A National Survey of Collaborative Practices for Secondary Multilingual Learners Designated as English Learners

Author:

Kibler Amanda K.1ORCID,Lesser Virginia1,Palacios Martha Castellón2,Sandstead Martha1,Wiger Sara2,Woodruff Karrie S.3,Bovee Jaclyn B.1

Affiliation:

1. Oregon State University Corvallis Oregon USA

2. WestEd San Francisco California USA

3. Corvallis School District Corvallis Oregon USA

Abstract

AbstractCollaborative teaching models serving secondary multilingual learners designated as English Learners (ELs) have become increasingly prominent but remain understudied. This study draws upon an ecological framework and uses quantitative and qualitative survey findings from a national sample of school districts in the United States to investigate the prevalence and use of collaborative practices. The study examines variations in how collaborative models are structured and implemented, as well as how they vary by district characteristics. Findings suggest that collaborative practices are present in many types of districts but are typically more common in larger, urban districts with higher percentages of EL‐designated students. Collaborative practices are more prevalent at middle school (grades 6–8) than high school (grades 9–12) levels but tend to occur across multiple key content areas. In relation to coteaching in particular, findings align with previous research on inequitable status and teaching responsibilities faced by some ESL teachers. District supports for collaboration vary, with professional development more prominent than teacher release time for collaborative planning. Overall, findings indicate that district resources and instructional capacity play important roles in the implementation of collaborative practices, and organizational capacity may influence the status of ESL teachers in these models.

Funder

U.S. Department of Education

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Linguistics and Language,Language and Linguistics,Education

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