Middle School Principals’
Interpretation of State Policy and
Guidance on Instructional Strategies for
ELLs with Disabilities
Kristi Liu, Haesook
Koo, Manuel Barrera, Martha Thurlow
September 2008
All rights reserved. Any
or all portions of this document may be
reproduced and distributed without prior
permission, provided the source is cited
as:
Liu, K., Koo, H.,
Barrera, M., & Thurlow, M. (2008).
Middle school principals’ interpretation
of state policy and guidance on
instructional strategies for ELLs with
disabilities (ELLs with Disabilities
Report 20). Minneapolis, MN: University
of Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Method
Results
Conclusions
References
Appendix
Introduction
For many years, federal
laws have emphasized access to
grade-level standards-based curriculum
for all students. Results of statewide
tests are disaggregated by identifiers
such as race/ethnicity, disability,
English proficiency, socioeconomic
status, and mobility. Disaggregated
results allow schools to examine
instructional programming and access to
the curriculum for specific subgroups of
students. However, the needs of students
with multiple identifiers are rarely
examined and addressed. English language
learners with disabilities (hereafter
referred to as ELLs with disabilities)
are a rapidly growing group of students
in the United States whose achievement
is affected by both second language
learning processes and the presence of a
disability. Although it is difficult to
identify the exact number of ELLs with
disabilities in public schools in the
United States, one national study (Zehler
Fleischman, Hopstock, Stephenson,
Pendzick, & Sapru, 2003) estimated that
9.2% of all English language learners (ELLs)
during the 2001–2002 school year also
received special education services. The
total number of ELLs had grown to more
than five million students nationwide by
2005 (National Clearinghouse for English
Language Acquisition, 2006), and is
expected to continue to increase. Using
the Zehler et al. (2003) figure, a safe
estimate is that there are at least half
a million ELLs with disabilities
attending public schools. Many students
with disabilities, including ELLs with
disabilities, now receive the majority
of their instruction in mainstream
classrooms (U.S. Department of
Education, 2007; Zehler et al., 2003).
For these students to achieve in
grade-level content classrooms,
educational practices must be aligned
with student needs (Smiley & Salsbury,
2007).
To support student
learning, the No Child Left Behind Act
of 2001 (NCLB) requires educators to use
scientifically-based instructional
practices. NCLB defines
scientifically-based research as
"research that involves the application
of rigorous, systematic and objective
procedures to obtain reliable and valid
knowledge relevant to education
activities and programs" (NCLB, 2001,
§9101). There is a growing body of
literature on research-based
interventions for English language
learners and students with disabilities
(cf. Gersten, Baker, Shanahan, Linan-Thompson,
Collins, & Scarcella, 2007; Sencibaugh,
2007; Stecker, Fuchs, & Fuchs, 2005;
What Works Clearinghouse, 2007).
However, there is relatively little
evidence showing what effective programs
and practices best meet the unique
learning needs of ELLs with disabilities
(Barrera, Liu, Thurlow, & Chamberlain,
2006; Barrera, Liu, Thurlow, Shyyan,
Yan, & Chamberlain, 2006). It can be
difficult for mainstream content
teachers to differentiate between
student learning challenges related to
second language learning and those
related to a student’s disability
(Layton & Lock, 2002). Teachers may rely
on strategies with which they are most
familiar, even if these practices do not
address all of their students’ learning
challenges. For example, in studies by
Barrera et al. (2006a, 2006b) many
mainstream and English as a Second
Language (ESL) teachers reported that
they primarily used instructional
strategies intended for
typically-developing ELLs when working
with ELLs with disabilities. Similarly,
special education teachers in those same
studies reported using instructional
strategies aimed at supporting a
student’s disability-related learning
needs without necessarily incorporating
strategies aimed at a student’s second
language learning needs. These findings
are not surprising given that the
majority of educators are not trained in
ways to adapt instruction to meet the
specific needs of linguistically and
culturally diverse students with
disabilities in the classroom (Kohnert,
Kennedy, Glaze, Kan, & Carney, 2003;
Mueller, Singer, & Carranza, 2006). In
many cases, teachers must develop these
skills on the job.
More than 10 years ago,
the National Research Council (NRC,
1997) addressed the idea of creating
changes in student academic outcomes
through changes in instruction. "Real
change in education comes through
changes in content that teachers teach
and students learn, and in the
instructional methods that teachers use"
(NRC, 1997, p. 113). With substantial
support and resources on ways to change
instruction so that it becomes more
accessible, teachers can create improved
learning outcomes on grade-level,
standards-based content for ELLs with
disabilities (Barrera et al., 2006a;
2006b). The question is, where do
teachers get this kind of sustained
support for change?
School principals are
central figures in the way instructional
innovation is implemented and
communicated to teachers in a particular
school (Marks & Nance, 2007). It may
have been typical in the past for
principals to primarily be building
managers with responsibility for hiring
and firing staff, scheduling, and
maintaining the school building.
However, both professional organizations
and the research literature underscore
the fact that times have changed. In a
standards-based system, principals must
be both managers and instructional
leaders if schools are to increase the
academic achievement of all students
(Council of Chief State School Officers
[CCSSO], 1996; Marks & Nance, 2007;
Smiley & Salsbury, 2007; Supovitz &
Poglinco, 2001). "Instructional
leadership…can play a central role in
shifting the emphasis of school activity
more directly onto instructional
improvements that lead to enhanced
student learning and performance"
(Supovitz & Poglinco, 2001, p. 1).
The Interstate School
Leaders Licensure Consortium, or ISLLC,
standards for principals emphasized that
instructional leaders must infuse into
every instructional decision the beliefs
that all students can be taught and that
all students can achieve high standards
(CCSSO, 1996). According to these
standards, an effective principal also
must have knowledge of ways to plan
appropriate instruction for a diverse
student body so that the goal of high
achievement for all students is
translated into specific practices (CCSSO,
1996). However, the ISLLC standards do
not define the term "diverse" to
specifically include ELLs, students with
disabilities, or ELLs with disabilities.
Other sources advocate that principals
need to understand how to implement
standards-based instruction with
linguistically and culturally diverse
students (Catano & Stronge, 2006; Lucas,
2000) and students with disabilities (Wakeman,
Browder, Flowers, & Ahlgrim-Delzill,
2006). ELLs with disabilities are not
specifically mentioned in the
instructional leadership literature, but
if schools are to achieve the vision of
academic success for all students,
instruction must address the dual needs
of ELLs with disabilities as well.
To better understand how
school principals can provide
instructional leadership appropriate for
ELLs with disabilities, the study
described in this report examined how
principals of successful schools
translated information to teachers on
designing accessible standards-based
instruction for ELLs with disabilities.
The intent of the study was to highlight
promising practices that might be
studied further, as well as to identify
areas where principals may need
additional support in providing
instructional leadership for their
teachers.
Table of Contents
Method
Research Question
This study was conducted as part of a
larger investigation designed to
identify effective instructional
strategies for ELLs with disabilities in
grade-level standards-based instruction
(Barrera, Shyyan, Liu, & Thurlow, 2008).
As shown in Figure 1, the research team
initially believed that principals, as
instructional leaders for schools, would
be directly involved in translating and
communicating to classroom teachers
principles of accessible instruction for
diverse students. Our hypothesis was
that information about instructional
strategies for ELLs with disabilities
might come from a variety of original
sources such as state standards and
supporting documents (Albus, Thurlow, &
Clapper, 2007), strategies mandated by
the school or district, and other
sources such as research literature and
professional development opportunities.
We believed that the principal would
play a central role in disseminating
this information to teachers.
Figure 1. Initial View of
Instructional Leader Role in the
Communication of Instructional Strategy
Information

Based on our hypothesis that
principals would be directly involved in
translating instructional strategy
information to teachers, the primary
research question for the study was: How
and to what degree are state standards
that specify instructional strategies
translated into practice by educational
leaders at the school level?
Instrument
A semi-structured interview guide was
created to elicit information from
principals about issues relating to the
translation of instructional strategy
information specific to ELLs with
disabilities. The interview guide
consisted of two parts: (1) demographic
information on principals, and
(2) school-wide interpretation of state
policy regarding instructional
strategies. The questions in the second
part began by asking about instructional
strategy information contained in state
standards and related documents. The
questions then asked respondents about
other sources of strategy information.
The appendix contains the complete
interview protocol.
