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The characteristics of long-term English language learner students and struggling reclassified fluent English proficient students in Arizona

Across the United States, and in the states served by the Regional Educational Laboratory West (REL West) in particular, there is widespread concern about how to successfully educate the growing number of English language learner (EL) students, especially those identified as long-term EL students and those identified as reclassified fluent English proficient (RFEP) students who struggle to score at passing levels on state English language arts (ELP)/reading content tests (Horwitz et al., 2009; Olsen, 2010; Quality Counts, 2009).

This study, which focuses on EL students in Arizona, is one of a series of three companion studies that seek to help Arizona, Nevada, and Utah identify the characteristics of long-term EL students and Struggling RFEP students. For this study, we defined long-term EL students as students who, during the six school years of the study, never scored at or above the levels required on Arizona’s English language proficiency (ELP) test to be reclassified as fluent English proficient. We compared these long-term EL students to their EL peers who did score at or above the levels required on Arizona’s ELP test to be reclassified as fluent English proficient, whom we refer to as reclassified fluent English proficient (RFEP) students. Struggling RFEP students were defined as EL students who met the state’s ELP requirements for RFEP but did not pass the state ELP or reading content test by the end of year 6 of the study. We compared these Struggling RFEP students to their RFEP peers who did pass the state ELP or reading content test, whom we refer to as Transitioned RFEP students.

The study examined student data from 2006/07–2011/12 to address three research questions:

  1. What proportion of EL students fit the study’s definition of long-term EL students by the end of the six years? What proportion of EL students fit the study’s definition of Struggling RFEP students by the end of the six years?
  2. What are the characteristics of long-term EL students? How are these characteristics different from those of RFEP students?
  3. What are the characteristics of struggling RFEP students? How are these characteristics different from those of the RFEP students who passed their ELP content test at least once by the end of the six years?

The study followed three cohorts of EL students in Arizona: a grade K cohort, who started kindergarten in 2006/07; a grade 3 cohort, who started grade 3 in 2006/07; and a grade 6 cohort, who started grade 6 in 2006/07. By examining these three cohorts in Arizona over six years (2006/07–2011/12), this study found the following:

Subgroup Proportions

  • Over 90 percent of the EL students in the sample scored at or above the required ELP level to meet RFEP criteria. Once reclassified as fluent English proficient (by scoring Proficient on the state’s ELP test), at least 63 percent of RFEP students also passed their ELP content test at least once (thereby becoming Transitioned RFEP students).
  • The percentage of Struggling RFEP students was greater in each successively higher grade-level cohort.

Subgroup Characteristics

  • Arizona’s long-term EL students and Struggling RFEP students, when compared to their more successful peers—RFEP students and Transitioned RFEP students, respectively—had higher percentages of eligibility for free or reduced-price lunch (FRL), eligibility for individualized education program (IEP) services, and male students.
  • With the exception of the grade-6 cohort, compared to their more successful RFEP and Transitioned RFEP peers, long-term EL students and Struggling RFEP students also had higher percentages of students with lower ELP levels during the first study year.