La Cosecha 2023 – SEAL Sessions

2023-10-19T11:53:07-07:00

JOIN SEAL AT LA COSECHA 2023 CONFERENCE

Dual Language Education of New Mexico has been hosting their La Cosecha Dual Language Conference since 1997.  This year’s conference theme is “Honoring Our Story: Reclaiming Our Past Through Empowerment and Action.” The event will take November 8 – 11, 2023 at the Albuquerque Convention Center in Albuquerque, NM and downtown partner hotels. SEAL is a proud partner and will offer two workshop sessions for educators and school administrators. See below for details and times. We look forward to seeing you there!

Effective, Integrated, and Responsive ELD for Dual Language Classrooms

Heather Skibbins, Ana Marisol Sánchez & Patricia Montes-Pate | Friday, November 10, 2023 | 1:30 – 2:50 p.m. | Clyde – Enchantment C/D

Are you struggling to design student-responsive ELD that builds upon what students are learning in Spanish? Through SEAL’s model of language functions, graphic organizers, differentiated sentence frames, and transfer lessons, bilingual teachers will explore how to bridge what their students are learning in Spanish into content-based ELD. We will examine classroom artifacts and videos to show how you can connect what you are doing throughout your day in a way that develops academic language and literacy in both languages.

Strengthening Family Partnerships to Promote Bilingual Pride at Home and in the Classroom

Adriana Diaz & Judith Alcalá | Saturday, November 11, 2023 | 9:10 – 10:30 a.m. | Albuquerque Convention Center – Ballroom C

This workshop offers effective practices and strategies to build family partnership at your sites through an assets-based approach, offering ready-to-go workshops to foster community engagement and empower families to take an active role in students’ learning. With a strong emphasis on celebrating and cultivating bilingualism/biliteracy in the home, our goal is that both parents and children will share in their pride of being bilingual and bicultural and utilize these skills in the classroom.

La Cosecha 2023 – SEAL Sessions2023-10-19T11:53:07-07:00

CABE 2023 – SEAL Sessions

2023-04-06T08:35:52-07:00

JOIN SEAL AT CABE 2023 CONFERENCE

The California Association for Bilingual Education (CABE)’s 48th Annual Conference is back in-person at the Long Beach Convention Center on March 22 – 25, 2023 for “Testimonios: The Power of Our Stories, Our Art and Our Dreams.” SEAL is a proud partner and will offer eight various workshop sessions for educators, families and community partners. See below for details and times. We look forward to seeing you there! REGISTER TODAY!

FEATURED SPEAKER: The Power of Stories for Equity-Focused School Transformation

Anya Hurwitz | Thursday, March 23, 2023 | 3:15 – 4:30 p.m. | Hyatt Regency Long Beach, Room: Regency B

Our stories, nuestros testimonios, shift hearts and minds, offering critical examples that inspire, spark action, and transform – even in times of uncertainty or challenge. In California, 1.4 million students in our K-12 public school system are English Learners, and 60% of all children 0-5 years old are Dual Language Learners who speak a language other than English at home. This number will only continue to grow, and it is critical that our schools treat them with asset-based approaches. SEAL’s Executive Director Anya Hurwitz along with California school leaders and educators will share how they’re working to center the assets and needs of their multilingual learners and demonstrate that it’s possible. This interactive session will provide participants with turn-key strategies that can be used to inspire in their own school communities and create equity focused school transformation. Participants will receive copies of The SEAL Case Study Series.

Testimonios: How Powerful Stories Transform Dual Language Learning Communities

Jennifer McNeil & Adriana Diaz | Thursday, March 23, 2023 | 3:15 – 4:30 p.m. | Renaissance Long Beach Hotel, Room: Broadlind I/II

In dual language we are tasked not only with the pedagogy of biliteracy, but with nurturing our students and our own intersectional identities, our languages, cultures, races/ ethnicities and more. How do we nurture sociocultural competence, become more critically conscious of these intersections, and engage in raciolinguistic equity? Come to this workshop to learn how teachers in one K-6 dual language program–themselves schooled in an era of English only hegemony and racism– are using the practice of testimonios to strengthen relationships and to make space for and honor their own raciolinguistic intersectional identities. Participants in this workshop will have the opportunity to write and share (if they choose) their own testimonio. Please join us in community and “speak your brave truth unapologetically.”

