Middle School
Principals’ Perspectives on Academic
Standards-based Instruction and
Programming for English Language
Learners with Disabilities
ELLs with Disabilities Report 22
Kristi Liu, Martha
Thurlow, Haesook Koo, Manuel Barrera
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., Thurlow, M.,
Koo, H., & Barrera, M. (2008). Middle
school principals’ perspectives on
academic standards-based instruction and
programming for English language
learners with disabilities (ELLs
with Disabilities Report 22).
Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Table of Contents
Introduction
Method
Data
Discussion
Conclusion
Resources
Appendix
Introduction
The demographics of U.S.
public schools are changing quickly.
Given the rapid growth in the number of
linguistically and culturally diverse
students nationwide (National Center for
Education Statistics, 2007), educators,
and school administrators can expect to
serve an increasingly diverse student
body with potentially different learning
needs from those of the native English
speaking students they may have been
primarily trained to teach. Students
identified as English language learners
(ELLs) make up a significant part of
this linguistically and culturally
diverse population. Many educators and
school leaders grapple with how to help
ELLs learn both social and academic
English at the same time that they are
required to learn grade-level
standards-based content (Smiley &
Salsberry, 2007). Educators also often
struggle with making grade-level content
accessible for students with
disabilities (Jackson & Neel, 2006).
Approximately 9% of all ELLs in U.S.
public schools also have a disability (Zehler,
Fleischman, Hopstock, Pendzick, & Sapru,
2003).
Creating instructional
adaptations for a group of students with
special learning needs may not have been
part of most mainstream educators’ and
administrators’ preparation programs in
the past (Lucas, 2000; Wakeman, Browder,
Flowers, & Ahlgrim-Delzell, 2006) and
few educators have been specifically
prepared to address the instructional
needs of ELLs with disabilities (Kohnert,
Kennedy, Glaze, Kan, & Carney, 2003).
Accurately differentiating between
second language learning processes and a
disability can be challenging for
educators (Casey, 2006) and it is
possible that some ELLs are over
identified in particular disability
categories while others are not
identified as in need of services when,
in fact, they are (cf. Albus & Thurlow,
2004; Y. Liu, Ortiz, Wilkinson,
Robinson, & Kushner, 2008). When ELLs
are identified as having a disability,
most often they receive services for
learning disabilities or speech language
disabilities and typically these
students are taught by mainstream
classroom teachers for much of the
school day (Zehler et al., 2003). ELLs
with any type of disability require
specially adapted instruction that meets
both their language learning and their
disability-related needs.
The limited amount of
research on the academic achievement of
ELLs with disabilities (Albus & Thurlow,
2004; K. Liu, Albus, & Thurlow, 2006)
shows that these students may have very
low rates of passing standards-based
content assessments, lower than both
ELLs overall and students with
disabilities overall. Low passing rates
raise concerns about the accessibility
of the instruction that ELLs with
disabilities receive in the mainstream
classroom. If students’ unique learning
needs are met, ELLs with disabilities
have the potential to demonstrate
increased academic achievement and to
become even more successful in
standards-based classrooms (Barrera,
Liu, Thurlow, & Chamberlain, 2006;
Barrera, Liu, Thurlow, Shyyan, Yan, &
Chamberlain, 2006). Supporting teachers
and assisting them in learning new ways
of teaching and creating accessible
instruction on standards-based content
is a high priority for raising
achievement levels for ELLs with
disabilities.
According to Lucas
(2000), creating school change so that
more equitable academic outcomes are
attainable by ELLs, and by implication
for ELLs with disabilities as well, is a
"moral obligation" (p. 10). Principals
play key roles in creating and
sustaining that change so educators have
the skills and knowledge to meet the
learning needs of all students,
including ELLs with disabilities (Smiley
& Salsberry, 2007). Doing so will
require that, in addition to functioning
as managers and parent and community
liaisons, principals also act as
instructional leaders (Smiley &
Salsberry, 2007). The research and
teaching literature charges
instructional leaders with specific
roles and responsibilities for better
serving ELLs; these are doubly important
for ELLs with disabilities given their
low rates of academic success. The roles
and responsibilities include:
-
Believing and communicating the
attitude that all students can learn
and achieve high standards (Council
of Chief State School Officers [CCSSO],
1996; Di Paola, Tschannen-Moran, &
Walther-Thomas, 2004)
-
Creating positive staff attitudes
toward ELLs (Lucas, 2000; Smiley &
Salsberry, 2007) and ELLs with
disabilities
-
Knowing
the characteristics of ELLs,
including ELLs with disabilities,
and their instructional needs (CCSSO,
1996; Thurlow, Barrera, &
Zamora-Duran, 2006)
-
Increasing teachers’ understanding
of ELLs (Lucas, 2000; Smiley &
Salsberry, 2007) and ELLs with
disabilities (Thurlow et al., 2006)
-
Developing program capacity to
address the needs of ELLs (Lucas,
2000; Smiley & Salsberry, 2007) and
ELLs with disabilities (Thurlow et
al., 2006)
-
Monitoring and enhancing teachers’
skills at instructing ELLs and ELLs
with disabilities (Di Paola et al.,
2004; Lucas, 2000)
-
Identifying and addressing barriers
to student learning (CCSSO, 1996)
All of these roles, in
addition to the more traditional roles
associated with being a manager,
supervisor, and liaison, are vital to
the success of a school. However,
providing direct support to teachers so
that they have the resources and skills
to appropriately instruct students with
specific learning needs is perhaps the
most crucial role for principals in a
standards-based accountability system (Supovitz
& Poglinco, 2001). Becoming a teacher of
teachers (Stein & Nelson, 2003) requires
principals to have personal experience
and expertise with diverse students,
even in situations where the size of a
particular student group, such as ELLs
with disabilities, is relatively small.
Previous work by the
National Center on Educational Outcomes
(K. Liu, Koo, Barrera, & Thurlow, 2008)
documented that principals in 10
"successful" middle schools (defined as
those making Adequate Yearly Progress (AYP)
with ELLs and students with
disabilities) were knowledgeable and
concerned about the special education
referral process for ELLs with
disabilities but less knowledgeable
about the characteristics of appropriate
instruction for these students.
Participants often answered questions
about policies and practices for ELLs
with disabilities by referring generally
to policies and practices for ELLs,
indicating that they may have lacked
knowledge of the unique learning needs
of ELLs with disabilities. Several
participating principals stated that
they either deferred instructional
leadership for ELLs with disabilities to
district curriculum and English as a
second language (ESL)/bilingual
specialists or delegated leadership
responsibilities to an ESL/bilingual
teacher in the school building. The
district played a much stronger role in
providing support to teachers in the
appropriate use of instructional
strategies for ELLs with disabilities
than did the state department of
education or the school. K. Liu et al.