School Selection
The population of ELLs with
disabilities in public schools is spread
widely, with limited concentrations of
students in any given building. For this
reason, principal participants for the
study were chosen from middle and junior
high schools that had demonstrated
improved academic outcomes for English
language learners and students with
disabilities overall. In this case,
school-level achievement of Adequate
Yearly Progress (AYP) during the
2003–2004 school year was used as an
indicator of success. The research team
chose this criterion because we believed
that achieving AYP with ELLs and
students with disabilities would entail
increasing academic outcomes for ELLs
with disabilities as well. NCLB
legislation does not require schools to
track the academic achievement of ELLs
with disabilities specifically and,
therefore, this information is often not
available to the public.
As part of this project, we hoped to
capture variation in the way principals
in states with large numbers of ELLs and
states with small numbers of ELLs
approached instruction for ELLs with
disabilities. Therefore, schools were
selected using a multi-stage
stratified-random sampling procedure.
Using data from the National
Clearinghouse for English Language
Acquisition, 10 states with the highest
and 10 states with the lowest ELL
populations were identified (n = 20).
From those 20 states, 10 states were
randomly drawn for inclusion in this
study—5 from the states with the highest
ELL populations and 5 from the states
with the lowest ELL populations. In the
ten selected states, a list was compiled
of all the public middle and junior high
schools that met AYP in the 2003–2004
school year.
Schools on this list were then ranked
by the percentage of ELLs attending in
2003–2004. At the same time, we noted
any schools that had unusually low
percentages of students with
disabilities attending and eliminated
these schools from our list. Finally,
the top ten schools in each state were
identified and the principals of these
schools were invited to participate in
face-to-face interviews during 2006.
Within a particular state, the first
principal who responded and agreed to
take part in the study was selected as a
participant. Teachers in the same
schools were participants in a separate,
but related, study investigating
recommended instructional strategies for
ELLs with disabilities (Barrera et al.,
2008). Principals and teachers were
recruited as study participants at the
same time.
Figure 2 shows the concentration of
study sites in each of the four
geographic regions of the United States.
Three principals worked in schools in
the Western region, two worked in
Midwestern schools, one worked in a
Northeastern school, and four worked in
Southern schools.
Figure 2. Locations of School Sites

Table 1 provides detailed demographic
information about the schools and
districts in which the principal study
was conducted, including states’ ELL
population sizes, school geographic
settings, grade span, total number of
students, number of ELLs, and largest
language groups. The geographic setting
information on each school district was
obtained from the National Center for
Education Statistics Common Core of
Data. We used what are now referred to
as the "Old Locale Codes." Since the
time of the study, locale codes have
been updated to reflect changes in the
definition of rural areas (NCES, 2008).
The geographic setting codes indicate
the schools’ location in terms of
population sizes in the areas in which
these schools were located (NCES, 2002).
Table 1. School Sites
Demographic Information for 2003–2004
|
State
|
ELL Population
|
Geographic
Setting of School
|
Grade Span
|
Total Number
of Students
|
Percent of
ELLs in Building
|
Largest
Language Group
|
|
1
|
Large
|
Mid-size
central city
|
7–8
|
966
|
33.9
|
Spanish
|
|
2
|
Large
|
Urban fringe
of large city
|
6–8
|
534
|
28.4
|
Spanish
|
|
3
|
Small
|
Rural
|
5–8
|
341
|
6.7
|
Spanish
|
|
4
|
Large
|
Mid-size
central city
|
6–8
|
1148
|
25.0
|
Spanish
|
|
5
|
Large
|
Large-central
city
|
PK–8
|
887
|
39.9
|
Spanish
|
|
6
|
Small
|
Mid-size
central city
|
6–8
|
814
|
6.6
|
Spanish
|
|
7
|
Small
|
Mid-size
central city
|
6–8
|
990
|
9.3
|
Spanish
|
|
8
|
Large
|
Mid-size
central city
|
6–8
|
881
|
17.9
|
Spanish
|
|
9
|
Small
|
Rural
|
5–8
|
480
|
1.7
|
Spanish
|
|
10
|
Small
|
Small town
|
6–8
|
342
|
9.4
|
Spanish
|
Table 1 shows that the
majority of principals in the study
represented middle or junior high
schools in mid-size central cities with
a student body of approximately 800–1200
students that included sizeable groups
of Spanish-speaking students. The
remaining principals worked in rural
schools, small town schools,
large-central city schools, and schools
in an urban fringe of a large city. The
selected schools varied widely in the
percentage of ELLs and students with
disabilities attending. However, even if
the percentage of ELLs attending some of
the schools was small, the schools
identified represented those with the
largest ELL populations among all middle
and junior high schools making AYP in
2003–2004 in the selected states. At the
time the study began, AYP data were not
yet available for the 2004–2005 school
year, the year in which the study was
conducted.
Participants
Participating principals
came from a variety of backgrounds, as
illustrated in Table 2. Among the 10
principals, there were 2 females and 8
males. These individuals had worked as
principals anywhere from 2 years to 30
years, with an overall mean of 14.9
years of principal experience. One
principal had been a superintendent in
another state but was called on to work
as a principal in a school experiencing
significant change. All but one of the
participants had initially been teachers
and had worked in content areas such as
general elementary education, math,
science, technology, special education,
and educational leadership in a military
academy. One participant had served as
the Dean of Students at a secondary
school prior to becoming a principal.
Principals’ length of tenure at their
current school site ranged from 1 year
to 14 years, with an average of 5.2
years across participants. These data do
not appear to show any patterns
according to whether the school was in a
large or small ELL state.
Table 2. Participants
Demographic Information
|
State
|
Gender
|
ELL Population
|
Years of
Experience as a Principal
|
Previous
Education Background
|
Years at
Current School
|
|
1
|
Male
|
Large
|
6
|
Technology
Coordinator & Math Teacher
|
1
|
|
2
|
Female
|
Large
|
11
|
Biology
Teacher
|
2
|
|
3
|
Male
|
Small
|
9
|
Elementary
Teacher
|
1
|
|
4
|
Male
|
Large
|
8
|
Former
Superintendent, Education
Leadership Teacher in military
academy
|
2
|
|
5
|
Male
|
Large
|
30
|
Special
Education
School
Counselor,
Content
Teacher |
13
|
|
6
|
Male
|
Small
|
27
|
Math Teacher
|
4
|
|
7
|
Female
|
Small
|
20
|
Content
Teacher in EBD programs
|
14
|
|
8
|
Male
|
Large
|
15
|
Math,
Computer, Science Teacher
|
3
|
|
9
|
Male
|
Small
|
2 |
Dean of
Students for Secondary Schools
|
2 |
|
10
|
Male
|
Small
|
21
|
Math,
Computer, Science Teacher,
Tech
Coordinator |
10
|
|
Average Number
of Years
|
|
|
14.9
|
|
5.2
|
Procedure
Between January and December of 2006,
a team of seven researchers went out to
visit school sites in groups of three
researchers per site. These team members
all had experience as educators or
education technical assistance providers
with experience in ESL or Special
Education. The teams conducted nine
on-site interviews with principals at
the same time as the study involving
teachers was conducted (Barrera et al.,
2008). One principal completed the
interview by telephone at a later time
due to a schedule conflict and a
follow-up phone interview was conducted
with one principal to clarify responses
given during a face-to-face interview.
The interviews ranged from 45 minutes
to 110 minutes in length, depending on
principals’ schedules. All interviews
were digitally recorded, with
permission, and later transcribed
verbatim for qualitative data analysis.
The NVivo qualitative data analysis
software was used to organize the large
amounts of verbal data.
Data Analysis
Qualitative analysis was conducted in
two stages, topic coding and thematic
coding, following guidelines/common
practices in qualitative data analysis (Auerbach
& Silverstein, 2003). During topic
coding, interview responses were coded
and organized according to each of the
five primary interview questions. Using
NVivo, a member of the research team
searched the interview transcripts for
statements that directly answered these
five questions, even if the answers
occurred at other points in the
interview. Table 3 lists these primary
interview questions and the
corresponding coding categories.