Discover Successful Approaches to Designated ELD that Responds to YOUR Students Needs

Jennifer Clinkscales & Heather Skibbons | Thursday, March 23, 2023 |  4:45 – 6 p.m. | Long Beach Convention Center, Room:102A

Need help planning “in response to” Designated ELD lessons? We will share a formative assessment technique, Oral Language Analysis (OLA), used in the SEAL model to help you successfully plan and implement responsive DELD lessons. Through watching videos, analyzing ELD standards, and opportunities for hands-on application and reflection, you will walk away with quick and easy-to-use templates and tools for planning and implementing formative assessments for DELD lessons with your students tomorrow!

Centering Multilingual Families + Communities within the $4.1 Billion Community Schools Partnership Program

Anya Hurwitz | Friday, March 24, 2023 | 10:30 – 11:45 a.m. | Hyatt Regency Long Beach, Room: Seaview C

California is making a historic $4.1 billion investment through its Community Schools Partnership Program grants. Schools can use these grants to fund a variety of supports. But not everyone is taking advantage – just yet. Building culturally and linguistically responsive family-school partnerships will be key, though many school leaders are saying they need help. Learn how community schools can promote home language development and multilingualism through culturally and linguistically responsive family-school partnerships. Hear from school district and site leaders who will share their approaches and success stories for making community schools a reality. Learn how you can too!

Supporting Bilingualism in PreK & TK

Patricia Pate & Ana Marisol Sanchez | Friday, March 24, 2023 | 1:30 – 2:45 p.m. | Long Beach Convention Center, Room: 202A

Young children have the capacity to learn two languages, but this requires intentional planning. How do you begin planning for integrated curriculum instruction? Which scaffolds should you use to support and give children the confidence to speak in both languages. Are you a PreK or TK teacher looking for strategies to help develop bilingualism in children? Come learn how the Sobrato Early Academic Language (SEAL) approach supports teachers in this work. Participants will receive access to planning tools and key strategies.

Taller para familias – apoya el éxito académico en casa

Adriana Diaz & Karen Ascencio | Friday, March 24, 2023 | 1:30 – 2:45 p.m.| Hyatt Regency Long Beach, Room: Seaview C

Este taller le proveerá herramientas, y estrategias sobre cómo promover el bilingüismo en casa usando las mejores prácticas basadas en la investigación del modelo SEAL. ¡Salga con una colección de ideas para involucrar a sus hijos en el hogar y en la escuela!

Designated & Integrated ELD: Using Language Functions as a Bridge

Heather Skibbons & Erin Magill Peleti | Friday, March 24, 2023 | 4:45 – 6 p.m. | Long Beach Convention Center, Room: 102A

Are you struggling to design a student-responsive Designated ELD that builds upon what students are learning in Spanish? Through SEAL’s model of language functions, graphic organizers, differentiated sentence frames, and transfer lessons Dual Language teachers will explore how to bridge what their students are learning in Spanish into content-based Designated ELD. We will examine classroom artifacts and videos to show how you can connect what you are doing throughout your day in a way that develops academic language and literacy in both languages.

CABE 2023 – SEAL Sessions2023-04-06T08:35:52-07:00

Effective Curriculum for English Learner Success Series

2023-04-06T08:37:48-07:00

Sobrato Philanthropies is released its Effective Curriculum for English Learner Success Series as a resource to spark continued learning and collaboration at the intersection of high-quality instructional materials and educational equity for English Learners (ELs).

Curriculum and instruction are central to shaping both what and how students are taught. Teachers must adapt both of these in order for ELs to master the same academic skills as their English-speaking peers. New curriculum needs to embed strong language development, culturally and linguistically responsive content, and scaffold these approaches to allow ELs to succeed. Philanthropy has an important role to play in supporting the development, adoption, and effective use of such curriculum.