(2008) raised the issue of whether the
delegation model of instructional
leadership was appropriate and useful in
the participating schools that had all
demonstrated success with
standards-based outcomes. The findings
suggested that more training may be
required for principals on the specific
instructional needs of students who have
a combination of both language learning
and disability-related learning needs.
The purpose of this
study was to follow up on the work of K.
Liu et al. (2008) by working with
another group of "successful" middle
school principals (in schools making AYP
with ELLs and students with
disabilities) to extend the findings on
instructional services and leadership
for ELLs with disabilities.
Specifically, we wanted to know about
the following issues: (1) services and
programs offered for ELLs with
disabilities, (2) sources of
instructional strategy information
specific to ELLs with disabilities, and
(3) the principal’s role in supporting
teachers’ use of instructional
strategies for ELLs with disabilities.
Table of Contents
Method
Participants
The research team
conducted the online principal survey
simultaneously with another
project-related study that examined
teacher nominated instructional
strategies for ELLs with disabilities
(Barrera, Shyyan, Liu, & Thurlow, 2008).
Participating
principals represented the same middle
and junior high schools from which
teacher participants were chosen for the
Barrera et al. (2008) study.
Data on the number of
ELLs with disabilities are not generally
made available by state departments of
education, districts, or schools.
Therefore, the team developed a process
to identify schools with the greatest
likelihood of serving ELLs with
disabilities. Schools were selected
using a multi-stage stratified random
sampling procedure. First, using data
from the National Clearinghouse for
English Language Acquisition we
identified 10 states with the highest
and 10 with the lowest ELL populations.
For our purposes, the District of
Columbia was included as a state. From
these 20 states, 10 states (5 states
with the highest and 5 states with the
lowest ELL populations) were randomly
drawn from the pool for inclusion in the
first phase of grant project studies
(Barrera et al., 2008; Shyyan, Thurlow,
& Liu, 2008). The remaining 10 states
became locations for the principal
online survey and the related study of
teacher-nominated instructional
strategies.
Second, within each of
the 10 identified states the team
created a list of middle and junior high
schools making AYP during the 2003–2004
school year. Achieving AYP is one
indicator of success in a
standards-based system and entails
achieving progress goals with English
language learners and students with
disabilities. We assumed that schools
achieving AYP with ELLs and students
with disabilities had increased academic
outcomes for ELLs with disabilities as
well. Because schools can change from
year-to-year in whether they make AYP,
we chose a common year based on the data
that were publicly available from
states.
Third, from the list of
schools making AYP the team identified
the percentage of ELLs and students with
disabilities enrolled at each of the
middle and junior high schools (grades
6–9) and rank ordered the schools by the
size of these student subgroups. We
chose the top ranked schools in each
state as potential study sites. In some
cases there were enough schools that we
could randomly identify five schools
from within this pool in which to begin
study recruitment. In other cases, there
were few, if any, schools that met all
of our criteria and we contacted all
possible study sites.
Within a particular
state, the first principal who responded
and agreed to take part in the study was
selected as a participant. In schools
with more than one principal we invited
all interested school leaders to
participate.
Two recruitment issues
affected our research design. In one
Western state with a large ELL
population we were unable to secure
district-level permission for school
principals to participate despite
principal interest in the study. We
attempted to recruit principals from
other districts in that state but met
with similar reluctance on the part of
districts. Therefore, the team decided
to drop that state from the research
study. Additionally, in one small ELL
state few schools met our participation
criteria exactly. We made the decision
to recruit a high school in this state
because 9th graders attended the school
and this was a grade-level included in
our focus.
We originally began this
multi-stage sampling procedure using
2003–2004 data on schools achieving AYP
and 2003–2004 school demographic data.
However, by the time this component of
the larger project began in the summer
of 2007, several of the schools we had
identified as potential research sites
no longer existed in the same structure.
Some schools had restructured and served
different grade levels, while others had
become charter schools or magnet schools
serving special populations of students
and using specialized curricula (e.g.,
science and technology magnet or visual
and performing arts magnet). For this
reason, we began the process of school
identification again, using the
2003–2004 list of schools making AYP,
along with 2007–2008 school demographic
data because 2003–2004 demographic data
often were no longer publicly available.
Figure 1 shows the
concentration of participating
principals in the four geographic
regions of the United States. A total
number of 11 principals (8 principals
and 3 assistant principals) participated
in this survey. Four of the schools in
which they worked were located in the
Northeast and five schools were in the
South.
Figure 1. Location of
School Sites

Survey
Development
The principal survey
described in this report was conducted
as part of a larger project that set out
to identify effective instructional
strategies nominated by educators and
administrators that would support
improved academic achievement for middle
school ELLs with disabilities in
grade-level standards-based instruction
(Barrerra et al., 2008; Shyyan et al.,
2008). One part of the grant project
addressed ways that principals of
successful middle schools (defined as
those making AYP with ELLs and students
with disabilities in 2003–2004)
translated to teachers instructional
strategy information specific to ELLs
with disabilities. We believed that
state standards documents would provide
a limited amount of support for teachers
in this area and teachers would require
increased instructional leadership in
order to create accessible grade-level
content instruction for students with
both linguistic and disability-related
learning needs. As a first step, project
staff conducted semi-structured
face-to-face interviews with a purposive
sample of 10 middle school principals
during 2006. Principal interview
findings were rich and insightful but
represented only a small sample of
school leaders. Therefore, the research
team developed an online version of the
principal interview, with some
extensions to elicit information similar
in nature to the information raised in
the face-to-face interviews. The online
survey focused on school level
standards-based instructional efforts as
well as program supports for ELLs with
disabilities.
The survey (see the
appendix) consisted of five parts. The
first part of the survey addressed
aspects of the school demographics that
provided important contextual
information for understanding
instructional leadership practices.
Principals were asked to describe the
location of the school, the grades
served, the total enrollment and the
size of various subpopulations such as
ELLs, students with disabilities, ELLs
with disabilities, and students
receiving free or reduced lunch.
The second section
included items about services and
programs the school offered for ELLs
with disabilities. First, the items
addressed identification procedures for
ELLs with disabilities. Then the survey
asked about services and programs for
ELLs with disabilities, factors
affecting how the school served ELLs
with disabilities, and specific supports
that either the state agency or school
district provided to promote
standards-based achievement of ELLs with
disabilities.
