help students make significant progress towards developing proficiency in two languages. The classroom should contain a majority of students who speak one non-English home language, students who speak English as their home language, and staff able to enrich students in both languages. With this 50/50 model, classrooms have flexibility in how they choose to allocate time spent in each language 鈥 alternating days, weeks, or times within the day. It is important, however, that 鈥渆ach language is spoken during designated, equal, and predictable periods.鈥 The Center suggests that this approach will 鈥渆nhance each child鈥檚 identity and positive self-concept.鈥

Source: Early Childhood Learning and Knowledge Center

Note: The visual demonstrates a 50/50 split between instructional languages. Different early childhood programs in the U.S. employ different allocations such as 90/10, 80/20, etc.

Home Language as a Foundation for English Development聽鈥 This model is advised for classrooms where all the students speak the same non-English home language and are under 聽3 years old. Literacy materials, classroom instruction, and all communication should be conducted in the children鈥檚 home language. English is introduced gradually throughout the year but the emphasis is to highlight 鈥渢heir home language as an important asset that they should be proud to use and continue to develop.鈥

English Only聽鈥斅燭he most straightforward of all the approaches, this model is intended for classrooms where all the students and teachers speak English as their home language. The goal for this model is that 鈥渃hildren will develop age-level language skills in English.鈥

罢丑别听聽in conjunction with the聽聽recently released a聽聽on supporting DLLs in which they highlight these CLMs. The departments said, 鈥渞esearch indicates that early childhood is the ideal developmental time period for learning a second language and developing proficiency in more than one language. Given the literature that describes the聽, support for both home language and English language development is recommended.鈥

As important as it is, deciding on a CLM is only step one towards crafting the ideal environment. Steps two, three, and four include ensuring that teaching staff have sufficient materials and support to initially implement the chosen CLM effectively, notifying families about the chosen model, and supervising the quality of the chosen model.

Some models lend themselves to easier implementation. 罢丑别听Dual Language聽model requires far more thought and preparation before implementation than an聽English-only聽model. For instance, it may take additional funds (and time!) to meet the聽Dual Language聽model鈥檚 requirement that all materials be available in both languages. Additional time will also be needed to hire qualified bilingual teachers in the midst of a聽. If, however,聽Dual Language聽is the聽聽for the classroom, the initial investment can be justified by the influence and benefit that it will have on DLL students and families.

Additionally, one can fall into the trap of wanting to implement multiple CLMs into one center or school. After all, each model has its own advantages 鈥 why not try to catch them all? The ECLKC warns against this approach: 鈥渨hile several CLMs may fit the children and staff in each center, a limited number should be selected when you start 鈥 no more than two is preferable at first. It may be tempting to want to start with all the models, but it is more important for a program to develop capacity and skills over time.鈥

Another important thing to note is that effective implementation of聽any聽of the CLMs requires unified effort from teachers, administrators, family support staff, and parents. Professional development, hiring decisions, and material purchases all have to be consistent in order to strengthen the CLMs an early education center is implementing. The hope is that students will benefit from intentional, high-quality instruction that has a focus on language development and early literacy learning.聽聽has shown that strong language development is one of the most reliable factors in predicting later academic success.

Of course 鈥 unlike those aforementioned ice cubes 鈥 kids behave in a variety of ways. While early education centers need to be flexible enough to address their diverse needs, this can be easier to do within a consistent model. CLMs provide precisely that: a stable approach that guides early educators鈥 efforts and acts as a foundation for creative, differentiated instruction to support all DLLs.

This post is part of 国产视频鈥檚 Dual Language Learners National Work Group.聽Click here for more information on this team鈥檚 work. To subscribe to the biweekly newsletter,聽click here, enter your contact information, and select 鈥淒LL National Work Group Newsletter.鈥

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Sammi Wong
Creating the Perfect Setting: Prescribed Environments to Maximize DLLs’ Inclusion and Learning