Since 2008, Sobrato Philanthropies has engaged educators serving EL students to strengthen the teaching and learning happening in classrooms across the state. The series of briefs, “Effective Curriculum for English Learner Success,” grapples with several aspects of curriculum and materials that are key to philanthropic investment in educational equity reform for ELs. Each brief focuses on different aspects of what it means to address the “curriculum” portion of creating EL responsive and effective schools.

Read and download the briefs

This series was conceived and authored by Laurie Olsen, Ph.D. We are grateful for review and input provided by Alesha Moreno-Ramirez (Director, Multilingual Support Division, California Department of Education), Crystal Gonzales (Executive Director, English Learners Success Forum), and Nicole Knight (Executive Director, English Language Learner and Multilingual Achievement, Oakland Unified School District

Effective Curriculum for English Learner Success Series2023-04-06T08:37:48-07:00

Quarterly Newsletter: January 2023

2023-04-06T09:17:42-07:00

From the Executive Director

Dear Partners,

As we launch into the second half of the 2022-2023 program year, I am proud of what we’ve accomplished and acutely aware of the power of our collective work to expand equitable opportunities for multilingual learners. Despite the slowdown in our economy, we are encouraged by the Governor’s budget efforts to protect crucial investments that ensure more equitable learning environments for our youngest learners. We continue our work with educators, school leaders, and partners to lift up and implement evidence-based, linguistically and culturally affirming approaches to educational equity.

We hit the ground running this fall as we fully returned to both in-person and hybrid convenings, meetings, and trainings across the state. Over the next few months we will publish three new publications: an ELs and STEM National Academies brief, a Community Schools brief co-authored with CSLX, and a blog on virtual learning during the pandemic. To help us build capacity and chart the course for SEAL’s future, we’ve added more team members who embody the values, lived experiences and bold leadership needed to transform practice and systems.

We remain committed to continuing our collaborative work with teachers, coaches and education leaders, while also being a resource to the state, policymakers and you. We look forward to our work together in 2023 so that we all remain focused on transforming education in California in the most equitable ways.

We hope you enjoy a snapshot of our last quarter and some highlights of events to come.

In partnership,

Anya Hurwitz

Advocacy. Policy. Research.

IN THE NEWS: SEAL Executive Director Anya Hurwitz joined CA practitioners, advocates, students and legislators to give their first take on the governor’s budget proposal in a recent EdSource article. Anya shared SEAL’s thoughts on its priority for early education and K-12 budget proposals during an expected economic downturn for California. We join our partners and continue to urge our state to support sustained investments for teachers and our youngest learners. Click below to read more about our collective thoughts.

New SEAL BRIEF: The California Department of Education will soon release a new Mathematics Framework that could significantly strengthen the pipeline of underrepresented English learner/emergent bilinguals (ELs/EBs) into STEM careers. SEAL’s latest brief will focus on research-based guidance from a 2018 National Academies of Science, Engineering, and Medicine (NASEM) report and bring to life how California educators can align the proposed Math Framework policy with the realities of teaching and learning in the classroom.

POLICY BRIEF: K-12 educators and faculty lifted up SEAL as one of the state recommendations in Public Advocates policy brief. The brief focuses on the experiences of current and former K-12 educators of multilingual learners and the landscape of bilingual education from the perspective of faculty of bilingual authorization programs. The brief outlines recommendations for the state that would expand and strengthen educator preparation to better serve multilingual learners’ needs and to increase their access to school programs and academic content. Read the policy brief authored by Public Advocates Education Equity Team Senior Staff Attorney Shilpa Ram.