Table 3. Coding Scheme:
Five Coding Categories
|
Interview
Questions
|
Coding
category in NVivo
|
|
Q1. Would you
tell us about your school and
some of the issues you believe
are associated with the
instruction of English language
learners with disabilities?
|
ELL
Instruction Issues
|
|
Q2. To what
extent do teachers in your
school implement different kinds
of instructional strategies that
are contained in state standards
and other state supporting
documents?
|
Strategies
Implementation
|
|
Q3. On what
sources of information do your
teachers rely to make decisions
regarding instructional
strategies for English language
learners with disabilities? How
about for English language
learners in general?
|
Sources of
Information
|
|
Q4. Do you or
the district provide information
to specifically cover
instructional strategies for use
with English language learners
with disabilities? To what
extent do teachers use this
information?
|
Information
Provided
|
|
Q5. What
additional school and classroom
level needs do you, as
principal, perceive regarding
effective instructional
strategies for English language
learners with disabilities?
|
Additional
School Classroom Needs
|
When coding responses to question 2
we defined the term "instructional
strategies" broadly to be in agreement
with the way principals viewed the term.
Our definition of a strategy included
physical resources (e.g., computer
software, laptops, textbooks, curriculum
frameworks, etc.), specialized staff
(e.g., translators, bilingual teachers,
etc.), and supplemental services or
programs (e.g., after school tutoring).
During the interviews, principals
often addressed other topics that they
believed were related to effective
instruction for ELLs with disabilities,
but that were not directly included in
the interview questions. We included a
second stage of thematic coding to
handle these other important themes and
issues that arose spontaneously. Two
project staff independently reviewed the
interview transcripts a second time and
developed a list of themes emerging from
the data. The results from each reviewer
were compared, using NVivo, to find
areas of consensus on important themes.
The following is a list of seven major
themes that researchers developed based
on reviewing the interview data:
- Outreach to parents of ELLs and ELLs with
disabilities.
- The need for staff who
speak other languages (e.g.,
Spanish).
- School adjustment
issues for ELLs and ELLs
with disabilities.
- ESL or Bilingual
teachers’ roles.
- Use of computers for
the instruction of ELLs.
- School-wide
collaboration between staff.
- Challenges in Special
Education and ESL
identification processes for ELLs with disabilities.
After identifying these themes in the
interview data, one team member coded
all of the interview transcripts a
second time for responses that fit the
themes.
Reaching Agreement during Thematic
Coding
After one researcher coded the seven
themes, two additional team members each
recoded two interviews out of the total
of ten in order to provide triangulation
for reaching agreement (Auerbach &
Silverstein, 2003). Two large ELL states
and two small ELL states were selected
using stratified-random sampling to
ensure representation across both types
of states. NVivo software provided
coding comparison reports for these four
states. The coding comparison reports
formed the basis for repeated
discussions among the three coders. The
discussions highlighted areas of
disagreement between the three
individuals and provided an avenue to
reach 100% consensus on coding
decisions. Consensus was defined as two
out of the three coders agreeing on
every coding decision.
Table of Contents
Results
Topic Coding
Summaries of principals’ responses to
the five primary interview questions are
presented in this section via a series
of tables along with selected quotes
that illustrate points. Participants and
states are not identified in this
summary. However, they are numbered and
referred to consistently throughout this
section of the report.
Issues Associated with the
Instruction of ELLs with Disabilities
Table 4 displays summary information
on Question 1: "Would you tell us about
your school and some of the issues you
believe are associated with the
instruction of English language learners
with disabilities?" The table includes
all answers that principals provided.
Those responses that explicitly
addressed instruction of ELLs with
disabilities are marked with a check and
are described in the text that follows
the table.
When asked about instructional issues
for ELLs with disabilities, many
principals answered with a multitude of
concerns they had about the instruction
of the ELL population as a whole. School
management issues were a broad area of
interest for these principals and this
topic included issues such as planning
instruction when the school was
undergoing a rapid demographic shift in
a short period of time, addressing a
shortage of ESL teachers, hiring staff
who could speak the students’ native
languages and facilitate parent
communication, and writing state
accreditation plans that appropriately
addressed the instruction of ELLs.
Additionally, during the year in which
this study took place, some of the
schools that had previously been
designated as achieving AYP for all
students, including ELLs, changed to
being identified as in need of
improvement in reading or math because
of low test scores for ELLs in these
content areas. Some principals believed
that they had the power to change the
school’s status and return it to the
list of those making AYP while others
were less optimistic. A principal of a
school in a small ELL state described
his worries about the future of the
school:
Table 4. Responses to Question 1, ELL
Instruction Issues
|
State |
Statewide ELL Population |
Findings
|
|
1 |
Large |
·
Few ELLs with disabilities
in school
·
Inclusion in mainstream is
important even if students
are just observing
ü
Students have one hour of
self-contained special
education class
·
Communication difficulties
of ELLs lead to misdiagnosis
of disability
|
|
2 |
Large |
·
Flow chart for
decision-making regarding
ELLs with disabilities
·
In past tested students in
either ESL or special
education
·
Long-term goal of bringing
ESL and special education
together
ü
Concerns about who services
children and which program
they need more
|
|
3 |
Small |
·
Relatively small population
of ELLs
·
Communication with parents
as the biggest obstacle
·
Need for Spanish-speaking
staff
·
Spanish coordinator does
translation now
|
|
4 |
Large |
·
Minimizing school violence
·
Rapid growth of ELL
population in the building,
changing school demographics
·
Creating culture of common
instruction across
classrooms
·
Developing collaboration
among teachers
·
Under-identification of
disabilities in Hispanic
population
·
Difficulty getting families
to support needs of students
with disabilities (e.g,
getting students to wear
their glasses)
·
Creating written
communication with parents
in Spanish
·
Hiring another
Spanish-speaking staff
person
·
Decreasing high teacher
turnover rates; 6th grade
ELLs not making Adequate
Yearly Progress
·
School was unprepared for
the amount of reading on
state test
·
Improvements in handing off
IEPs between 5th and 6th
grades
|
|
5 |
Large |
·
Changes in how long students
can be classified as ELLs
·
Getting parents to speak
English at school if
possible
ü
Lack of knowledgeable social
workers and psychologists
who can speak students’
native languages to assist
with special education
issues
·
Bias in special education
evaluation can create
underrepresentation of ELLs
|
|
6 |
Small |
·
Transient ELL population
with limited formal
schooling
·
ELLs keep school in the
"needs improvement" status
in reading
·
Need for changing method of
improving ELL skills
|
|
7 |
Small |
·
Problems with students
·
Diverse ELL population
represented by more than 21
languages
|
|
8 |
Large |
·
Language barriers
·
Late exit program
·
ELLs’ adjustment to the
culture
·
Acceptance of ELLs by the
student body
·
Communication issues between
ELLs and other students
·
Social interaction
challenges for sheltered
ELLs with disabilities
|
|
9 |
Small |
·
Increasing ELL population
·
Insufficient number of staff
to work with ELLs
·
Communication with parents
·
ESL teacher translates
materials in Spanish
|
|
10 |
Small |
·
Writing school accreditation
plan to address ELL
instruction appropriately
|
We’re a district in need of
improvement—in reading. And it’s
our ESL population that will
probably forever keep us
a district in need of
improvement. And if we don’t
make fundamental changes in how
we’re going to improve their
skills the future doesn’t look
[good] for us….I think we’re
getting better….I just see so
much more that we should be
doing. It all falls on how much
we depend on the skills of that
classroom teacher and if we
can’t make that classroom
teacher better, these kids
aren’t going to succeed and
change their attitudes.
Classroom teachers, all of us,
have to believe these kids can
succeed.
A small number of principals
described issues specifically pertaining
to the instruction of ELLs with
disabilities. One highlighted how ELLs
with disabilities in his school were
largely those students without
significant learning challenges. Another
program existed in the district for
students with more severe disabilities.
This principal emphasized incorporation
of all students with disabilities,
including ELLs with disabilities, into
mainstream instruction. He also ensured
that all students with disabilities,
including ELLs, received an hour of
instruction in a self-contained special
education classroom. A second principal
discussed the challenges of determining
whether an ELL with a disability should
be served in ESL or special education
programming. Finally, a third principal
explained how the lack of qualified
social workers and school psychologists
had the potential to negatively affect
the instruction of ELLs with
disabilities.
Implementation of Instructional
Strategies Found in State Standards
Table 5 displays summary information
about principals’ responses to Question
2: "To what extent do teachers in your
school implement different kinds of
instructional strategies that are
contained in state standards and other
supporting documents?" Principals gave a
variety of answers to this question that
reflected their views on instructional
strategies. All answers are shown in
Table 5, but those that specifically
referenced state standards and
supporting documents are marked with a
check.
