Unlocking Learning Report
Unlocking Learning Report
UNLOCKING LEARNING:
SCIENCE AS A LEVER FOR
ENGLISH LEARNER EQUITY
THE EDUCATION TRUSTWEST
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UNLOCKING LEARNING:
The second-grade classroom at Christopher Elementary School in San Jose, California, is alive with
academic conversation as students 54 percent English learners work in small groups at learning
stations. During part of a life science unit, one group is using magnifying glasses to examine sea urchin
shells and dried starfish, while another group examines snails. Students work excitedly with the specimens
as they make observations and compare the diversity of animals in different habitats. Students at another
station work in pairs at laptops to find information about seashore birds and their environment. At a third
table, students match animal figures with photograph habitat cards and read detailed descriptions about
each animal.
At first glance, the scene may seem no different than the many other classrooms across California that
use learning stations. But there is a rare level of coherence and intentionality. This school and the Oak
Grove School District adopted the Sobrato Early Academic Language (SEAL) program, which centers on
rigorous academic home language and English language development through the coordinated study of
science and social studies thematic units.
The walls are covered with poster boards, but these are hardly random. Each poster contains chants with
highlighted science vocabulary words that are color-coded to match key words in sentences on a white
board, which also are repeated on index cards at each of the learning stations. The result? A vibrant learning
environment that motivates students to engage in practicing spoken language, written communication,
and meaningful cognitive tasks. Language development is the vehicle for learning science. Its a reciprocal
process as students learn to speak like scientists and use science learning to build language skills.
Authors: Sarah Feldman, Director of Practice and Vernica Flores Malagon, Senior Practice Associate
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66%
62%
16%
54%
18%
8%
GRADE 5
GRADE 8
English Learners
GRADE 10
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PRA
ICES
T
C
NEXT
GENERATION
SCIENCE
STANDARDS
CROS
C
NTENT
O
1. Asking Questions
and Defining Problems
CU
ENGINEERING PRACTICES
T TIN
DISCIPLINARY
CORE IDEAS (DCI)
Physical Science (PS 1-4)
Life Science (LS 1-4)
Earth And Space (ESS 1-3)
CROSSCUTTING
CONCEPTS
1. Patterns
2. Cause And Effect
3. Scale, Proportion, Quantity
4. Systems And Models
5. Energy And Matter
6. Structure And Function
7. Stability And Change
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CALIPATRIA UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT (CUSD)
OAKLAND UNIFIED
SCHOOL DISTRICT
(OUSD) educates 49,098
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WESTMINSTER SCHOOL
DISTRICT (WSD) in Orange
3 Systematically increasing science instructional
time in the early grades for EL students;
4 Encouraging innovative, multilingual strategies
to advance science learning for ELs;
5 Using LCAP budgeting to dedicate funding
to promote equity and advance science
instruction for English learners.
The following discussion will highlight these practices,
illustrated with examples from the six districts we
visited that serve robust populations of EL students.
1 Providing high-quality, job-embedded
professional learning for teachers and
administrators to build science content knowledge
and integrate science instruction with researchbacked ELD instructional strategies.
Schools and districts with the best outcomes for
English learners in all subjects offer teachers job-
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PERSISTENT CHALLENGES
IN THE DISTRICTS
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15
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STATE POLICY
RECOMMENDATIONS
The state can advance science education and boost conditions for English learners to excel by doing the following:
1. STRENGTHEN TEACHER PREPARATION.
Preparation of science teachers needs to look radically
different. This is particularly true at the high school level,
which has traditionally siloed science education by biology,
chemistry, and physics. The California Commission on
Teacher Credentialing (CTC) should:
a. Work swiftly to expedite the development of revised
science teaching standards and science professional
credentialing tests to ensure implementation of CA
NGSS as early as possible; and
b. Ensure that courses offered through teacher
preparation programs, including those required for
elementary teacher and administrator credentials, are
updated to include preparation for the demands of
CA NGSS and instructional strategies for the CA ELD
standards.