The third component of
the survey elicited information about
strategies contained in reading, math,
and science curricula. Specifically, we
asked about the type of curriculum used
in each subject, whether the curricula
overall provided instructional
strategies aimed at supporting the
specific learning needs of ELLs, ELLs
with disabilities, and students with
disabilities, and ways that principals
facilitated implementation of these
curricula.
The fourth section dealt
with strategies identified in state
standards and related documents. Items
asked about the frequency, usage, and
amount of instructional strategy
adaptation by teachers for those
strategies contained in state
standards-based documents. A few items
addressed the principal’s leadership in
the selection of instructional
strategies for teaching ELLs with
disabilities.
The fifth component of
the survey elicited information about
participating principals’ professional
experience working as a school
principal. The survey ended with a
request for volunteers to talk with the
research team by telephone to describe
survey responses in more detail.
Survey
Pilot
Before administering the
survey, the team piloted it with nine
middle school principals in a state that
had not been identified as a potential
research site. The pilot took place
between July and September of 2006.
Suggestions for item clarification and
additional items were gathered from
pilot survey participants. The research
team then revised the survey based on
the feedback received.
Survey
Administration
The online survey was
administered individually beginning in
September of 2007 and ending in July of
2008. Securing the required school and
district permissions sometimes required
several weeks or months of effort per
research site. As a result, as soon as
all the necessary requirements were met,
the principals were asked to go online
to a specified Web site link and fill in
the survey at their convenience. Data
collected from the survey were processed
using Microsoft Excel. Although some
respondents indicated a willingness to
participate in an additional telephone
interview to clarify their survey
responses, this portion of the study was
not completed due to time constraints.
Table of Contents
Data
School
and Student Information
Table 1 shows
demographic profiles of the schools
represented by participating principals.
The majority of principals worked in
middle or junior high schools that
served students in grades 6–8 or 7-8.
However, due to some variation in the
way schools were configured one
principal represented a K–8 school and
an additional principal worked in a high
school serving students in grades 9–12.
There were six principals from states
with small ELL populations (five in the
South and one in the Northeast) and five
principals from states with large ELL
populations (two in the South and three
in the Northeast). Geographic setting
information on each school was obtained
from the National Center for Education
Statistics Common Core of Data. The
geographic setting codes indicate the
school’s location compared to populated
areas (NCES, 1998). 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). Schools were located in a
variety of geographic settings. However,
there were no urban schools that met all
of our participation criteria.
Table 1. School
Demographic Information
|
State |
ELL Population |
Geographic Location |
Geographic
Setting |
Grade Span |
Number of
Participants |
|
1
|
Small
|
South
|
Large city
|
9–12
|
1
|
|
2
|
Large
|
South
|
Urban fringe of
a large city
|
6–8
|
1
|
|
3
|
Small
|
South
|
Large town
|
6–8
|
1
|
|
4
|
Small
|
Northeast
|
Small town
|
7–8
|
1
|
|
5
|
Small
|
South
|
Large town
|
7–8
|
2
|
|
6
|
Large
|
Northeast
|
Large town
|
K–8
|
2
|
|
7
|
Large
|
Northeast
|
Mid-size city
|
6–8
|
1
|
|
8
|
Large
|
South
|
Urban fringe of
a mid-size city
|
6–8
|
1
|
|
9
|
Small
|
Northeast
|
Small town
|
6–8
|
1
|
Table 2 provides further
contextual information about the size
and student demographics of each school
during the 2007–2008 academic year.
These data may vary slightly from those
for 2003–2004 but they were commonly
available for all schools in our study
sample. In 2007–2008 student enrollment
figures ranged from a low of 166
students to a high of 1266 students with
a majority of schools enrolling more
than 500 students. There was also
considerable variability in the
percentage of students receiving free or
reduced lunch in each school. To be
consistent with other figures in the
table, we converted the percent of
students receiving free or reduced lunch
to a whole number. In two schools more
than half of the student body received
free or reduced lunch (706 of 980
students and 697 of 1107 students),
indicating that the schools primarily
served students from low income
backgrounds. In contrast, in another
school less than one fourth of the
enrolled students were from low income
backgrounds (126 of 787 students).
All of the participating
principals worked in schools that had
relatively large populations of ELLs for
those schools making AYP in the same
state. However, as Table 2 shows, some
of the schools had fewer than 10 ELLs
enrolled in 2007–2008. None of the
participating schools served more than
six ELLs with disabilities and a few had
no ELLs with disabilities.
Table 2. 2007–2008
Student Demographic Information
|
State |
ELL Population |
Total School
Enrollment |
Student-Subgroups
|
|
Number of
Students Receiving Free/Reduced
Lunch
|
Number of ELLs |
Number of
Students with Disabilities |
Number of ELLs with
Disabilities |
|
1
|
Small
|
475
|
157
(33%) |
7
|
3
|
0
|
|
2
|
Large
|
1266
|
519
(41%) |
122
|
212
|
6
|
|
3
|
Small
|
787
|
126
(16%) |
20
|
30
|
3
|
|
4
|
Small
|
166
|
43
(26%) |
3
|
0
|
0
|
|
5
|
Small
|
794
|
262
(33%) |
6
|
50
|
0
|
|
6
|
Large
|
506
|
142
28% |
125
|
45
|
4
|
|
7
|
Large
|
980
|
706
(72%) |
104
|
186
|
6
|
|
*8
|
Large
|
1107
|
697
(63%) |
*
|
*
|
*
|
|
9
|
Small
|
575
|
132
(23%) |
12
|
47
|
2
|
*= Data were unavailable
Table 3 lists the
primary language backgrounds of the
largest groups of ELLs in each school
for 2003–2004, as provided by the
participating principals. Many of the
principals worked in schools that served
Spanish-speaking ELLs. However, there
were other languages represented,
notably French and Asian languages.