As shown in Table 5, a small number
of principals directly referenced the
content of state standards when
answering this question. Most of these
respondents stated that the standards
contained content or broad learning
goals and did not specify instructional
strategies. In the schools that these
principals served, teachers worked to
align instruction with standards but
relied on other sources for strategy
information.
Table 5. Responses to Question 2,
Strategies Implementation
|
State |
ELL
Population |
Findings |
|
1 |
Large |
·
Sheltered Instruction (SIOP
Model) adopted for ESL
contains strategies
·
All staff, including ESL and
special education, teach
standards
·
Teachers decide what
strategies are best and how
often to use them
|
|
2 |
Large |
ü
No strategies in state
standards
ü
State documents and
strategies are not connected
·
Marzano’s work broadly used
·
Visuals for ESL students
·
Hands-on strategies in
science
·
Getting away from peer
instruction (e.g., peer
translation)
·
School designs curriculum
based on test results
|
|
3 |
Small |
ü
State standards contain
content, not strategies
·
Common lesson formats
developed in school
ü
Lessons are designed based
on curriculum maps aligned
with state standards
·
Curriculum maps have pacing
scale
·
Principal requires common
instruction across
classrooms
|
|
4 |
Large |
Principal did not address
the question
|
|
5 |
Large |
·
Computer labs
·
Computer programs
·
After school programs
mandated
·
Teacher aides and others
support teachers in
classroom
·
Principal monitors teaching
·
Language lab with CDs and
tapes
|
|
6 |
Small |
·
Professional development
activities require teachers
to look at student work in
relation to standards
|
|
7 |
Small |
·
Teachers use strategies like
differentiation and
modification in all classes
on a regular basis
·
District [ESL] coordinator
gives teachers this
information
|
|
8 |
Large |
ü
Everybody uses broad
standards and grade-level
expectations adopted by
state
ü
Standards do not provide
instructional strategies
·
Teachers look at released
test items and test-taking
protocols
·
Expectation of "excellence
for all kids"
·
Welcoming school environment
·
Principal doesn’t mandate
specific grade-level
expectations
·
District mandates
grade-level expectations
·
District uses "late exit"
ESL model with decreasing
native language support by
grade
·
Instructional aides provide
native language support
|
|
9 |
Small |
·
Differentiated instruction
·
Menu-type assignments that
offer student choices
·
CDs with translated textbook
material in Spanish
·
Laptops for every student
·
Hands-on activities
·
Pneumonic whiteboards
|
|
10 |
Small |
·
Use a variety of strategies
·
Portable computers
·
Technology expert on staff
·
ESL teacher to coordinate
activities
·
Renaissance Learning Group
programs (Accelerated Math,
Accelerated Reader)
·
Significant communication
with teachers and
paraprofessionals who work
with ELLs
·
Pull outs as necessary
·
Sheltered instruction
·
Scaffolding
·
Strong staff development
|
All of the respondents described
instructional strategies, in the
broadest sense of the word, that were
being used within the school to meet the
needs of students in general. ELLs with
disabilities were not specifically
mentioned in answers to this question,
but principals did refer to ways that
ELLs would benefit from strategies used
for all students. Respondents varied in
the degree to which they mandated
instructional strategies. A few
principals mentioned trying to create a
school culture of shared instruction
across classrooms with standardized
activities that they wanted all teachers
to use. For example, one principal
required all teachers to use a common
lesson format and to post that format so
that students could learn the routine.
As a school we developed
certain strategies that we
expect everyone to use. A
certain lesson format so that
there’s a warm up activity in
every classroom that you go in
to whether it’s from gym class
to math class to art class to
music class, there’s a warm up
activity posted. And then
there’s the lesson and then
there’s a wrap up activity. And
there’s specific criteria for
those and that helps all of our
children, especially ELLs, with
having that routine in every
classroom. Knowing what’s
expected, you’re not walking in
to a totally different learning
environment.
This principal led staff in creating
curriculum maps based on state standards
and in setting up common pacing
schedules so that similar content was
being taught across classrooms in
grade-level instruction at the same
time.
In the middle of the spectrum, some
principals required the use of a common
curriculum or piece of instructional
technology that contained strategies
within it but gave teachers discretion
to decide whether and how to use the
related strategies. For example, one
principal mentioned curriculum based on
a specific model of sheltered content
instruction for English language
learners. This curriculum was required
in ESL classes but teachers had the
freedom to decide how and when to use
the variety of instructional strategies
suggested by the curriculum.
On the opposite end of the continuum,
several principals offered teachers a
wide variety of instructional resources
that they believed contained
instructional strategies, and then gave
teachers the freedom to use those
resources as they thought best. These
principals offered a wide variety of
instructional resources such as computer
technology (e.g., laptops, language
labs, computerized reading or
mathematics programs, etc.). One of
these principals said, "I think it is
important for teachers to have enough
autonomy in an environment because they
are the ones who are dealing with
students. Each student is unique. And
they have to tailor their instruction
and program on a daily basis. And my
goal is to provide a teacher whatever
resources, training, or support that
they need so that they can be the best
that they can be."
In most cases, principals described
strategies generally and did not discuss
specific ways in which the strategies
were used to support grade-level content
learning. For example, one principal
said, "For ESL students we use visuals
more. For instance, when we say, ‘I want
you to speak,’ we use hand gestures,
pointing, and visuals."
Sources of Information Used by
Teachers
Table 6 displays summary information
for Question 3: "On what sources of
information do your teachers rely to
make decisions regarding instructional
strategies for English language learners
with disabilities? How about for English
language learners in general?" Again,
principals provided a wide variety of
responses that are all included in Table
6. Answers that were specifically
related to resources for instructing
ELLs with disabilities are marked with a
check.
As Table 6 indicates, only one
principal mentioned a source of
information that gave specific guidance
to teachers about instructing ELLs with
disabilities. Rather, principals
described broad sources of information
about teaching English language
learners. Respondents highlighted three
main sources of general instructional
strategy information for ELLs: (1) a
building-level or district-level ESL
specialist, (2) professional development
sessions, and (3) computer technology.
First, mainstream teachers often
relied on an ESL or bilingual teacher or
coordinator in the building as their
primary source of information. For
example, one principal commented:
We rely highly and heavily on
our ELL teacher who I think
you’ve met….She does an
outstanding job here….She works
very well with her caseload but
I think her real strength is her
ability to work with mainstream
staff helping them deal with her
kids’ individual issues. It’s
necessary for there to be a
relationship there and a trust
level. [She] can come in and in
a very nice way really make big
changes in what’s happening for
her kids.
Table 6. Responses to Question 3,
Sources of Information
|
State |
ELL Population |
Findings |
|
1 |
Large |
·
Sheltered instruction
curriculum for ESL students
·
Certified bilingual teachers
·
Bilingual teachers train
other teachers
·
State-provided textbooks
·
District updates resources
constantly
·
District consultants give
targeted support
·
Weekly meetings of
department heads
·
District training sessions
for teachers
·
Collaboration between
teachers and district
specialists
·
Weekly teacher professional
development meetings to
share ideas
|
|
2
|
Large |
·
Curriculum designed based on
test results
·
Teacher training
·
College connections
·
Good relationships with
district staff
·
Differentiated instruction
with list of strategies
·
Teacher discussion time
|
|
3
|
Small |
·
Common strategies everyone
in school must use
·
Mandated lesson format
·
Teachers use curriculum maps
aligned with state standards
and follow the pacing
schedule
·
Spanish coordinator
translates for parents and
ELLs
·
ELL instructor pulls out
students for English,
reading, and writing
·
Monthly faculty meetings and
monthly curriculum meetings
·
Data review determines goals
and potential changes
|
|
4
|
Large |
ü
Teacher training on ELLs
with disabilities
·
Books
·
District-level training
·
Common planning periods for
teachers
·
Staff development sessions
·
Instructional coaches
·
District ESL specialist
·
Articles on best practices
in instruction
·
Small group time to discuss
readings
·
Learning strategies exam for
students
·
State documents
·
Spanish-speaking teacher
|
|
5
|
Large |
·
Books
·
Book of state standards with
aligned reading and math
materials
·
Bilingual lead teacher
·
Book of after school
community programs
·
Staff trip to Puerto Rico to
study how least restrictive
environment is handled there
|
|
6
|
Small |
·
Professional development
sessions where teachers look
at work in relation to
student standards
·
ESL teacher
·
District offers optional
professional development
·
Workshop day in fall
|
|
7
|
Small |
·
District coordinator
·
Professional development at
building level
·
Inclusion of special
education and ESL teachers
in district standards-based
curriculum study groups
|
|
8
|
Large |
·
Native language support in
some mainstream classrooms
·
Teacher translated parts of
some textbooks
·
District training sessions
about ESL instructional
models
|
|
9
|
Small |
·
CDs of Spanish version of
textbook
·
ESL teacher
·
Computer translation program
·
Accelerated reader in
Spanish and English
·
After school program with
free tutoring services run
by migrant specialist
|
|
10
|
Small |
·
Portable computers
·
Technology
·
Technology support staff
·
Reading specialist
coordinates Renaissance
software use
·
Virtu Software has
techniques to help students
in reading, writing, and
math
·
Staff development
opportunities
·
ESL teacher trains
mainstream teachers
·
Collaborative teacher team
meetings every day
·
Binder with strategies for
ELLs
·
Training for
paraprofessionals
|
As this principal pointed out, ESL and
bilingual education teachers often acted
as consultants and coaches for other
educators in the building, helping them
understand the needs of ELLs and
suggesting instructional strategies for
specific students. Sometimes these
teachers led staff development trainings
as well and took on additional roles
such as translating materials for
parents and translating portions of
textbooks for students. In cases where
the teacher was not bilingual, an
additional staff member such as a
Spanish coordinator sometimes worked
with the teacher to provide translated
materials.
