[Lmresearch] New EdSource report--Similar English Learner Students, Different Results: Why Do Some Schools Do Better?

Russell W. Rumberger russ at lmri.ucsb.edu
Fri May 11 15:40:14 PDT 2007


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           Similar English Learner Students, Different Results: 
            Why Do Some Schools Do Better?
            How elementary schools focus their time and energies, and what resources they have for doing it, can make a powerful difference in the academic achievement of English Learner students from low-income backgrounds, according to findings from this new analysis of data. 

            This new extended analysis was based upon extensive survey data from 4,700 K-5 classroom teachers (80% or more at each school) and all principals in 237 California elementary schools from 137 different school districts across the state. These schools were initially randomly selected from 550 schools in California's 25-35% School Characteristics Index band. All schools from this band have high levels of student poverty and low parent education levels; for this analysis we further narrowed our original sample to eliminate any school that didn't have enough English Learner students to have an EL Academic Performance Index score. 

            The research team analyzed the school practices covered by the teacher and principal surveys to see which most highly correlated with California's new school level English Learner Academic Performance Index. In addition, the team analyzed the same practices against percent proficient on the California Standards Tests to see if the results were similar. Finally, the team ran an additional analysis to see if the results were similar for only schools in our sample with English Learner student populations that were 80% or more Spanish speakers. The results for all three analyses were essentially the same: there are four interrelated broad school practices - backed up by numerous examples of specific actionable practices - that most strongly differentiate the lower from the higher performing elementary schools with regard to English Learner API. These four practices are the same, although in a slightly different order of significance, as the team had found in October 2005 for the school-wide API. 

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