Assessment

Early Bilingual Programs Found To Boost Test Scores

By Mary Ann Zehr — September 04, 2002 3 min read
  • Save to favorites
  • Print

English-language learners do better academically over the long term if they participate in special programs to learn English at the start of their school careers, rather than attend only mainstream classes, according to one of the largest longitudinal studies of such students ever conducted.

That conclusion comes from a study of English-language learners released last month by Wayne P. Thomas and Virginia P. Collier, researchers at George Mason University in Fairfax, Va.

Read “A National Study of School Effectiveness for Language Minority Students’ Long-Term Academic Achievement,” from the Center for Research on Education, Diversity and Excellence.

“We now know that very unhappy things happen when you just submerse English-language learners in a regular classroom—when the teacher has no special training and no special things are done for them,” Mr. Thomas said.

The authors say the study also confirms what they found in earlier research: Students who take bilingual education classes do much better on standardized tests after entering mainstream classes than students who take English-only classes.

The study reports on student records from 1982 to 2000 provided by five school districts, including the 208,000-student Houston district, and is part of an ongoing, federally financed study of programs for English-language learners in 16 school districts. (“Learning Gap Linked to LEP Instruction,” April 25, 2001.)

Mr. Thomas and Ms. Collier stressed in an interview that some bilingual education programs are much more effective than others, something they say is often lost in the national debate about how best to teach students English.

For instance, they’ve found that transitional bilingual education, in which students are taught some subjects in their native languages with the expectation that they will move as quickly as possible into mainstream classes, is only slightly more effective than English-only instruction.

“The issue is not just bilingual versus English-only,” said Mr. Thomas. “How effective you are depends on what kind of bilingual and English-only programs you’re talking about.”

Program Comparisons

The study found that long-term bilingual education programs that develop strong literacy both in students’ native languages and in English—in contrast with short-term programs that emphasize learning English as quickly as possible—are the most effective kinds of programs. In fact, the study says they’re the only kinds of programs that fully close the achievement gap between English-language learners and native English-speakers over the long term.

The researchers give “90-10" two-way bilingual programs, begun in 1996 in Houston schools, as an example. Those programs strive to teach both native speakers of English and Spanish attending the same classes academic content in both languages. The students initially receive 90 percent of instruction in Spanish and 10 percent in English.

The amount of English used for instruction increases with each grade. English- language learners in such classes scored at the 51st percentile in reading on standardized tests at the end of 5th grade.

In contrast, Houston students who participated in “ESL content” programs, in which teachers use English-as-a- second-language techniques to teach core academic courses, performed at the 32nd percentile on standardized tests in reading in the 11th grade.

And English-language learners in Houston public schools whose parents had chosen to place them only in mainstream classes scored on average only at the 12th percentile on standardized reading tests in 11th grade.

Many of the findings of the researchers are longitudinal, following the same students over time.

But the particular comparisons regarding Houston’s programs are not based on the achievement of the same students over time. Rather, they are based on different students enrolled in the same kinds of programs.

Kenji Hakuta, an education professor at Stanford University, said the study was important for the field because of its scale and ability to follow students over a long period of time. The much more common short-term studies in the field “are limited as to what they tell us,” he said.

Mr. Hakuta pointed out that Mr. Thomas and Ms. Collier used a research approach that differs from the methodology of some other large-scale studies, in that they deeply involved district personnel as observers and collectors of data. Such an approach provides them with excellent access to student information, he said, but also causes the study to lose some objectivity.

Events

Teaching Profession K-12 Essentials Forum Supporting the New K-12 Workforce: What Teachers Need to Stay at School
 Join this free virtual event to discover what teachers say they need to feel supported to stay in classrooms for the long haul.
College & Workforce Readiness K-12 Essentials Forum Career and Technical Education Takes Its Next Big Step
Join this free virtual event to hear creative approaches to modernize CTE programs and navigate the shift away from a near-exclusive focus on "college preparedness."

EdWeek Top School Jobs

Teacher Jobs
Search over ten thousand teaching jobs nationwide — elementary, middle, high school and more.
View Jobs
Principal Jobs
Find hundreds of jobs for principals, assistant principals, and other school leadership roles.
View Jobs
Administrator Jobs
Over a thousand district-level jobs: superintendents, directors, more.
View Jobs
Support Staff Jobs
Search thousands of jobs, from paraprofessionals to counselors and more.
View Jobs

Read Next

Assessment Spotlight From Data to Decisions: How Data Should Shape Instruction, Not Just Measure It
Find out how educators are shifting to real-time, strengths-based data to guide teaching, differentiation, and support.
Assessment Opinion We Need to Stop Overrelying on Student Test Scores
These four educator strategies offer approaches for improving how we evaluate achievement.
6 min read
Conceptual illustration of classroom conversations and fragmented education elements coming together to form a cohesive picture of a book of classroom knowledge.
Sonia Pulido for Education Week
Assessment Students Can Hear Questions Aloud When They Take Many Tests. Does It Help?
Text-to-speech tech helps some students answer questions correctly, but hurts others' performance.
2 min read
Young student in a school computer lab concentrates on a laptop while wearing pink headphones; classmates work nearby in a bright, collaborative learning environment focused on technology and study.
Vanessa Solis/Education Week + Getty Images
Assessment Opinion Learning Is Dynamic. Grading Should Be, Too
The traditional way of grading students isn't helping them, argues Thomas R. Guskey.
Thomas R. Guskey
4 min read
Grading Papers
Shutterstock