Additionally, professional
development sessions, either on-site or
organized by the district, were a major
source of information for teachers.
These sessions were sometimes led by a
district ESL or bilingual education
specialist. For example, in one district
teachers needed to learn about a new
assessment for ELLs and all staff
attended training led by the district
ESL specialist. Alternatively, some
districts organized optional training on
a variety of topics relating to
instruction. One principal reported that
his district was offering a teacher
training specifically on teaching ELLs
with disabilities, but most of the
training opportunities described were
not specific to these students.
Finally, computer technology was
raised frequently as a resource for
teachers. This was a theme that cut
across responses to many of the
interview questions. Therefore, we
discuss it in more detail in the
thematic coding section of this paper.
Information Provided by Principals
and Districts
Table 7 displays summary information
for Question 4: "Do you or the district
provide information specifically
covering instructional strategies for
use with English language learners with
disabilities? To what extent do teachers
use this information?" The principals
mentioned a variety of resources
provided by the school or district and
all answers are included in the table.
There were no answers that explicitly
referenced instructional strategy
information for ELLs with disabilities.
Therefore, none of the answers have a
check mark next to them.
Table 7. Responses to Question 4,
Information Provided
|
State |
ELL Population |
Findings |
|
1 |
Large |
·
Sheltered instruction
curriculum for ESL students
·
Workshops, conferences, and
training sessions from the
district
|
|
2 |
Large |
·
Little help from the
district
·
Meetings and professional
development at the school
level
·
Teachers decide how much and
when they use this info
|
|
3 |
Small |
·
Common lesson format
developed on site for all
classrooms and students
·
Teachers create curriculum
maps with pacing schedule so
content is addressed
uniformly across classrooms
|
|
4 |
Large |
·
Teacher training sessions
and staff development from
the district
·
Articles and books from the
principal
·
Principal requires results
of learning strategies exam
to be shared with students
|
|
5 |
Large |
·
Strategies and warm-up
activities from the district
·
Teachers follow a curriculum
set by the state
|
|
6 |
Small |
·
Professional development
opportunities at the
district level
|
|
7 |
Small |
·
Professional development
from the district
|
|
8 |
Large |
·
Teacher training sessions
from the district
|
|
9 |
Small |
·
Nothing provided by district
·
Migrant directory
·
Translation dictionaries
provided by the state
·
Teacher training at the
school level
|
|
10 |
Small |
·
Teacher training sessions
·
Handbook of ESL
instructional strategies
from the district
|
Table 7 indicates that the ten
principals interviewed did not mention
any instructional strategy resources
specifically for ELLs with disabilities
that they or the district provided for
teachers. The majority of principals
stated that the school district’s role
was to provide professional development
opportunities for teachers but they did
not elaborate on the content of these
teacher trainings. In some cases where
the district was not as involved, the
principals provided those training
opportunities for teachers. One
principal in a small ELL state described
both district and school trainings that
incorporated discussion of ways to meet
the needs of ELLs and students with
disabilities in mainstream instruction.
First, she discussed the district
project on instructional strategies that
had been supported by a grant:
We had a five year grant in
the district for professional
development for regular
teachers. During that five year
grant, we did the training with
staff across the district. But
teachers could also become
certified in that area and it
was also paid by the grant. That
made a huge difference. Through
that grant, we brought in a lot
of people that did a workshop
for the training when we had a
professional development time.
The principal went on to describe how
ESL and special education teachers were
included in these district-wide
professional development opportunities
so that all teachers were thinking about
ways to teach standards-based content.
In addition to the district
opportunities, a second layer of staff
development activities on instructional
strategies was provided at the school
level as required by the school
improvement plan.
Additional Needs Regarding
Instructional Strategies for ELLs with
Disabilities
Table 8 displays summary information
on Question 5: "What additional school
and classroom level needs do you, as
principal, perceive regarding effective
instructional strategies for English
language learners with disabilities?"
All answers to this question are
included in the table. Those that
specifically addressed instruction of
ELLs with disabilities are marked with a
check.
Table 8. Responses to Question 5,
Additional School Classroom Needs
|
State |
ELL Population |
Findings |
|
1 |
Large |
·
Budget for more teaching
resources and updated
technology
ü
More Hispanic bilingual
school psychologists and
special education teachers
(and the salary incentives
required)
|
|
2 |
Large |
·
More ESL teachers
·
Difficulties losing teachers
to attrition
·
More bilingual teachers
|
|
3 |
Small |
·
How to consistently grade
ELLs
·
Having more Spanish
translators
|
|
4 |
Large |
·
Knowing student learning
styles and sharing these
with teachers
|
|
5 |
Large |
·
Teacher attrition
·
Loss of services, aides and
special education teachers
due to perceived low
salaries
|
|
6 |
Small |
·
Teacher training sessions
are optional and those who
need them may not take them
·
More ESL teachers and
inclusion specialists to
support general education
teachers
|
|
7 |
Small |
·
Students need more help with
behavioral issues
·
More teachers to meet needs
of ELLs
·
Teachers need more
professional development on
modifying and using new
techniques
·
Time for collective teacher
reflection
|
|
8 |
Large |
·
Providing newer reading
materials for students
(e.g., periodicals)
·
Instructional technology
equipment for ESL
instructors
·
Offering more field trips
ü
Nothing specific to ELLs
with disabilities
|
|
9 |
Small |
·
Additional staff
·
Training for all staff on
needs of ELLs
·
Teachers frustrated when
students do not understand
instruction or materials
|
|
10 |
Small |
·
Funding for more
para-educators
·
Continue looking at data and
following through
|
Table 8 illustrates that when principals
were asked what they needed to better
serve ELLs with disabilities, many of
them mentioned needing additional staff,
particularly ESL teachers, but did not
specifically relate this need to
improving instruction for ELLs with
disabilities. More than one principal
discussed needing to replace staff
because of attrition due to issues like
increasing class sizes, low pay, and
changing school demographics. A
principal in a remote rural area of one
state described the difficulty he had
getting qualified people to consider
working at the school. He said:
We need school psychologists
here. We lack them in rural
schools like us. We are
constantly looking for Hispanic
bilingual psychologists and
special ed teachers but it is
rare to find anyone interested
in coming this far, you know. We
are in big competition with
urban schools to recruit
qualified teachers so if we
could offer some incentives for
br anyone who is willing to move in
here, I think we need extra
money for that too.
Other principals expressed general,
non-financial needs that were not
explicitly related to improving
instruction for ELLs with disabilities.
For example, ieache could choose from several professional
development options that were offered by
the district. Teachers did not always
choose the option that would develop
their skills for serving students with
special learning needs even though such
choices were available. The principal
wished that these types of professional
development courses on instruction could
be mandatory. A second principal
recognized a need for more help teaching
educators how to grade ELLs in an era of
school accountability. He said, "The
biggest need that I think they bring is
how do they grade ELLs. The regular
teachers want to know, how do I grade
them? I mean, the student’s speaking
very little English and I’m being
accountable for their progress, how do I
grade them? That’s a need that I see,
and more consistency that we need to
have there." A third example of a need
that was not directly related to funding
was one principal’s wish for more
collective teacher meeting time to
reflect on teaching ELLs.