Table 3. The Language
Backgrounds of the Largest Groups of
ELLs
|
State |
ELL Population |
Number of ELLs
|
Language
Backgrounds of the Largest
Groups of ELLs
|
|
1
|
Small
|
7
|
Spanish
|
|
2
|
Large
|
122
|
Spanish, French,
Creole, Japanese, Burmese,
Vietnamese
|
|
3
|
Small
|
20
|
Spanish
|
|
4
|
Small
|
3
|
French,
Vietnamese, Chinese
|
|
5
|
Small
|
6
|
Indian (no
language specified), Spanish
|
|
6
|
Large
|
125
|
Spanish,
Vietnamese
|
|
7
|
Large
|
104
|
Spanish, Karen,
Maay Maay
|
|
8
|
Large
|
*
|
Spanish
|
|
9
|
Small
|
12
|
Vietnamese,
Chinese
|
*= Data unavailable
Principal Background
Table 4 provides
demographic information on all the
participating principals. Among the 11
principals, there were 5 females (4
principals and 1 assistant principal)
and 6 males (4 principals and 2
assistant principals). These individuals
had worked as a principal for between 3
and 39 years, with an overall mean of
about 15 years. Principals’ length of
tenure at their current school site
ranged from one year to five years, with
an average of about four years across
participants.
Table 4. Participants’
Demographic Information
|
State |
ELL Population |
Participant
Position |
Gender |
Years of
Experience as a Principal
|
Years at Current
School
|
|
1
|
Small
|
Principal
|
Male
|
10
|
3
|
|
2
|
Large
|
Principal
|
Female
|
3
|
3
|
|
3
|
Small
|
Principal
|
Female
|
17
|
5
|
|
4
|
Small
|
Principal
|
Female
|
14
|
5
|
|
5 |
Small
|
Assistant
Principal
|
Male
|
3
|
3
|
|
Assistant
Principal
|
Male
|
4
|
2
|
|
6 |
Large
|
Principal
|
Male
|
12
|
5
|
|
Assistant
Principal
|
Female
|
6
|
3
|
|
7
|
Large
|
Principal
|
Male
|
20
|
1
|
|
8
|
Large
|
Principal
|
Female
|
4
|
4
|
|
9
|
Small
|
Principal
|
Male
|
39
|
3
|
|
Average
|
|
|
|
15
|
4
|
Services/Programs for
ELLs with Disabilities
The first section of the
survey asked principals to provide
information about services and programs
for ELLs with disabilities. Respondents
were asked to describe policies and
procedures used in their school for
referring an ELL to special education. A
summary of these responses is shown in
Table 5.
Table 5. School
Policies, Procedures and Assessments for
Referring ELLs to Special Education
|
State
|
ELL Population
|
Findings
|
|
1
|
Small
|
No response.
|
|
2
|
Large
|
Same procedures
as for students with learning
disabilities: child study,
teacher observation, anecdotal
reports, academic and behavioral
testing, parent conferences.
|
|
3
|
Small
|
Teachers notify
principal. Principal notifies
district specialists. Child
study team forms. Conduct parent
conferences, teacher
observation, collect test
scores. Follow district
guidelines.
|
|
4
|
Small
|
No response.
|
|
5
|
Small
|
Teacher and
administrator contact district
special education office
|
|
6
|
Large
|
Same procedures
to identify any students for
special education: teacher
observation, child study team,
parent conferences, and
assessment results. Follow
district guidelines. Teacher
notifies principal, principal
meets with special education
staff. District is notified
immediately. Follow district
procedures.
|
|
7
|
Large
|
No response.
|
|
8
|
Large
|
Teacher input,
parent input, Student Support
Team, prescribed diagnostic
testing.
|
|
9
|
Small
|
Same procedures
for all students.
|
Most of the principals
replied that the special education
identification procedures for ELLs with
disabilities were the same as for
students who were not ELLs, indicating
that there were no unique referral or
assessment practices that took into
account second language learning
processes. A few of these same
respondents stated that special
education referral procedures were
established by the district. Therefore,
the school followed district policies
for assessing all students. Typically,
the district procedures were similar
across states: formation of a child
study team, meetings with parents,
observation of the student in the
classroom, and examination of student
assessment results.
As shown in Figure 2,
when asked what types of programs and
services were available to ELLs with
disabilities, the majority of principals
indicated that their school offered a
combination of ESL and special education
programming for English language
learners with disabilities.
Figure 2. Services for
ELLs with Disabilities

One school only offered
ESL services to ELLs with disabilities,
one offered full inclusion in a
mainstream setting, and one offered
modified inclusion. In a modified
inclusion setting, a small number of
students with disabilities might be
placed in a mainstream classroom with a
special education paraprofessional for
support. The classroom teacher would
plan instruction with the support of a
special education inclusion specialist.
The remaining principal indicated that
the placement of an ELL with a
disability depended on the severity of
the child’s disability. "For example,"
he wrote, "an ELL student with mental
retardation or severe handicapping
condition would be in a self-contained
special education class. Those that are
at level three ELL may be in regular
education classes supported with a
resource teacher or inclusion setting."
A variety of factors may
influence the specific ways in which a
school serves ELLs with disabilities.
Figure 3 show the factors that
principals reported to play the biggest
role in shaping services for these
students. All of the participating
principals reported state guidelines as
an important service determination
factor for ELLs with disabilities.
Special education assessment procedures
and district directives were also common
factors. Funding, school-based
management plans, and scheduling
influenced services in a few schools.
Building space and staffing were not
reported as factors by any principals.
Figure 3. A List of
Service Determination Factors for ELLs
with Disabilities

Districts and state
departments of education may play a role
in supporting educators through the
provision of information and training
about the instruction of students with
special needs. We asked principals
whether their district or state had
provided instructional leadership in
three particular areas: (1) distributing
hard copy or electronic information on
teaching ELLs with disabilities in
standards-based classrooms, (2)
sponsoring workshops and training
sessions, or (3) collaborating with a
professional organization to offer
workshops and trainings. Table 6 shows
their replies.
Table 6. Supports
Provided to Promote Standards-based
Achievement of ELLs with Disabilities
|
State |
Information,
fliers, letters, or web-based
materials from… |
Workshops or
training sessions directly
sponsored by… |
Workshops or
training sessions sponsored by
other professional associations
in collaboration with…
|
No specific
support from… |
|
State Agency
|
School District
|
State Agency
|
School District
|
State Agency
|
School District
|
State Agency
|
School District
|
|
1
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
X
|
|
|
2
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
3
|
X
|
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
|
|
4
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
5
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
|
|
6
|
X
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
|
|
7
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
|
X
|
|
|
|
8
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
|
9
|
X
|
|
X
|
|
X
|
X
|
|
|
Several principals
reported that both state departments of
education and school districts provided
hard copy or electronic information to
educators. Some had received information
from both levels. In addition, both the
school districts and the state education
agencies had sponsored workshops or
trainings, with the school district
appearing to take the lead in this area.
The school districts seemed slightly
more likely than the states to
collaborate with professional
organizations to provide such training.
One principal indicated that his
teachers received information and
training from a state agency, but also
reported that the state agency did not
provide any specific support.