SBE MEETING: In November, SEAL joined Californians Together and 13 English learner partners and advocates from CABEFamilies in SchoolsMount Diablo Unified School District and PIQE to provide testimony at the State Board of Education (SBE) meeting on the State Accountability System. We each provided testimony regarding the State’s Data Dashboard, the Academic and English Language Progress Indicators, and accountability for ELs within LCAPs. We urged the board to re-examine how the academic indicators, ELPI, DA and CSI/ATSI are structured to address the needs of English learners. We expressed our willingness to work with the California Department of Education and the State Board of Education on this critical issue. Our voices were heard, and several SBE board members spoke to the issues we raised. Listen to the testimony and comments from the State Board President, Linda Darling Hammond and board member, Gabriela Orozco Gonzalez. SBE will bring back the agenda for further conversation and SEAL will join partners again to continue raising awareness and voices.

HOW DO KINDERGARTNERS LEARN BEST? SEAL’s Anya Hurwitz took part in the second of a six-part webinar series by The Campaign for Grade-Level Reading and New America’s Early & Elementary Education Policy Program that promotes impactful teaching and learning in kindergarten. Anya with leaders from Stand for Children, Temple University, and Tools of the Mind explored research findings on teaching and learning in kindergarten and explored strategies and approaches for teaching in the way young children learn best. Watch clip from Part 2 and register now for the upcoming webinars.

CENTERING EQUITY IN K-12 SYSTEMS: In November, SEAL’s Executive Director Anya Hurwitz moderated a panel at the Fall 2022 Birth to 12th Grade Water Cooler Conference focused on centering equity in K-12 systems. The panel discussed systemic change and building systems that are rooted in racial equity and lifted up equity initiatives that intentionally build a collective vision, support capacity building, and use targeted resource allocation to meet the needs of the most impacted and underserved students. Relive the conference HERE.

THE ECONOMIC BENEFITS OF MULTILINGUAL LEARNING: SEAL with Early Edge California joined Bay Area Council Economic Institute and Sobrato Philanthropies as a panelist to discuss their recent report: The Economic Benefits of Multilingual Learning. The report findings reveal that supporting multilingual learning among California’s youngest children can improve educational outcomes, boost household incomes, and give California companies the edge needed to compete on the world stage.

Listen to the discussion and download the report today!

SEAL in the Field

OUR WORK GROWS: SEAL’S Full Model continues to be delivered in both hybrid and in-person structures serving preschools and elementary schools throughout California. Our Design for Change work is moving forward with a very positive reception as we continue to be responsive to the needs of our partners and the field more broadly. Through EL RISE!, SEAL continues to deliver virtual professional learning in partnership with 20 California county offices of education. We’ve developed 10 new offerings in the last six months and delivered 58 virtual sessions. Within our federally funded National Professional Development project in LAUSD, PEARLL Pathway 2, we are piloting a new hybrid model of delivery that includes in-person training along with an online course and community of practice. And the work continues to grow!

SEAL CONVENINGS BRING TOGETHER HUNDREDS: From October to December 2022, SEAL gathered hundreds of California education leaders and partners for three separate convenings – Bilingual, New Administrator, Administrator – each with its focused and in-depth all-day interactive sessions. Attendance was high and feedback was strong. Leaders continue to highlight that interaction and networking with one another is extremely valuable and supportive to their work. The sessions included an overview of research and interactive sessions to build bilingual support in families, dialogue for increased systems alignment, problem-solving, shared successes and more. In February, we’ll host our first in-person early learning leadership convening since Covid! Look forward to this and more to come!

Follow our work at @SEALedEquity – Twitter, Facebook and LinkedIn.

CONGRATULATIONS: Shout out to our very own Associate Director Charice Guerra, who has been elected to the IQC Executive Committee as a member and appointed to be the Chair of the ELA/ELD Subject Matter Committee. The Instructional Quality Commission (IQC) is an advisory body to the State Board of Education (SBE). The IQC is responsible for advising the SBE on matters related to curriculum and instruction. Among the various 2023 goals for the IQC are to support the revision of the Mathematics Framework and the upcoming Mathematics Instructional Materials Adoption.