Thematic Coding Results
During the second round of coding
seven themes emerged from preliminary
thematic analysis of the interview
transcripts: (a) outreach to parents of
ELLs and ELLs with disabilities, (b) the
need for staff who speak other
languages, (c) school adjustment issues
for ELLs and ELLs with disabilities, (d)
roles played by ESL and bilingual
teachers, (e) use of computers for the
instruction of ELLs, (f) school-wide
collaboration between staff, and (g)
challenges in special education and ESL
identification processes for ELLs with
disabilities. These themes represented
topics that were relevant to the
principals who participated in the
studies and often related broadly to the
population of ELLs, rather than to the
specific needs of ELLs with
disabilities. After identifying these
seven themes, we then located all of the
statements that related to them in the
10 principal interview transcripts. In
this section, we discuss each theme and
elaborate on it using relevant quotes
from selected principals.
Outreach to Parents/Need for Staff
Who Speak Other Languages
Comments relating to themes 1 and 2,
outreach to parents of ELLs and the need
for staff who speak other languages,
particularly Spanish, frequently
occurred together in the same part of
the interview. Principals in several
states discussed school-wide efforts to
communicate with parents of ELLs in
order to better understand the students’
home cultures. The principals believed
that this communication with parents
would enhance students’ adjustment to
school as well as their academic
outcomes. Some principals, particularly
in a few states with relatively small
statewide ELL populations, struggled to
communicate with non-English speaking
parents because of a lack of bilingual
staff. These principals mentioned a need
for more bilingual office staff,
teachers, and school psychologists to
conduct special education evaluations of
students.
Two principals in small ELL states
described how they relied on middle
school students to act as translators in
the absence of needed bilingual staff.
One small town principal mentioned the
need for parents of ELLs to be connected
to the school system and the difficulty
the school had in providing that
connection:
I think that there’s a
communication breakdown because
of the language barrier. I think
the families want the best for
their children, but with the
communication breakdown…families
face so many barriers in a small
town like this…there aren’t many
people in the school system that
can help them to get that
communication across.
In this school with few
Spanish-speaking staff and a population
of Spanish-speaking families with
limited English skills, the principal
often relied on the Spanish-speaking
students to translate messages from the
school to the parents. The principal
jokingly referred to this practice as
"dangerous."
In contrast, in another small ELL
state, a rural middle school principal
with few local Spanish resources
believed that using more English-fluent
students to communicate in Spanish with
less-English fluent students worked
successfully:
Another issue that we have,
and it’s county-wide as well, is
communication with the parents
of ESL students that a lot of
times they don’t understand any
English at all so we have to do
the best we can to get an
interpreter. Several times I’ll
just use a student and they do
an excellent job of
communicating with the new
students that enroll at our
school.
Whether principals had sufficient
native language resources or not,
several of them named specific
activities they had initiated in an
attempt to establish some form of
communication with parents of ELLs.
These efforts included translated
brochures, an ESL link on the school Web
site, and a parent newsletter. One
principal of a small town school in a
large ELL state described regular
written communication that included a
parent newsletter that, initially, was
written in English. The principal
discussed his hopes to translate the
newsletter in the upcoming school year
through the help of an additional
bilingual office specialist:
We communicated with
newsletters. We got weekly
newsletters for home. We sent
home the weekly newsletters that
were not translated into
Spanish, but will be this year.
We would send them periodic
things that didn’t require
translating. We had to keep only
one person who can speak Spanish
in the front office then. We
have another person this year so
that will help us out quite a
bit.
School Adjustment Issues
Several principals shared anecdotes
showing the difficulty ELLs in general,
and refugee students in particular,
experienced adjusting to the culture of
schools. School adjustment difficulties
were sometimes manifested as behavioral
difficulties. When asked what she, as
principal, perceived to be the greatest
need in her building for effective
instructional strategies for ELLs with
disabilities, one principal in a small
ELL state responded by saying:
I think that things that they
need most help with are
behavioral issues; how to
operate within our educational
system. Often these students who
come to us right from refugee
camps, they do not trust adults.
Also, more resources, things
that are in a variety of levels,
teachers are needed to meet in
how to build trust in
relationships with students who
have lived that kind of trauma
and war kind of existence that
these students had.
This principal emphasized the value
of structured classroom and school
routines so that refugee students would
know the behavioral expectations. She
also described the difficulty of
developing consistent classroom routines
and sustaining relationships between
students and teachers in a school with a
traditional six- or seven-period daily
schedule:
Especially in the middle
school setting, what is really
important with these students is
structure, consistency, and, you
know, relationship, and those
things need to be in place. So
that is not easy to put in place
when they are period, period,
period, and period. But they
need that structure and
consistency. You know, in terms
of what we are asking them to
do…when they sharpen the pencil,
when they enter the room, how
they interact with each other,
what are the consequences. The
consequences needed to be really
spelled out.
In a large ELL state, an urban school
principal with ELLs from a variety of
language backgrounds also commented on
the difficulty that staff sometimes
experienced when working with immigrant
and refugee students who had a history
of limited formal schooling or who had
experienced trauma before coming to the
United States. In this principal’s
opinion, there were significant
challenges integrating students with
emotional and behavioral needs into a
large mainstream classroom:
The problems aren’t
necessarily coming from just the
academic….I’m not in favor of
use of all the medicines, and
medications, but you have a lot
of children who lived in war
zones or in areas that were not
conducive to a good education or
they didn’t get an education.
They might have skipped a whole
year or whatever, and here we
have them and we have to work
with them. But if they are
not…able to sustain themselves
in the classroom…we have lower
class sizes than most…if they’re
in a class with 25 students and
the teacher has to take up all
the time with the one student,
and many of the students, also,
their countries, wherever they
might have come from, they have
different…protocol…a different
culture.
Not every principal who mentioned
school adjustment issues related them
specifically to the needs of refugee or
immigrant students with limited formal
schooling backgrounds or a history of
trauma. A principal of a predominantly
Spanish-speaking small town school in a
rapidly growing ELL state approached the
issues of school adjustment from the
angle of school violence and spoke of
measures he had implemented to reduce
the violence. "When I first got here, we
even had school gangsters in our school.
I had made five chances rule for
troubling students after several
meetings with teachers. It was a
constant struggle to discipline students
who were not used to [it] before I came
in. But now it seems to be ok."
Teachers’ Roles
Principals viewed ESL and bilingual
education specialists as front line
responders who helped the larger group
of ELLs face academic and personal
challenges in the classroom and school.
Principals spoke in glowing terms about
the accomplishments of these educators
who often juggled multiple demands.
These teachers supported mainstream
staff in meeting the instructional needs
of ELLs. For example, one principal
described the way the sole ESL teacher
in the school balanced a complicated
schedule of working in a push-in setting
to diagnose and support the content
language learning needs of ELLs:
We do have an ELL instructor
who pulls the students out for
English language arts, reading
and writing. We don’t pull them
out for math; we don’t pull them
out for science and social
studies. So she works with
the…students in a small group
setting to help with their
English….She’s also in sometimes
the math and the science and the
social studies classrooms to
offer support to those ELL
students. So while they’re in
their regular classroom they
have somebody there that can
help provide direction, break it
down for them. She’s not there
all the time because she
services grades 5–8. So she kind
of finds out what the strengths
and weaknesses are of each
child.
Sometimes the role of specialists in
supporting academic learning extended
outside the regular school day. In one
school that did not have a full-time ESL
teacher, the principal had asked the
county migrant education specialist to
work with migrant students in a free
after school tutoring program so that
there would be a consistent staff person
who understood the needs of ELLs.
As previously mentioned, in addition
to supporting students directly, some
ESL or bilingual teachers also supported
other teachers by leading school-wide
staff development activities that
addressed the needs of ELLs in general.
One principal of a small rural middle
school praised the way the ESL/bilingual
teacher collaborated with the literacy
specialist to deliver staff development
opportunities.
We have a very strong and
healthy program of staff
development so that we are
working with our teachers in the
areas of ELL. Our ELL teacher as
well as our reading teacher,
they spent a lot of time
training the staff. So we are
going through a lot of
techniques and strategies
anywhere from brain-based
learning to Renaissance to
reading strategies.