Instructional Strategies
Associated with Content Curricula
In previous interviews
with other successful middle school
principals in schools making AYP (K. Liu
et al., 2008) some school leaders
referred to instructional strategies
suggested by curricula. For this reason,
we asked principals in this online
survey to provide information about
their curricula in reading, math, and
science. When asked about the curricula
that the school used, response patterns
were similar across each of the three
content areas. All of the principals
reported using a school or
district-developed curriculum in
reading. A few respondents reported
using a combination of a school or
district-developed curriculum and
commercial curriculum in each content
area. In math and science, the majority
of states again reported using a school
or district-developed curriculum with a
small number also using a commercial
curriculum. Only one state reported
using solely a commercial curriculum in
math and science.
We then asked principals
whether the school used different
curricula in reading, math, and science
for ELLs, students with disabilities,
and ELLs with disabilities. The patterns
of responses were, again, very similar
across states for each of the three
content areas. Two states had separate
curricula in reading and math for
English language learners (only one of
the two had separate curriculum in
science for ELLs). Three other states
had separate curricula in all content
areas for students with disabilities.
Three states had separate curricula only
for ELLs with disabilities. One small
state had a common curriculum in reading
and math. That small state, along with a
second small state, had only a common
science curriculum for all students.
These responses showed no discernible
pattern according to whether a school
was located in a state that had a large
number of ELLs or a small number of
ELLs.
When teachers implement
curricula in the classroom,
instructional leaders follow up with
teachers to determine whether
adjustments in instruction need to be
made at a building level, and an
individual teacher level. Figure 4
contains the follow up strategies used
by the nine principals in this study.
Figure 4. Measures Used
to Implement a New Curriculum

The most common type of
follow-up procedure for principals was
an administrative measure such as an
accountability chart or performance
checklist. Observations of teachers by
either principals or district curriculum
specialists were other common procedures
to ensure that teachers were following
content and instructional strategies as
laid out by the curricula. One principal
who reported using a teacher peer review
process added the following comment
about the instruction of ELLs in
general:
All new teachers
are provided a mentor for peer
to peer review. The "Thoughtful
Classroom" implemented this past
year encouraged peer
collaboration and review of
student work. State testing data
and local assessments are used
to review student status, i.e.,
progress. Administrators from
Central Office have visited
classrooms and conduct
district-wide meetings specific
to ELLs. This year an ELL
coordinator will oversee the
middle and high school programs,
visiting schools on a regular
basis.
The remaining principal
used minimal measures to follow up on
curriculum implementation.
As a last question in
this section of the survey, principals
were asked whether their curricula in
reading, math, and science contained
instructional strategies that were
specifically aimed at delivering
grade-level content to specific groups
of students. Figures 5 and 6 contain
information relevant to this question.
The answers for math and science
curricula were identical in each state
and were, therefore, combined into one
table.
Figure 5. Instructional
Strategies Contained in Reading by Type
of Student

Figure 6. Instructional
Strategies Contained in Math and Science
by Type of Student

Figures 5 and 6
highlight that, according to principal
responses, most of the curricula used in
these successful middle schools provided
instructional strategies for the general
student group. Strategies for ELLs were
also relatively common. Several
principals reported that reading, math,
and science curricula contained
instructional strategies specific to
ELLs with disabilities, even though
there were not many principals reporting
that their curricula contained
strategies for students with
disabilities overall. It was not clear
what these strategies for ELLs with
disabilities were. One principal
indicated a lack of familiarity with the
instructional strategies contained in
curricula in all three areas.
Other Sources of
Instructional Strategy Information
In addition to
strategies contained in content
curricula, teachers may rely on other
sources of information to learn about
ways to help students with special needs
achieve in grade-level instruction.
Principals or district-level staff may
mandate the use of particular
instructional strategies by all
teachers. Principals in this survey
provided information about strategies
that they or their districts mandated in
reading, math, or science for students
with disabilities, ELLs, or ELLs with
disabilities. Across all of the content
areas, two principals reported that they
did not know, implying that they did not
know whether the district mandated any
instructional strategies for these
groups of students. One principal was
certain that neither he nor his district
mandated the use of any strategies for
these students.
The remaining
principals’ responses can be summarized
as follows:
-
In
reading, five or more participants
reported that there were strategies
mandated for teaching all students
and for teaching ELLs. Four
principals reported mandated
strategies for teaching students
with disabilities and four reported
mandated strategies for ELLs with
disabilities.
-
In
math, a very similar pattern
occurred. Five or more principals
indicated that there were mandated
strategies for teaching all
students. Five reported mandated
strategies for teaching ELLs. Four
indicated there were mandatory
strategies for students with
disabilities and three said that
there were strategies required for
ELLs with disabilities.
-
In
science, some slight differences
were apparent. Again, five or more
principals indicated mandatory
strategies for students in general
and for ELLs. Three said there were
strategies for students with
disabilities. Only one indicated
there were mandatory science
strategies for teaching ELLs with
disabilities.
A follow up item asked
principals to describe the mandatory
strategies that existed at the building
or district level. Most principals (n=6)
chose not to answer the question. Among
the remaining three principals, two
offered a brief description of
instructional strategies in use and
another provided a brief comment:
Our district
provides and promotes the
implementation of the 7–8–9
process....the 7 correlates, the
8–step process, and the 9 high
yield strategies. This is to be
used in all classrooms across
all grade levels.
Strategy one is
to differentiate instruction to
address the four different
learning styles. Strategy two is
to raise the use of compare and
contrast activities. Strategy
three is to modify the regular
education curriculum to address
pace of instruction to increase
student understanding and
retention. Strategy four relates
to the Fast ForWord program to
support literacy education for
ELL’s and special education
students....There is a gap in
the teacher perception that they
plan and use differentiated
instruction versus the extent to
which this strategy is observed
in action.
State training
has provided strategies that are
or have been successful.
None of the comments
listed by principals related directly to
instruction of ELLs with disabilities.
Previous research by
Albus, Thurlow, and Clapper (2007) found
that some states incorporated
instructional strategies for students
from special populations into their
state standards and the supporting
documents that described standards. We
asked principals about the extent to
which teachers of ELLs with disabilities
used strategies contained in the state
standards and supporting documents. All
of the principals believed that teachers
used these state-specified strategies.
One principal in a large ELL state
reported that teachers of ELLs with
disabilities used state-specified
instructional strategies extensively.