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4. SUPPORT MULTILINGUAL/DUAL-LANGUAGE
EDUCATION. Dual-language proficiency is associated
with improved academic outcomes overall, including
more sustained academic growth. To promote
multilingualism, the state can:
a. Strengthen the bilingual teacher pipeline by
providing funding to districts for teachers to get a
bilingual credential (BCLAD); and
b. Foster implementation of Prop. 58 by disseminating
multilingual resources for science and other subject
areas through the CDEs digital platform.
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CONCLUSION
The states success in effectively educating its students demands increased attention to the needs of English
learners, who make up more than a fifth of the states students. Unfortunately, in the critical subject of science,
English learners access to rigorous learning opportunities lags behind their peers, a situation that can and must
be addressed directly.
A handful of districts across California from large urban districts in the Bay Area to small rural districts in Imperial
County are spearheading innovative approaches to boosting EL success in science. They are adopting forward-thinking
instructional practices, developing teachers capacity to integrate science with English language development, and finding
creative partnerships to deepen science learning. These districts are prioritizing science learning and view the success of
English learners as integral to their strategy. Examination of these approaches using the questions in this report has
the potential to elevate the importance of science learning across the state. With the exciting opportunities presented
by the new standards and our redesigned funding system, we are optimistic that more districts will view science as a
powerful lever to advance learning and opportunity for Californias English learners.
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END NOTES
1 Zoe Ann Brown and Kathy DiRanna, Equal Access to Content
Instruction for English Learners, An Example from Science,
(San Francisco, CA: WestEd, 2013).
2 In the 2015-16 school year, 1.37 million public school students
in California were classified as English learners, representing
22 percent of the public school population. Source: California
Department of Education Data Reporting Office, DataQuest,
2015-16 Enrollment by English Language Acquisition Status (ELAS)
and Grade. http://dq.cde.ca.gov/dataquest/longtermel/ELAS.
aspx?cds=00&agglevel=State&year=2015-16
3 Rena Dorph, Patrick M. Shields, Juliet Tiffany-Morales, Ardice
Hartry, and Teresa McCaffrey, High Hopes, Few Opportunities:
The Status of Elementary Science Education in California.
Center For The Future of Teaching and Learning, (San Francisco,
CA: WestEd, 2011).
4 California Department of Education Data Reporting Office,
DataQuest, 2015-16 Enrollment by English Language Acquisition
Status (ELAS) and Grade.
5 United States Census Bureau, 2010 to 2014. https://www.census.gov/
6 California Department of Education, Dataquest, 2014-15.
7 U.S. Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences,
National Center for Education Statistics. National Assessment of
Educational Progress (NAEP), 2015 Science Assessments.
http://www.nationsreportcard.gov/
8 California Department of Education, DataQuest, California
Longitudinal Pupil Achievement Data System (CALPADS).
9 Susan Gomez-Zwiep and William J Straits, Inquiry Science: The
Gateway to English Language Proficiency. Journal of Science
Teacher Education (2013), 24:1315-1331.
10 The Education TrustWest analysis of California Department of
Educations 2014-15 Staff Assignment and Course Data. Retrieved
November 2016. http://www.cde.ca.gov/ds/sd/df/filesassign.asp
11 The Education TrustWest analysis of California Department of
Educations 2014-15 Staff Assignment and Course Data. Retrieved
November 2016.
12 Brown, et al., Equal Access to Content Instruction For English
Learners, p.5.
13 Gomez-Zwiep et al., Inquiry Science: The Gateway to English
Language Proficiency.
14 Helen Quinn, Okhee Lee, and Guadalupe Valdes, Language
Demands and Opportunities in Relation to Next Generation
Science Standards for English Language Learners: What Teachers
Need to Know. Understanding Language. (Palo Alto, CA: Stanford
University, 2013).
15 Gomez-Zwiep et al., Inquiry Science: The Gateway to English
Language Proficiency.
16 As of November 2016, the CST science assessment is currently
the only ESEA-required science assessment used by school
districts to test fifth-, eighth- and 10th-grade science learning
proficiency. CA NGSS science assessments are in development
and scheduled for statewide use in 2018-2019.
The following 2015 data were used to select schools and districts:
Grade Level
5th grade
8th grade
10th grade
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OUR MISSION
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
www.edtrustwest.org