A principal in a school that had
experienced exponential growth in the
Latino student population over the past
decade relied on the district ESL
specialist to train teachers in his
building on implementation of the
statewide assessment with ELLs.
Along with balancing roles such as
student advocate, classroom instructor,
after school tutor and staff development
leader, ESL or bilingual teachers who
spoke the students’ dominant language
sometimes acted as translators or
interpreters. These teachers facilitated
communication between the school and the
family. In one case, a teacher who spoke
Spanish even translated portions of
textbooks for Spanish-speaking students.
Use of Instructional Technology
Principals mentioned the use of
various kinds of instructional
technology as a way to develop English
language skills for ELLs, as well as to
make grade-level content more
accessible. Some principals had
established a school-wide culture of
technology use. A few principals had
previously worked as instructional
technology experts in schools and
brought this expertise to their role as
instructional leader. According to one
rural school principal in a small ELL
state who had a technology background,
"Technology is a very, very important
aspect of what I have done in the past
and I’ve applied that to a lot of things
we do here. So even though I am
principal, I still do a lot of
technology-related [things] here."
Portable hand-held computers were one
form of technology used by teachers in
the school. The school invested money in
Renaissance Learning programs such as
Accelerated Math and Accelerated Reader
to monitor student progress in content
areas. A program called Virtu Software
had also recently been purchased to help
students reach targeted goals in
reading, math, and writing. To
facilitate these efforts, the principal
had hired a technology expert
specifically to work with staff on
learning to use technology in the
classroom.
Another principal of a rural school
in a small ELL state had limited access
to native Spanish speaking staff but
emphasized adoption of textbooks that
had supporting materials in Spanish.
A lot of our textbooks now
that we adopt, we are checking
with the publishers to be sure
that they have different
variations of the textbook in
different languages. There are
CDs they come with that material
that is in English and Spanish,
which is the one that we choose.
You can choose other languages
but we choose the Spanish
version of that so it’s really
the textbook on disk in that
language.
These Spanish-language versions of
texts were available to any teacher in
the building and the principal asked
teachers to use the Spanish versions to
supplement lectures or class notes in
English.
Teachers and students in one school
had access to a language lab with a
variety of English language materials
for ELLs, but the principal expressed
concern that the materials were not well
used:
We have a large lab…and this
language lab is wireless and
could have as many as five
different groupings hearing five
different programs. It’s set up
for either CDs or tapes that
we’ve had and, as I say, it was
something before we had some
other technology, but it’s
almost like brand new and I wish
more people used it because you
can have these different
language groups hearing and
having tapes. And we have
purchased materials for the
children.
This principal described a computer
lab that was more popular with teachers
and students.
We have many computer labs
that we put in, technology that
we have in the school…and this
has been important to all of our
students. Certainly to our
English language learners who
were able to go to computers in
different areas and work on
programs or work with their
teachers that they have.
Computer access was a common topic of
discussion among other principals as
well. A rural school with few
ELL-specific resources was able to
provide laptops with full Internet
access for every classroom.
A crucial part of providing
technology for ELLs, as well as other
students, was locating sources of
funding. When asked about specific needs
he or his teachers had regarding
effective instructional strategies for
ELLs with disabilities, one principal
answered:
We have two main issues.
First is budget and second
personnel. We are looking for
some grants to see whether we
can bring in some money to buy
more teaching resources and to
update technology in the
classroom.
School-Wide Collaboration Among Staff
To better serve ELLs, many principals
mentioned school-wide efforts to share
working knowledge among teachers. Some
principals had already established a
time and process for collaboration,
while others were in the early stages of
doing so. Principals who had already
designated a time for collaboration
varied in the degree of structure and
specificity they provided for teachers.
For example, one principal established
monthly faculty meetings as the time for
all staff to meet and review data on
student learning.
We have faculty meetings once
a month and we have curricular
meetings once a month so every
other week we’re meeting either
as a department or as a faculty.
And our faculty meetings are not
just a process of giving out
information, it’s a learning
process for our staff, it’s a
professional development time.
So we’re reviewing data, we’re
coming up with conclusions,
coming up with goals and
objectives and/or solutions to
the data, how do we address the
data, what is it that we’re
doing right, what do we need to
be changing. Our staff’s pretty
used to that, used to that
process in faculty meetings. And
we’re starting to distribute it
specifically for content areas
so now that our lead teachers
are used to the data, they can
share and just look at the math
department, then if the math
teachers are meeting, on what
needs to change.
These large-group meetings did not
necessarily focus on the needs of
English language learners with
disabilities specifically, but the
principal expressed her interest in
bringing results of this research study
back to the staff to discuss it as a
large group. Similarly, a rural school
principal scheduled weekly faculty
meetings that were frequently devoted to
collaborative discussion of data but
might involve smaller teams of faculty
who would develop ideas for the larger
group. He stated:
We have specific groups that
meet weekly and that use data.
Actually our school has a
profile committee and their
responsibility is the
dissemination of that data in
appropriate ways….We go through
them and we use the profile to
hand out information to our
staff. We track it. We use the
state information and the
national information. We are
used to getting that information
out there to everybody.
Again, these comments were not
focused on planning for the specific
needs of English language learners with
disabilities, but presumably the needs
of multiple groups of students were
incorporated into the data-based
discussions.
Other principals had established a
more open-ended time in order to support
teacher collaboration. One principal had
created a common day during the week for
teachers to collaborate, but did not
appear to have mandated the type of
collaboration that needed to occur or
the specific groups of students whose
needs were to be discussed.
Teachers have all Wednesday
afternoon together to go over
strategies…and to discuss
them…They share their ideas and
discuss what works better and
what doesn’t during that time.
A principal of another school used
staff meetings to hand out a variety of
articles on best practices in assessment
and instruction in the hopes of
stimulating collaborative discussion.
I’ve used those things just
to get them to get into small
groups to talk and think and use
that time. Basically, taking
small steps [this] past year and
a year before and getting them
to spend a lot of time to talk
amongst themselves.
A principal who was just beginning to
establish a collaborative process to
address the needs of ELLs responded:
We hold meetings with
teachers; give them ideas on
professional development. Last
year, the focus was on literacy,
this year, on differentiation
for ESL. We are more focused
this year. We are looking into
collaboration among the
teachers. The teachers will use
it [instructional strategies]
better if they hear about it
from each other. We get together
and discuss issues—the
ESL/special education
students—what each teacher is
willing to do.
In this school, areas that staff
perceived to be the greatest need were
identified and discussed. The principal
added, "We communicate research areas in
need in small groups. We conduct
workshops. Book resources…for the
teachers to become passionate."
The idea of small groups of teachers
from different content areas working
together was referred to by another
principal as "cross-pollination." This
principal spoke of small collaborative
groups who attended staff development
sessions focused on evaluating
standards-based student work and then
shared with colleagues the information
they had learned:
We’re spending a lot of time
with professional development
looking at student work and a
lot of time looking at student
work in relation to the
standards….One of the advantages
though that we have is our
teachers working in teams do
some cross-pollination. So if a
social studies teacher from that
team went and received that
training, other teachers on that
team have some residual
benefits...
Challenges in Identifying English
Language Learners with Disabilities
Several respondents described the
challenges of appropriately identifying
ELLs with disabilities and placing them
in the correct program. These principals
represented both large and small ELL
population states. Research participants
had a variety of concerns ranging from
availability of staff to identification
procedures to programming decisions.
Differentiating language learning
processes from a disability was a common
challenge. For example, one principal in
a large ELL state believed that his
Spanish-speaking ELLs with limited
communication skills in English were
often wrongly perceived by mainstream
teachers as having a disability.
I think most of ESL kids with
disabilities are there mainly
because of the language issues.
I have seen new students, once
they got here, they don’t know
the language so they are easily
misunderstood as having some
learning disabilities by the
mainstream teachers. But in
reality, they just could not
communicate in classroom with
their teachers or other kids.
They just sit there just silent.
But I have seen many, many of
our students, once they start
learning English, they quickly
learn subjects! So I think the
language is the main issue.
A second principal in a small ELL
state expressed some confusion about
differentiating between language
learning challenges and a disability and
stated "I don’t think that we’re very
good at that yet."
In many cases, identification of a
student as an ELL appeared to be the
first stage in the process, with
identification of a potential disability
coming at a later stage. When asked
whether a student would be identified
first as needing ESL or special
education services a principal of a
rural school in a small ELL state
expressed confidence in the school’s
identification procedures.