Five principals reported that teachers
of ELLs with disabilities used
state-specified instructional strategies
regularly. Three principals reported
that teachers of ELLs with disabilities
used these strategies somewhat. The
majority of principals believed that
teachers used the strategies as directed
by the state, but then also adapted them
to meet the needs of diverse students
and combined them with strategies from
other sources.
As shown in Figure 7,
principals stated that teachers in these
nine schools primarily increased their
effectiveness at using standards-based
instructional strategies through
professional development sessions and
informal exchanges with other teachers.
Teachers relied to a lesser extent on
reading professional materials such as
books and Web sites, consulting research
literature, and following
recommendations from professional
organizations.
Figure 7. Methods Used
by Teachers to Increase Effective Use of
Instructional Strategies

Principals supported
teachers in improving instructional
practice for ELLs with disabilities by
sending them to professional development
workshops (n=6), referring teachers to
the district’s curriculum specialists
(n=5), and providing books or other
materials (n=3). One principal in a
large ELL state reported the use of an
outside consultant to help develop
teachers’ skills:
An outside
consultant… came into the school
to provide professional
development, trained teacher
leaders for in-school Learning
Clubs and worked with specific
departments to identify
strategies to raise the level of
teacher effectiveness while
addressing student learning
activities through higher level
learning modalities.
Other Thoughts from
Principals
The survey finished with
an open-ended item asking for any
additional information on the
principals’ efforts to help ELLs with
disabilities meet academic standards.
Five principals added a comment:
Communicate our
mission, goals, and expectations
to the parents so that
strategies can be continued at
home. We do pull out groups,
one-on-one instruction, reading
strategies, and the TV Read-In
Program. Once a week, we show a
high interest program
school-wide. We turn off the
sound and have the students read
the closed captioning. This
increases vocabulary,
comprehension, and fluency
Collaboration
among the teaching staff and
their constant communication is
really important. I do my best
to listen to them and to support
them.
Constant
communication with our teaching
staff about our students.
There is one
important piece that is hard to
measure, i.e., that the school
teachers, support staff and
administration genuinely care
about all of our students.
Through this, we continue to
work toward improvement of
student attendance, i.e.,
2007–2008 just shy of 93%. We
promote a safe and conducive
learning environment, e.g., this
year reduced suspendable
incidents by approximately 48%.
In addition, our district and
school has an excellent
relationship with the Refugee
Center and other community
groups supporting our ELL
population. We will continue to
examine our practices while
seeking out researched-based
initiatives that will raise our
effectiveness in serving our
students.
My teachers
spend a great deal of time
collaborating with other
educators in the building and in
the district. Improving
instructional practices for ALL
students is a focus.
We are fortunate
to have well trained staff and a
small number of students per
teacher.
The additional comments
provided by principals largely related
to school-wide strategies for promoting
the academic achievement of all students
and did not specifically pertain to the
instruction of ELLs with disabilities.
Table of Contents
Discussion
This study was conducted
with a small number of participants, and
therefore the findings are not
generalizable. However, given a
relatively small pool of middle and
junior high schools with diverse
students that were making AYP, the views
of these participants are extremely
important. They represent views from
leaders who have been successful at
increasing standards-based academic
achievement for ELLs and students with
disabilities. Our assumption was that
the principals would also have raised
academic achievement for ELLs with
disabilities at the same time. However,
even in the largest schools associated
with these nine principals there were
fewer than six identified ELL with
disabilities at the time of the study.
Principals’ answers to questions
reflected the view that perhaps the
group of ELLs with disabilities was not
sufficiently large enough to have become
a pressing concern.
These nine school
leaders often reported that they
followed district special education
identification procedures, which were
the same for all students. The fact that
none of these principals mentioned
specific identification processes
associated with differentiating between
a disability and second language
learning is striking. Similarly, in
these schools there was no single
instructional program or service
designed to meet the combination of
language learning and disability-related
needs of ELLs with disabilities. Rather,
a blend of ESL and special education
programming was standard practice.
Typically, principals reported that the
structure of services offered to ELLs
with disabilities was primarily
influenced by state guidelines, special
education assessment procedures, and
district directives. They did not report
any school-level initiatives in place
for the identification and instruction
of this population of students.
Survey respondents
perceived instructional strategy
information for English language
learners with disabilities to come from
four main sources: the curricula,
individual principal or district
mandated strategies, professional
development opportunities provided by
the district or state department of
education, and informal teacher
exchanges. Principals did mention that
they supported teachers in developing
their skills related to instructional
strategy use for ELLs with disabilities
by sending teachers to professional
development workshops or referring them
to district specialists. However, the
district appeared to play the largest
role in providing training opportunities
and curriculum specialists to support
teachers.
Table of Contents
Conclusion
The findings of this
online principal survey echo the
findings of the previous principal
interviews (K. Liu et al., 2008) in two
major areas. First, principals seemed to
be less familiar with the details of
instructing ELLs with disabilities than
they were with instructing the total
group of students. In anecdotal
comments, principals described
school-wide instructional practices such
as differentiated instruction or the use
of state test data to review student
progress when asked to provide comments
relating to standards-based instruction
for ELLs with disabilities. They
indicated they were aware of diverse
instructional needs, such as those
pertaining to ELLs. Likewise, when asked
what strategies were mandated by the
principal or the school district for
ELLs with disabilities, but also for
ELLs and students with disabilities,
many principals stated that there were
mandated strategies but did not describe
them. These types of answers indicate
that these school leaders may lack
specific knowledge and experience with
the instruction of ELLs with
disabilities.
A second key finding
that was echoed in our previous study is
that these nine principals deferred some
of their role as instructional leader
for ELLs with disabilities to the
district. The districts often provided
teacher training opportunities and
direct support to teachers for the
instruction of specific groups of
students in ways that the principal did
not. All of the schools represented in
this study were schools that had
successfully supported increases in
standards-based content learning for
ELLs, students with disabilities, and
potentially ELLs with disabilities in
the past. Deferring part of their
instructional leadership role to more
knowledgeable individuals with greater
resources may have been an efficient and
effective strategy. More research is
needed to determine the extent to which
principals could provide more direct
instructional leadership for ELLs with
disabilities if they had support in
learning more about the students and
whether direct leadership from the
principal would make any difference in
achievement scores.
Table of Contents
Resources
Albus, D., & Thurlow, M.
(2004). Beyond subgroup reporting:
English language learners with
disabilities in 2002–2003 online state
assessment reports (ELLs with
Disabilities Report 10). Minneapolis,
MN: University of Minnesota, National
Center on Educational Outcomes.
