English Language Center Program (ELC)
English Language Center Programs (ELC)
The
English Language Centers (ELCs) provide intensive social and academic
language support to recently-arrived English language learners in
grades 7-12 (students at language levels 1 and 2 who have been in the
U.S. for three years or less). The ELC program is designed to ease the
transition for newcomer students while allowing them to work toward
graduation standards. ELC students spend approximately 75% of the
school day in intensive language classes, developing English skills
while they study challenging content material such as geography,
science, health, and math. The other 25% of the school day is spent in
mainstream elective classes such as art, music, and physical education,
allowing ELC students to interact with native English-speaking peers.
The
content of ELC classes is aligned to state standards, and students earn
credits that count toward graduation. ELC classes are taught by
ELL-licensed teachers, and bilingual support is available for students.
ELC coursework focuses on English language development. ELC
students complete a yearlong transitional math course taught by a
licensed math teacher.
Most newly-arrived students complete the ELC
curriculum sequence in two academic years. Upon exiting the ELC,
students are mainstreamed for up to 80% of the day, reserving some time
for maintenance of newly acquired English skills.
As students
transition out of the ELCs, they spend time in mainstream classrooms,
shifting toward more academic work in English. Level 3 students enroll
in transitional health and science courses, which are taught by
mainstream teachers for ELL students only.
ELL students at language
levels 4 and 5 (long-term English language learners) take social
studies, science, health, math, and electives courses in the
mainstream; they continue to receive ELL support in academic reading
and writing.
In 2007-08, ELCs are located at:
Five middle school/junior high sites
- Battle Creek Middle School
- Cleveland Junior High School
-
Hazel Park Middle School
-
Humboldt Junior High School
-
Washington Middle School
Four senior high sites
-
Arlington Senior High
-
Como Senior High
-
Harding Senior High
-
Humboldt Senior High
Secondary Graduation Pathways
This
year, the ELL department has been working in collaboration with the
SPPS Area Learning Center (ALC), Office of Instructional Services, and
counselors to revise secondary graduation pathways. The students of
primary concern are English language learners who begin their education
in SPPS as level 1 students in one of the three high-school ELCs. These
students must meet the same graduation requirements as their native
English-speaking peers; for this reason, many of these ELL students do
not graduate in four years. The primary reason for this is that it is
difficult for these ELL students to earn the number of credits required
to graduate on time. When students enter high school at level 1, much
of the ESL/ELL coursework they complete during their first two years
counts only as elective credit; thus, many of these students fall
behind in their graduation requirements.
Revised graduation plans
have been created for each of the high-school ELCs; these will give
students the opportunity to graduate in four years along with their
mainstream peers. In addition, these plans should help to lower the
dropout rate for English language learners in the district
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