We do them both. When every
student comes in, we actually do
a whole language survey, which
is federally mandated for us to
do that by questions. When we
determined that there is an ELL
component there we go ahead and
do testing to determine what
areas of lacking there are with
a particular student. From
there, we then go ahead and
assign, if there is any need for
education, we do assign that
person to [the] ELL person, many
times to our reading specialist.
And then from there, if there
are special ed students, they
are also identified through
special ed. So we tried to work
through both areas in a way that
we can help best to get that
child from where they are at to
a grade level.
However, another principal in a small
ELL state was less confident about the
benefits of delaying identification of
students with disabilities. When this
principal was asked how an ELL with a
disability would first be identified he
responded that in the past the school
had not identified any ELLs with
disabilities because of uncertainty
about the procedures.
[Students would be identified
first as] primarily ELL because
we wouldn’t probably recognize
the disability at first. And I
think that’s an area that we
need to get better in as a
school and as a district is
teasing out where the learning
issues are. Is it cultural, is
it a learning disability, is it
cognitive ability?…I don’t think
that we’re very good at that
yet. We’re becoming more aware
of it and I think that’s maybe
the first step to improvement …a
few short years ago we had
virtually no limited English
speaking students that were
identified…formally identified.
Now we are starting to get some.
One principal believed that separate
services and systems of student
identification in ESL and special
education were a natural result of
separate laws governing each at the
federal level.
So you have two sets of
regulations. I don’t know how it
is in other states. You have
special education laws that
govern IEP and that kind of
protocol. And you have…ESL and
bilingual and the laws that are
controlling that. There is no
merging at the strategic level
and they remain separate
entities.
Another principal acknowledged the
need to bring the two services together
to provide effective instruction for
ELLs with disabilities, but admitted
that the school had not yet accomplished
this task. This principal struggled with
a model of separate service delivery
that required the school to choose
between ESL and special education
programming for an ELL with a
disability. The school created a flow
chart to assist in decision making for
ELLs with disabilities but the principal
was concerned about achieving a balance
of services for these students. This
school leader’s long term goal was to
work toward integrating the two
programs.
The issues of appropriate staffing to
assist with special education placement
and instruction was also on the minds of
principals. Some school leaders needed
greater access to qualified social
workers and school psychologists who
understood the process of second
language acquisition and could speak the
students’ native language to ensure that
special education assessment was
accurately identifying students with
disabilities. However, having access to
appropriate assessment staff did not
necessarily solve all of the
identification challenges. One urban
school principal in a large ELL state
believed that ELLs at his school were
under-identified for special education
services because the limited numbers of
social workers and school psychologists
who spoke the students’ language and
understood their culture were reluctant
to identify a child with a disability
from that culture.
If you come from a war zone,
if you’re Bosnian and you come
from a war zone, noises are
going to affect you, things that
happen in the classroom, loud
doors, whatever. It’s a
different type of working with
that youngster as far as what
they need. And you might just go
directly to a social worker,
except that many of the social
workers don’t have the
background of language and
that’s where we come right back
to problems. And we don’t have
psychologists for all the
language groups, especially ones
that can come out and do
anything, and then the
psychologists we find are
biased…I feel, not that they
purposely are biased, but how
can you test one of your own
children, their language and you
don’t want to with the small
group say ‘Oh, this child
is…needs a lot of help, is SLD,
is very slow’ and you know it.
Because you might feel deep
down, even though you’re able to
test the child in their own
language that maybe the child is
just so confused with having to
move and he’s in this country
and the culture is different so
maybe it’s not that bad and so
you’re going to minimize and not
maximize what’s wrong.
Table of Contents
Conclusions
Principals
interviewed for this study raised
three primary issues regarding
instruction for ELLs
with disabilities. First, they indicated
that state standards and supporting
documents did not provide instructional
strategy information as far as they were
aware. In their view, state standards
and supporting documents provided
details of the content that educators
needed to cover, but did not specify how
to cover it. Second, appropriate
identification of ELLs with disabilities
was, perhaps, a larger concern for these
10 principals than ways to deliver
instruction to these students. Third,
ESL or bilingual education teachers
often played a key role in supporting
the instruction of ELLs (and, perhaps,
ELLs with disabilities) in mainstream
classrooms.
These three issues were
repeated by principals of schools in
both large ELL and small ELL states.
Although some of the principals could
talk at a general level about addressing
the needs of ELLs with disabilities,
most of them talked at a broader level
about addressing the needs of ELLs as a
whole. The topic of ELLs as a whole may
have come up more frequently because,
even in large schools, there were often
only a small number of ELLs with
disabilities enrolled. In part, ways to
appropriately instruct them in
grade-level standards-based classrooms
were not a particularly high priority
for these 10 principals at the moment of
the interviews due to the small numbers
of these students in any given school.
An additional factor in the lack of
attention to the specific instructional
needs of ELLs with disabilities may be a
limited knowledge base from which
principals could provide direct
instructional leadership.
Our initial assumption
about the direct flow of instructional
leadership from the principal to
classroom teachers was not necessarily
the case when it came to instructing
this population of students with unique
needs. Our small sample of principals
either shared responsibility for
instructional leadership of ELLs with
disabilities with the district or
delegated some of their authority as
instructional leaders to ESL or
bilingual specialists in the building.
These specialists, in turn, passed on
information about ELLs, and, possibly,
ELLs with disabilities, to the classroom
teachers. We did not ask principals
whether this style of shared leadership
with teachers was an intentional choice.
A study conducted by Bays & Crockett
(2007) identified a similar pattern of
shared instructional leadership for
students with disabilities within 9
schools participating in a research
study. In addition, the topic of
distributed leadership is increasingly
more common in school leadership
journals (cf. Mayrowetz, 2008; Spillane,
Camburn, & Pareja, 2007; Spillane,
Halverson, & Diamond, 2001) suggesting
that principals are adopting this style
of leadership more frequently.
We acknowledge that our
study sample is small and findings
cannot be generalized. However, based on
this finding of shared instructional
leadership we propose a revised version
of the initial instructional leadership
diagram contained in Figure 1. This
revised diagram is presented in Figure
3.
Figure 3. Flow of
Instructional Leadership in the
Communication of Instructional Strategy
Information for ELLs with Disabilities

Our findings of shared
instructional leadership for ELLs with
disabilities raise some questions that
call for additional research in this
area:
-
In these schools
making Adequate Yearly Progress, is
the shared or delegated model of
instructional leadership working
effectively? Or is the delegation of
leadership and professional
responsibility expedient given that
principals may have a small
professional knowledge base about
this small, but rapidly growing,
population?
-
Does the shared or
delegated model of instructional
leadership indicate a need for
principals to receive more training
and support on the instruction of
ELLs with disabilities? Or, do the
experiences of these educational
leaders indicate a desirable
approach based on a much needed
collaborative model?
-
Do the overriding
concerns of principals regarding
appropriate assessment,
identification, and logistical
accommodations for ELLs with
disabilities underscore an important
research and policy agenda that
would help to frame the development
of instructional research
specifically validated for ELLs with
disabilities?
As research into
standards-based instruction for ELLs
with disabilities continues, it will be
important to explore what is happening
in districts with larger populations of
these students—
especially those where both ELLs and
students with disabilities are meeting
the requirements for AYP.
Table of Contents
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Table of Contents
Appendix
Principal Interview Protocol
School wide
Interpretation of State Policy
I) Demographic
Information
A) What is your
previous area of teaching
experience?
B) How long have
you been a principal? How many
years have you been principal in
this building?
C) Tell me about
your school and some of the
issues you believe are
associated with the instruction
of English language learners
with disabilities?
II) Instructional
Strategy Information
A) To what
extent do teachers in your
school implement different kinds
of instructional strategies that
are contained in state standards
and other state supporting
documents?
B) On what
sources of information do your
teachers rely to make decisions
regarding instructional
strategies for English language
learners with disabilities? How
about for English language
learners in general?
C) Do you or the
district provide information
specifically to cover
instructional strategies for use
with English language learners
with disabilities? To what
extent do teachers use this
information?
D) What
additional school and classroom
level needs do you, as
principal, perceive regarding
effective instructional
strategies for English language
learners with disabilities?
E) What is the
best way to distribute research
findings in your school or
district?
III. Do you have any
additional comments?