Albus, D., Thurlow, M.,
& Clapper, A. (2007). Standards-based
instructional strategies for English
language learners with disabilities
(ELLs with Disabilities Report 18).
Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Barrera, M., Liu, K.,
Thurlow, M., & Chamberlain, S. (2006).
Use of chunking and questioning aloud
to improve the reading comprehension of
English language learners with
disabilities (ELLs with Disabilities
Report 17). Minneapolis, MN: University
of Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Barrera, M., Liu, K.,
Thurlow, M., Shyyan, V., Yan, M., &
Chamberlain, S. (2006). Math strategy
instruction for students with
disabilities who are learning English
(ELLs with Disabilities Report 16).
Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Barrera, M., Shyyan, V.,
Liu, K., & Thurlow, M. (2008).
Reading, mathematics, and science
instructional strategies for English
language learners with disabilities:
Insights from educators nationwide
(ELLs with Disabilities Report 19).
Minneapolis, MN: University of
Minnesota, National Center on
Educational Outcomes.
Casey, A. (2006). Case
in point: Issues and challenges in
educating English language learners with
disabilities. Journal of Special
Education Leadership, 19(1),
52–54.
Council of Chief State
School Officers [CCSSO]. (1996).
Interstate school leaders licensure
consortium: Standards for school leaders.
Washington, DC: Council of Chief State
School Officers.
DiPaola, M.,
Tschannen-Moran, M., & Walther-Thomas,
C. (2004). School principals and special
education: Creating the context for
academic success. Focus on
Exceptional Children, 37(1), 1–10.
Jackson, H., & Neel, R.
(2006). Observing mathematics: Do
students with EBD have access to
standards-based mathematics instruction?
Education and Treatment of Children,
29(4), 593–614.
Kohnert, K., Kennedy,
M., Glaze, L., Kan, P., & Carney, E.
(2003). Breadth and depth of diversity
in Minnesota: Challenges to clinical
competency. American Journal of
Speech-Language Pathology, 12(3),
259–272.
Liu, K., Albus, D., &
Thurlow, M. (2006). Examining
participation and performance as a basis
for improving performance. Journal of
Special Education Leadership, 19(1),
34–42.
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.
Liu, Y., Ortiz, A.,
Wilkinson, C., Robertson, P., & Kushner,
M. (2008). From early childhood special
education to special education resource
rooms: Identification, assessment, and
eligibility determinations for English
language learners with reading-related
disabilities. Assessment for
Effective Intervention, 33, 177–187.
Lucas, T. (2000).
Facilitating the transitions of
secondary English language learners:
Priorities for principals. National
Association of Secondary School
Principals [NASSP] Bulletin, 84(619),
2–16.
National Center for
Education Statistics. (2007). The
condition of education 2007: Indicator
six, language minority children.
Retrieved July 30, 2008 from
http://nces.ed.gov/pubsearch/pubsinfo.asp?pubid=2007064
National Clearinghouse
for English Language Acquisition.
(2006). The growing number of limited
English proficient students:
1995/96–2005/06. Retrieved July 30,
2008, from
http://www.ncela.gwu.edu/policy/states/reports/statedata/2005LEP/GrowingLEP_0506.pdf
Shyyan, V., Thurlow, M.,
& Liu, K. (2008). Instructional
strategies for improving achievement in
reading, mathematics, and science for
English language learners with
disabilities. Assessment for
Effective Intervention, 33(3),
145–155.
Smiley, P., & Salsberry,
T. (2007). Effective schooling for
English language learners: What
elementary principals should know and do.
Larchmont, NY: Eye on Education, Inc.
Stein, M., & Nelson, B.
(2003). Leadership content knowledge.
Educational Evaluation and Policy
Analysis, 25(4), 423–448.
Supovitz, J., & Poglinco,
S. (2001). Instructional leadership
in a standards-based reform.
Philadelphia, PA: Consortium for Policy
Research in Education. Retrieved July
30, 2008, from http://www.eric.ed.gov/ERICDocs/data/ericdocs2sql/content_storage_01/0000019b/80/19/f3/9c.pdf
Thurlow, M., Barrera,
M., & Zamora-Duran, G. (2006). School
leaders taking responsibility for
English language learners with
disabilities. Journal of Special
Education Leadership, 19(1),
3–9.
Wakeman, S., Browder,
D., Flowers, C., & Ahlgrim-Delzell, L.
(2006). Principals’ knowledge of
fundamental and current issues in
special education. National
Association of Secondary School
Principals [NASSP] Bulletin, 90(2),
153–174.
Zehler, A., Fleischman,
H., Hopstock, P., Stephenson, T.,
Pendzick, M., & Sapru, S. (2003).
Descriptive study of services to LEP
students and LEP students with
disabilities (Volume I Research
Report). Arlington, VA: Development
Associates Inc. Retrieved July 30, 2008,
from http://www.ncela.gwu.edu/resabout/research/descriptivestudyfiles/volI_research_fulltxt.pdf
Table of Contents
Appendix
NCEO
Survey for Principals
Please take 15–20
minutes to tell us about your school and
instructional strategy use that may
benefit English language learners (ELLs)
with disabilities. As you answer the
survey questions, we would like you to
think about: middle school or junior
high ELLs with identified or suspected
disabilities; ELLs with disabilities who
participate in grade-level
standards-based content instruction
(e.g., those with learning disabilities,
speech-language disabilities,
emotional-behavioral disabilities,
mild-moderate mental retardation); and
all teachers who work with grade-level
standards-based content instruction for
ELLs with disabilities (e.g., content
area specialists, ESL teachers, special
education teachers, resource room
teachers, etc.).
Student and School
Demographics
1. What grades are
served in your school? ___
2. How many students are
enrolled in the school this year? ___
3. In what kind of
setting is your school located?
[ ]
large city (population greater than or
equal to 250,000)
[ ]
urban fringe of a large city
[ ]
mid-size city (population smaller than
250,000)
[ ]
urban fringe of a mid-size city
[ ]
large town (population greater than or
equal to 25,000)
[ ]
small town (population smaller than
25,000)
[ ]
rural
[ ]
other, please specify ___
4. What percent of your
total student body receive free or
reduced lunch during the 2007–08 school
year? ___
5. How many of the
following types of students does your
school currently serve? Fill in all the
blanks
ELLs (English Language Learners) ___
Students with disabilities ___
ELLs with disabilities ___
6. What are the language
backgrounds of your largest groups of
ELLs? Choose all that apply
[ ]
Spanish
[ ]
Hmong
[ ]
Vietnamese
[ ]
Native American languages
[ ]
Other, please specify ___
Services/Programs for
ELLs with Disabilities
7. If your school
identified ELLs with disabilities in the
past or is likely to do it in the near
future, what policies, procedures, or
assessments do teachers use in referring
an ELL to Special Education? Please list
these below. ___
8. What kinds of
services are offered or can be offered
in your school for ELL students with
disabilities?