Join us

SEAL IS CABE 2023 BOUND: We are excited to be part of CABE’s – in person – annual conference with eight sessions presented by SEAL team members for educators, community partners and families. We look forward to “Testimonios: The Power of Our Stories, Our Art and Our Dreams” on March 22 – 25, 2023, at the Long Beach Convention Center. Click HERE to learn more about our various sessions.

See you there! Register Today

CENTRAL VALLEY ED CHAMPIONS: SEAL is partnering with Californians Together, PIQE, Teach Plus and multilingual champions in the Central Valley Multilingual Consortium to develop an English learner policy agenda. The last of three virtual sessions will be held Saturday, February 4, 2023, to review policy recommendations based on the listening sessions and conversations with education leaders in the Central Valley and work to refine those recommendations to develop a Central Valley English Learner Policy Agenda. Register Today.

Welcome to SEAL

Resources and Tools

EL Curriculum Brief Series: Sobrato Family Foundation‘s new series of briefs, “Effective Curriculum for English Learner Success,” grapples with several aspects of curriculum and materials that are key to educational equity for ELs. Each brief focuses on different aspects of what it means to address the “curriculum” portion of creating EL responsive and effective schools.

CASE STUDIES & TOOLKIT

Our series of in-depth school district case studies are full of powerful stories that can inspire more districts and supporters to embrace and invest in EL/DLL strategies. Our Toolkit pulls quotes, images, and facts from each of the narratives and offers critical learnings from the districts’ implementation experiences.

Download today!

Download Your FREE Resources Today!

Quarterly Newsletter: January 20232023-04-06T09:17:42-07:00

What Does It Mean to Center Equity and Belonging?

2023-04-06T09:17:01-07:00

Dear Colleagues,

Last month I had the opportunity to participate in two important discussions about school transformation and high-quality learning environments for all students, but especially for our English Learners/Dual Language Learners (ELs/DLLs) and students of color. These conversations were anchored in research and best practices, but more importantly, they lift up the stories of educators who are doing incredible work in classrooms across California and the nation.

On November 2, I had the pleasure of moderating a panel at the Fall 2022 Birth to Twelve Grade Water Cooler Conference focused on centering equity K12 systems. In California, we have what many would describe as an equity-driven educational policy context, with LCFF at the core. But is LCFF advancing equity as intended? A recent report authored by Californians Together and the Center for Equity for English Learners titled, “In Search of Equity for English Learners: A Review of Local Control and Accountability Plans”, found that as we approach ten-year mark of LCFF, “… the search for equity continues to mirror the search for ‘a needle in a haystack’”.

I opened the panel discussion with this framing and asked each participant – what does it mean to center equity and belonging in our K12 systems? It was a robust conversation that spanned the local and state policy, practice, and legislative levels. At SEAL, we believe one of the key aspects of belonging and equity is teacher agency– the idea that teachers need to feel engaged, empowered, and at the helm of equity-focused teaching and learning.

Likewise, I was also able to participate in a dynamic conversation co-hosted by The Campaign for Grade-Level Reading and New America on November 30 titled, “Play + Academics + Relationships: Teaching in Ways Kindergarteners Learn Best”. It was refreshing that this panel discussion was framed in a robust manner, resisting the strong tendency to be reductive within these kinds of conversations, especially given all our fears about learning loss and pandemic recovery. The three essential elements of quality Kindergarten I uplifted were– 1) deep engagement, 2) language development across all content, and 3) the necessity of culturally and linguistically affirming learning. These are critical to ensuring all children have access to joyful, supportive, equity focused learning, especially DLL/ELs. Furthermore, teachers need time, support, training, and coaching to increase their ability to be intentional about their planning, so the learning becomes evermore deep and rich.

As we approach the half-way point for this 2022-23 school year, and we prepare for the state budget and policy process in January, SEAL will continue supporting educators and school communities across California while championing the investments and policies needed to center equity and create high-quality learning environments for California’s racially, culturally, linguistically, economically diverse children.

