English-Language Learners News in Brief

Denver Drafts Plan For English-Learners

By The Associated Press — October 09, 2012 1 min read
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The Denver school district has settled on a new road map to help students who aren’t native English-speakers overcome language barriers and fully participate in school.

Federal prosecutors and the Congress of Hispanic Educators had expressed concerns about whether the 82,000-student district was living up to a 1999 court order outlining steps it would take to adequately serve English-language learners as required under federal law.

Prosecutors said last week that the district had agreed to a proposed consent decree requiring such steps as implementation of comprehensive measures for identifying and monitoring students who need help; translation services for parents who speak limited English; and tailored services for English-language learners who have disabilities or who are refugees. Help also must be offered in the district’s charter schools.

A judge must still approve the consent decree.

A version of this article appeared in the October 10, 2012 edition of Education Week as Denver Drafts Plan For English-Learners

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