Friday, March 12, 2010

Epoch Times - LA Unified School District Subject to Civil Rights Review for English Learner Students

Epoch Times - LA Unified School District Subject to Civil Rights Review for English Learner Students

LA Unified School District Subject to Civil Rights Review for English Learner Students

By Shahrzad Noorbaloochi
Epoch Times Staff
Created: Mar 11, 2010Last Updated: Mar 11, 2010
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The Department of Education stated yesterday that the Office of Civil Rights (OCR) would be performing an assessment of the civil rights of English Learner (EL) students in the Los Angeles Unified School District (LAUSD). The assessment will be the first official civil rights action that the Department of Education will have undertaken to ensure that schools are complying with federal laws on ensuring the civil rights of students.

The review is meant to assess whether EL students are receiving effective education in EL classes in the LAUSD, a district which is home to a great number English learner students. The main focus of the review will be to evaluate whether current EL development programs in LAUSD schools are effective and provide students with access to core curriculum content in a meaningful way. It will also assess whether communication with student’s parents is sufficient and effective in fostering students’ educational progress.

According to a study published in October 2009 by the Tomas Rivera Policy Institute (TPRI) at University of Southern California, nearly two-thirds of the entire population in LAUSD were English learners at one point. Of these students, 30 percent were not reclassified into non-EL classes until the eighth grade and 29 percent were never reclassified as English-proficient.

This high rate, the study concludes, cannot plausibly be due to the lack of cognitive skills and ability among these students, stating, “some may assert that cognitive skills or ability are affecting learning outcomes. However, this is not plausible; a rate of 29 percent defies the normal distribution of cognitive skills that education researchers assume in any given population, and research suggests that ELs need five to seven years to learn English with native fluency.”