Chicago
Public Schools (CPS) students who began kindergarten as English Learners (ELs),
on average, progressed to eighth grade with academic achievement similar to or
better than their peers who began kindergarten proficient in English, finds a
new study released today by the University of Chicago Consortium on School
Research.
Nearly
80 percent of CPS English Learners achieved English proficiency by eighth
grade, with the majority (76 percent) becoming proficient by fifth grade. ELs
who demonstrated English proficiency by eighth grade had higher attendance,
math test scores, and core course grades than their peers who were never
classified as ELs; reading test scores and Freshman OnTrack rates were similar.
For
the one in five EL swho did not reach proficiency by the end of eighth grade,
school was more challenging—attendance, grades, and test scores were lower than
those of their peers who did attain proficiency by the end of eighth grade.
More effective supports are needed to serve these students, and the authors
suggest there may be an opportunity to identify these students early on—in kindergarten
or first grade
.The
groundbreaking study, English Learners in Chicago Public Schools: A NewPerspective, stands in contrast to previous publicly available data that has
shown English Learners academically far behind their peers. Previous studies
about ELs have reported data on active English Learners—defined as those
students who have not yet reached proficiency on a state English test—at a
specific moment in time.
“The
Consortium study is different because for the first timewe analyzed the long-term
trajectories of18,000 CPS students who began kindergarten as ELs and followed
their progress all the way through eighth grade,” said Marisa de la Torre,
Senior Research Associate and Managing Director at the UChicago Consortium. “EL
students are making progress, but the growth is not apparent when you’re
looking at different groups of students each year.”
The
study’s methodology and key findings are important because one-third of CPS
students are classified as English Learnersat some point in their academic
career.
According
to the National Center for Education Statistics, the proportion of students who
are English Learners across the country grew 26 percent from 2000 to
2015.Educators, policymakers, and families must have comprehensive information
to understand if schools are fully serving students who are working to attain
proficiency in English while simultaneously learning the academic content for
their grade level. The report demonstrates that the statistics currently used
for accountability overlook how well most ELs are performing in school
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