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Parent Guide to the ESL Standards for Pre-K-12 Students: Introduction and Common Questions
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by Emily Lynch Gómez

Introduction
Common questions about ESL standards
1. What are the ESL standards?
2. Who can use the ESL standards and how?
3. What can I, as the parent, do to help my child attain the ESL standards?
4. What do the ESL standards say about using a student's native language?
5. How can the ESL standards help my child on standardized tests?
6. How can teachers use the ESL standards?
7. How can I tell if my child's teacher is using the ESL standards?
8. What is a standards-based curriculum?
9. How can my school administrator(s) use the ESL standards?
10. How are the ESL standards organized?
11. What additional resources are available to parents to help their children in school?
12. How can I order the ESL standards and other supporting materials?
Parent Guide: Appendices


Introduction

In 1997, Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages (TESOL) published ESL Standards for Pre-K-12 Students. Some parents want to know what these ESL standards mean for their child who is learning English as a second language. How will this document affect their child's education? How can it be used to improve the services the school district offers to their child? Are there negative consequences to implementing these standards? This guide will answer these questions and more for the parents and educators of English as a second language (ESL) students.*

* ESL means English as a second language. ESL is the name of a course for students to learn English as a new language. It is also sometimes the name of a program of studies for these students. In this document, we refer to students who are learning English as ESL students.

Common Questions About ESL Standards

Click on the questions below to see TESOL's response.

1. What are the ESL standards?
2. Who can use the ESL standards and how?
3. What can I, as the parent, do to help my child attain the ESL standards?
4. What do the ESL standards say about using a student's native language?
5. How can the ESL standards help my child on standardized tests?
6. How can teachers use the ESL standards?
7. How can I tell if my child's teacher is using the ESL standards?
8. What is a standards-based curriculum?
9. How can my school administrator(s) use the ESL standards?
10. How are the ESL standards organized?
11. What additional resources are available to parents to help their children in school?
12. How can I order the ESL standards and other supporting materials?

 

1. What are the ESL standards?

See Appendix A to read the ESL standards.

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2. Who can use the ESL standards?

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3. What can I, as the parent, do to help my child attain the ESL standards?

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4. What do the ESL standards say about using a student's native language?

Students who can read in their native language usually learn to read better in English and have better academic achievement than students who cannot read in their native language. TESOL fully supports native language instruction, where possible. TESOL also recognizes the benefits of bilingualism and supports effective bilingual education programs. However, the ESL standards do not directly provide strategies for native language development. The ESL standards are intended for use in ESL classes, which are always a part of any well-developed bilingual education program.

In the introduction to the ESL standards volume (p. 5, 8), the importance of developing and maintaining the native language is discussed.

See Appendices B and C for what the ESL standards volume says about knowing more than one language.

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5. How can the ESL standards help my child on standardized tests?

See Appendix D for more information on this question.

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6. How can teachers use the ESL standards?

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7. How can I tell if my child's teacher is using the ESL standards?

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8. What is a standards-based curriculum?

A curriculum is a road map for teachers that outlines the topics they should be teaching, the goals they should have for student learning, and the resources they should use in their instruction in a specific class. A standards-based curriculum is one that draws from the content or performance standards for that subject area (in this case, the ESL standards) to describe what the students should be learning in a specific grade or level. Teachers then use the standards-based curriculum to decide on what and how to teach the content in the class. The curriculum often includes skills for students to learn, recommended materials, and instructional and assessment approaches that may enhance the instructional program.

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9. How can my school administrator(s) use the ESL standards?

In the introduction to the ESL standards, TESOL has described its vision of effective education for ESL students. These statements, found below, can be used by administrators to guide their policy on educating ESL students.

Administrators can take the lead in ensuring that these vision statements are implemented in your child's school. By including some of these ideas in the school's mission statement, for example, principals can encourage all personnel to expect high standards of achievement from ESL students and to share in the responsibility of educating ESL learners. Administrators should recognize that ESL students can contribute to the school community by sharing their language and culture with the English-speaking population. Administrators can use various means to demonstrate the belief that all students benefit from knowing more than one language and culture. See also School Administrator's Guide to the ESL Standards and other resources.

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10. How are the ESL Standards organized?

Goals
The ESL standards are organized under three broad goals focusing on an ESL student's ability to use English for social and academic purposes and to use English in socially and culturally appropriate ways. Nine standards, three per goal, describe what students should know and be able to do.

Standards
The standards are presented in three grade-level clusters, pre-K-3, 4-8, and 9-12. The grade-level clusters are similar to those used in other national content area standards, such as math or science, and are tied to national testing practices. The standards are explained fully in Question 1. See also Appendix A.

Descriptors
Each standard in the document is illustrated by descriptors. These descriptors represent behaviors and skills that students are expected to demonstrate when they meet a standard. For example, under Goal 1, Standard 1, "To use English to communicate in social settings: Students will use English to participate in social interactions," one descriptor is "sharing and requesting information." Students who meet Goal 1, Standard 1 must be able to demonstrate that they can share and request information when using English for social purposes.

Sample Progress Indicators
To help teachers in particular, each standard also includes sample progress indicators (SPI). The SPIs are observable, assessable activities that teachers can include in their lesson plans to determine whether or not students are making progress toward meeting a standard. The SPIs are cumulative so that as the grade level increases, additional SPIs are added to accommodate the uses of English expected of older students.

Vignettes
The vignettes are stories of classroom scenes based on real-life classroom situations. By reading the vignettes, educators can get ideas for instructional strategies to help them deliver standards-based lessons.

Discussion
A discussion section follows each vignette. This section highlights the specific behaviors that the teachers and students demonstrated in the vignette to help students achieve the standard.

See Appendix E to read a sample standard for Goal 2, Standard 2, for Grades 4-8 (TESOL, 1997, pp. 87-90).



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11. What additional resources are available to parents to help their children?

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12. How can I order the ESL standards and other supporting materials?

The ESL standards and its companion documents can be ordered by contacting TESOL Publications at 301-638-4427 or toll-free at 888-891-0041 or http://www.tesol.org/catalog/. A list of the ESL standards and companion documents follows.

The ESL standards manuscript is also available at http://www.tesol.org/.

Further Reading


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