Of course not all districts, but most of the large ones that DCUM posters use do. I absolutely think there should be more transparency about what triggers an assessment. Parents should make their school board aware of their concerns in order to use their voices to impact the procedures. Of course, parents and the general public also need to understand that speaking English along with another language doesn’t always equate to proficiency in both languages. But I understand that school staff are not trusted by some to evaluate their child’s proficiency, and those parents should feel empowered to opt their child out of receiving services. |
But if a parent says they primarily speak English at home, shouldn't school systems take that at face value? Instead of assuming because they speak another language as well, their English might be bad? If you don't trust parents, then why not assess all children? |
In my district btw parents did make the system aware of their concerns and it came up in the anti racist audit. School staff KNOW that parents are BEGGING them to remove their children from ESL. They often do not listen. That is a reality many families have experienced. But you are framing this as a parent problem. It is a school system problem. |
Oh it's because you trust the White parents, not the Brown parents |
Of course it’s a school system problem. But school systems do not listen when it is only teachers saying something (ask any teacher anywhere, and it’s hard to put your job on the line to be a truth teller). Parents also need to make their voices heard, legally if necessary. As always, it’s not teachers vs parents, it’s individuals vs the systems. |
Okay? Now you are just stating the obvious and pretending you GAF about kids in this situation |
I am an EL teacher in LCPS.
1. Families can absolutely refuse EL services. 2. A lot of the time our services are "push in" meaning we come into the gen ed classroom. So I "know" all the kids in the class, not just the ones who are "mine." I also help anyone who needs help, while obviously focusing on the ones receiving EL services. OP are you sure the mom wasn't just saying that she services a classroom where your child also was? |
Just reposting the OP since you ignored most of what she said
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Maybe he was found eligible for esol services. Each state determines eligibility differently. In Maryland, you fill out questions about languages first spoken, most often used at home, and other languages spoken in the home. Based on those responses, children are screened. Your child can speak English but still be impacted by other languages spoken at home and that might be revealed during the screening process. You will receive a letter that states your son is eligible for services and will be able do accept or decline services. Keep in mind, Maryland is in the process of revising the letter so schools can’t send it home yet. Also, even if you refuse services, your son will be assessed yearly until he meets the cut score. The other possibility is that the esol teacher is plugging into a classroom to support students and your son just happens to be in the same class. Many esol programs have a coteaching model. |
No, schools can’t just take that at face value because that means different things to different people. Plus, it’s just a screener, no need to overreact about this. |
Because the test is not given at the beginning of the year. |
OP is saying her child was pulled out from school all year before he was assessed so it wasn't "just a screener", it was many hours of him missing appropriate instruction. |
I see so many problems with this process starting with the implicit assumption that other languages are a deficit instead of an asset. |
DP. It is not “just a screener.” First of all, screening tests take a kid out of class and schools typically make no effort to catch the kid up on what they missed. You may think this is trivial but as kids get older it is not. Second of all, the “screener” opens the door to the bureaucratic nightmare that is trying to get the school to remove the ESOL label. A kid could have a bad day and fail the screener, a stubborn kid could tank it on purpose, lots of stuff. If I was a parent of a kid with a second language spoken at home there is zero way I would disclose it unless I thought the kid needed ESL support. And I would decline the “screener.” |
+1. Parents should be asked if the child speaks English fluently. If the answer is yes, then no screening unless a teacher flags an obvious need. Then screen with consent of parents. That is what is required for IEP screening. |