[ ]
ESL Program only
[ ]
A combination of an ESL and Special
Education Programs
[ ]
Full Inclusion Model: in a regular
classroom with special education
consultation
[ ]
Modified Inclusion Model: in a regular
or resource room supported by general &
special education teachers
[ ]
Self-contained Special Education only
[ ]
Other, please describe ___
9. Which of the
following determines how your school
serves ELLs with disabilities? Choose
all that apply
[ ]
State guidelines
[ ]
District directives
[ ]
School-based management plan
[ ]
Building space
[ ]
Scheduling
[ ]
Funding
[ ]
Staffing
[ ]
Special Education Assessment procedures
[ ]
Staffing
[ ]
Other, please specify ___
10. Please describe more
specifically how these affect your
school’s services for ELLs with
disabilities. ___
11. What specific
supports does your state agency or
school district provide to promote
standards-based achievement of ELLs with
disabilities in your school? Select all
that apply
|
|
State Agency
|
School
District
|
|
Information, fliers,
letters, or web-based
materials from your…
|
[ ] |
[ ] |
|
Workshops or training
sessions directly
sponsored by your…
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Workshops or training
sessions sponsored by
other professional
associations in
collaboration with your…
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
No
specific support from
your…
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
12.
Are
there any other supports that
your state agency or school
district provides to promote
standards-based achievement in
your school? ___
Reading, Math, and
Science Curricula
13. Does your
school use any of the following
types of curricula in reading,
math, and science for students
in general? Select all that
apply
|
|
School or
District-developed
|
Commercial
Curriculum
|
Other
|
|
Reading
|
[ ] |
[ ] |
[ ]
|
|
Math
|
[ ] |
[ ] |
[ ]
|
|
Science
|
[ ] |
[ ] |
[ ]
|
14.
Does your school diversify its
curriculum for ELL students,
students with disabilities, and
ELL students with disabilities
in the following content areas?
Select all that apply
|
|
Diversified
for ELLs only
|
Diversified
for students with disabilities
only
|
Diversified
for ELLs with disabilities
|
No
diversification in this area
|
|
Reading
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Math
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Science
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
15.
What do you do to follow up with
teachers when a new curriculum
is implemented? Select all that
apply
[ ]
I use administrative measures
such as an accountability chart
or performance chart/checklist
[ ]
I observe classroom teaching
[ ]
I implement a peer review
process among teachers
[ ]
I invite district-level
curriculum specialists to
observe classroom teaching
[ ]
I utilize minimal administrative
measures because I trust my
teachers to do their job
[ ]
Other, please specify ___
16. Do your
curricula in reading, math, and
science contain recommended
instructional strategies*
specifically aimed at delivering
grade level content to any of
the following groups?
(*Instructional strategies are
purposeful activities to engage
students in acquiring new
behaviors or knowledge. These
have clearly defined steps or a
clear description of what the
teacher does.) Select all that
apply
|
|
Reading
|
Math
|
Science
|
|
Strategies for
teaching students in general
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Specific
strategies for teaching students
with disabilities
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Specific
strategies for teaching ELLs
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Specific
strategies for teaching ELLs
with disabilities
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
No instructional
strategies recommended
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
I do not know
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
Instructional Strategies
17. Do you or
does your district require any
additional instructional
strategies in the following
content areas for any of the
following groups beyond those
contained in the curricula?
Select all that apply
|
|
Reading
|
Math
|
Science
|
|
Strategies for
teaching students in general
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Strategies for
teaching students with
disabilities
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Strategies for
teaching ELLs
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
Strategies for
teaching ELLs with disabilities
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
No instructional
strategies recommended
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
|
I do not know
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
[ ]
|
18. If you
identified additional
instructional strategies that
you or your district require for
each content area and student
group in Question 17 of the
survey, please describe each
strategy below. ___
19. To what
extent do teachers of ELLs with
disabilities use instructional
strategies that may be
identified in state standards
and related documents?
[ ]
Extensively
[ ]
Regularly
[ ]
Somewhat
[ ]
Almost never
[ ]
Not at all
[ ]
No instructional strategies
contained in state standards or
supporting documents
20. How do
teachers use the instructional
strategies that may be contained
in state standards and
supporting documents? Select all
that apply
[ ]
As directed by the state
[ ]
Adapted to meet the needs of
diverse students
[ ]
Combined with other strategies
[ ]
Not used; teachers rely on their
own resources to determine
instructional strategies
[ ]
No strategies available in state
standards and supporting
documents
21. In addition
to state supported strategies
how do teachers increase their
own effectiveness in using
instructional strategies to help
students meet academic
standards? Select all that apply
[ ]
By attending professional
development sessions
[ ]
Through informal exchanges with
other teachers
[ ]
By reading professional
materials (e.g., books,
websites, etc.)
[ ]
By following a set of
recommendations from their
professional organizations
[ ]
By consulting the research
literature on instructional
strategies
[ ]
Other, please explain ___
22. How do you
assist your teachers in
selecting instructional
strategies for teaching ELLs
with disabilities? Select all
that apply
[ ]
I refer them to our school
district’s curriculum
specialists
[ ]
I send them to professional
development workshops
[ ]
I provide other supportive
materials (e.g., books) for them
[ ]
Other, please specify ___
23. As a school
that has been successful in
meeting Adequate Yearly Progress
(AYP) requirements with all
students, including ELLs with
disabilities, what additional
information would you like to
share regarding your efforts to
help ELLs with disabilities meet
academic standards? ___
Demographic Information
24. How long
have you been a principal?
(years) ___
25. How long
have you been a principal in
your current school? (years) ___
26. We are very
interested in hearing more about
what you have to say relating to
successful instruction of ELLs
with disabilities. Would you
agree to participate in an
approximately 20 minute
telephone conversation with
researchers to discuss the
topics above in greater detail?
We would like to hear your
comments about any of your
answers above, any specific
initiatives your school or
district has undertaken relating
to instructional strategies and
any targeted efforts to improve
grade level content learning of
ELLs with disabilities.
[ ]
Yes; I agree to talk with a
researcher
[ ]
No, thank you; I decline to
participate in an additional
telephone call
Top of page |