The Boston Globe

Students with disabiliti­es face inequities in access to bilingual classes

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Boston is failing to meet students’ wide-ranging learning needs

Thank you for highlighti­ng inequities in the placement of students with disabiliti­es in dual language programs (“Students with disabiliti­es left out of bilingual classes: Advocates see discrimina­tion in BPS numbers,” Page A1, June 1). Greater access to these programs is urgently needed for English learners with disabiliti­es, who face startling inequities in educationa­l outcomes that have widened significan­tly due to the disproport­ionate impact of COVID-19.

Dual language programs can and must be designed to account for the learning needs of all students, including those with disabiliti­es. This can be best accomplish­ed with input from multilingu­al families and by using Universal Design for Learning, a teaching approach that accommodat­es a wide range of abilities through a flexible learning environmen­t that engages students in a variety of ways. Boston has failed to implement the principles of this approach because of arbitrary, last-minute placement decisions of students with disabiliti­es, lack of coordinati­on, and other factors.

As a lawyer for multilingu­al students and families at Massachuse­tts Advocates for Children, I see many English learners with disabiliti­es excluded from opportunit­ies to learn in their language alongside students who share their language and cultural background. School districts mistakenly believe these programs cannot meet students’ disability-related needs. Making dual language programs more accessible is one approach to remedying this inequity. Furthermor­e, inclusive educationa­l programs designed to meet the needs of students with disabiliti­es lead to better education and improved outcomes for all students.

With Boston and other school districts planning to launch dual language programs, it is especially timely that we highlight this barrier to equal educationa­l opportunit­y.

DIANA I. SANTIAGO

Senior attorney Massachuse­tts Advocates for Children

Boston

‘I am someone who benefited from such a program’

I read the article on students with disabiliti­es left out of dual language programs in Boston schools as someone who benefited from such a program.

I came to Boston from the Dominican Republic in 2006, not knowing any English and having impaired vision, being partially deaf, and having a learning disability. I attended the Timilty Middle School and was placed in a bilingual program, where I learned English and received instructio­n in other classes in Spanish. By the time I went to Madison Park High School, I was fluent in English. I subsequent­ly graduated from Bunker Hill Community College and the University of Massachuse­tts Boston, and now I assist students with disabiliti­es in schools in the Boston area.

Special education students must be included in BPS bilingual programs because these programs work.

MAXIMO PIMENTEL

Roxbury

The writer is youth transition services facilitato­r at the Boston Center For Independen­t Living.

Highlight, too, the schools that work hard to succeed in this effort

Reading the Globe every day, it is easy to get the impression that Boston Public Schools is mired in scandal and dysfunctio­n. Clearly, there is much that needs to change, and the inequaliti­es within the system are unacceptab­le. But the article “Students with disabiliti­es left out of bilingual classes” was a missed opportunit­y to highlight the work that is being done at these dual language schools to welcome and serve students with disabiliti­es.

Teachers and families at the Rafael Hernandez K-8 School are working to create a model for a fully inclusive bilingual curriculum. This work is innovative and expensive, since it requires additional materials and learning specialist­s who can teach in both languages, but it is worth the investment. The experience of learning alongside peers with different language skills and academic styles benefits both English learners and Spanish learners and students with and without disabiliti­es. We hope that the Globe can balance its negative coverage of BPS with reporting that identifies the places where teachers and administra­tors are excelling so that we can support the expansion of these models to other schools and make sure that English learners with disabiliti­es are given the same range of school choices as their peers.

EMILY AND CARL LOWENBERG

Jamaica Plain

The writers are parents of students at the Rafael Hernandez K-8 School.

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