In Partnership,

Anya Hurwitz

What Does It Mean to Center Equity and Belonging?2023-04-06T09:17:01-07:00

SEAL 2022 October Newsletter

2023-04-06T09:10:36-07:00

Mountain View School District Case Study Brings to Life SEAL implementation Across a District

Our work at SEAL focuses on creating long-term systemic change that supports English Learners (ELs) and Dual Language Learners (DLLs). Transforming the system starts in the classroom. Through collaboration among teachers, families, coaches, principals, and district leaders, comprehensive, sustainable, robust, equity-minded, research and values-based school improvement efforts can be generated across different contexts, regions, and systems. Our case study series demonstrates that it is possible.

The Mountain View School District Case Study is the third and last in our case study series that captures the extensive story of a school district’s journey to SEAL implementation. While our evaluation research and policy briefs allow readers to learn how SEAL improved teaching and learning, and how students demonstrated stronger engagement and positive outcomes, Social Policy and Research Associates helped us document three district’s unique approaches to SEAL implementation filled with examples and reflection from school district leaders and educators.

In this case study, we follow Mountain View School District, which serves preschool through eighth-grade students in the San Gabriel Valley. Ninety percent of the district’s students qualify for free or reduced-price lunch, and more than half are English Learners (ELs). While the majority of ELs speak Spanish, the district also serves students who speak Arabic, Tagalog, Mandarin, and Vietnamese.

Prior to its partnership with SEAL, the district had been grappling with low EL test scores and low EL classification rates of students. Following a yearlong study funded by the California Community Foundation and in partnership with Californians Together, leaders discovered the root causes of students’ low achievement and were introduced to the SEAL model as an EL-focused early grades strategy.

The case study explores the conditions that enabled the district to adopt and implement SEAL successfully, relying on existing SEAL structures, training, and supports, all the while adapting to and complimenting its unique context and needs. The district developed an EL master plan with policies, structures, and implementation components that specifically referenced the SEAL model as a way to better center EL students’ needs. It set aside funding from its Local Accountability Action Plan and used seed funding from California Community Foundation for implementation efforts. Mountain View ultimately invested fully in adopting SEAL in a way that has facilitated SEAL integration into instruction, policies, systems, and practices throughout the district.

Read Mountain View School District Case Study

To complement the Mountain View School District Case Study we are sharing the November 2021 webinar recording where district leaders shared their experience with SEAL implementation and opened up about the challenges and opportunities as they pivoted to virtual learning at the onset of the pandemic, and how they continue to work with educators to accelerate the learning of their students.

View Webinar Recording

We look forward to working alongside educators and school communities to deliver powerful learning opportunities centered around the assets and needs ELs and DLLs so that all students can excel and thrive.

In partnership,

Dr. Anya Hurwitz

Executive Director

 

Enjoy all three case studies:

SEAL 2022 October Newsletter2023-04-06T09:10:36-07:00

Empowering and Equipping Teachers to Transform Classrooms

2023-04-06T09:15:41-07:00

Dear Partners,

When we empower and equip teachers to deliver high-quality education to English Learners/Dual Language Learners (ELs/DLLs), we transform classrooms for students, uplift and center their families, and raise the bar in schools and school districts. Last month, we shared how our case studies series captured the powerful stories, lifting up the experiences of teachers and communities doing the hard and transformational work of educational equity, unpacking the influence and impact SEAL is having on their teaching and students.

We’re proud to share with you the official release of our Redwood City School District Case Study. This is the second of three case studies authored by Social Policy and Research Associates.

The Redwood City School District (RCSD) Case Study is a retrospective that brings to life the approach to SEAL implementation across a district prior to the onset of the pandemic as well as during. This case study highlights examples and outcomes from one RCSD elementary school and the district’s early childhood program. Among the outcomes cited are students’ high fluency in English and Spanish, increased parent participation, and richer curricula and instruction.

“SEAL represents best practices in education. The strategies we’re learning here can be applicable to students of all ages, even for college students. Good teaching is good teaching is good teaching. SEAL is good teaching.” 

– Edna Carmona, Director Of Child Development, RCSD

SEAL will share findings of the case study this afternoon at The Education Trust –West’s Education Equity Forum 2022, during our session titled, The Importance of Professional Learning for Early Care Educators that Centers the Needs of DLLs, where we will highlight SEAL’s professional development work with early childhood educators across the state and share specific examples from our RCSD case study to illustrate what professional learning looks like when the needs of DLLs are placed at the center.

For a synopsis of how SEAL was implemented in three California school districts, read Overview: The SEAL Model and Its Implementation Across Three Exemplar Districts. The overview also describes the SEAL model, including its origin story, central design principles, staffing, professional development structure, and highlights from its pilot and expansion efforts. Our third case study on Mountain View School District will be released in October. Stay tuned!

Sharing our journey with RCSD is also a special opportunity to celebrate the heritage, languages, traditions and contributions of Hispanics/Latinx to our nation during Hispanic Heritage Month. RCSD serves a diverse student body with a majority of students identifying as Hispanic/Latinx (68%) and with a majority of English Learners who speak Spanish (97%). Building family partnerships is a critical aspect of SEAL’s work, and RCSD’s implementation of our strategies created a vehicle to incorporate students’ cultural backgrounds into the curriculum and increase the relevance of what students learn. I know you’ll enjoy reading how our students shared their knowledge with family members in Gallery Walks, one of the cornerstones of the SEAL model. We are honored to partner with a diverse community of educators, advocates and influencers who help create language rich-environments and celebrate the rich diversity students and their families bring to the classroom.

When all cultures and languages are affirmed, the cultural capital that students enter the classroom with becomes the foundation of empowering, engaging and joyful learning. These case studies build upon the positive evidence of the SEAL model to transform education systems to be more equitable and just for ELs/DLLs in Redwood City School District and beyond.

 

In partnership,

Dr. Anya Hurwitz

 

Read the Case Studies

Empowering and Equipping Teachers to Transform Classrooms2023-04-06T09:15:41-07:00

SEAL 2022 September Newsletter

2023-04-06T11:30:10-07:00

From the Executive Director

Dear Partners,

In our last newsletter, I shared that I’d be treating the reprieve of the summer as a gift. I am so grateful to have had time with my family and friends near and far. As we enter another school year, I hope each of you got the radical rest you all deserve.

While summers tend to be a little less hectic at SEAL, we were still busy planning and preparing for another school year focused on serving you, the powerful educators, advocates, and leaders working to center the assets and needs of our multilingual learners. This summer we welcomed six new SEAL team members who embody the values and bold leadership needed to partner with educators and transform practice and systems. These individuals, each with their own unique experiences inside and outside of the classroom, will help us chart the course for SEAL’s future.

And the future at SEAL will always be grounded in transforming classrooms so Dual Language/English Learners and all students thrive. We’re taking you on that transformational journey with our upcoming case studies series, highlighting the incredible work of three school districts’ implementation of SEAL. What’s refreshing about these case studies is that we hear direct quotes from teachers and parents. These are powerful stories, lifting up the experiences of communities doing the hard and transformational work of educational equity, and they unpack the influence and impact SEAL is having on their teaching and students.

Please connect with us on TwitterLinkedIn or Facebook to follow the release of our case study series over the coming months.

In Partnership,

Dr. Anya Hurwitz

*NEW* Case Studies Series to Inspire Better EL Learning

Inspiration from Three School Districts Successfully Implementing SEAL

We’re excited to announce that over the next three months we’re telling the stories of three dynamic school districts that paved the way to implement SEAL: Oak Grove School District, Redwood City School District, and Mountain View School District. Authored by Social Policy and Research Associations, our first case study features the Oak Grove School District, which adopted SEAL in 2013 after broader education policy shifts led district leaders to create a new approach to educating EL students.

The case studies offer critical learnings from the districts’ implementation experiences, outcomes for schools and students, plus considerations for other school districts and policymakers looking to bring forth transformational equity-focused educational change. They accompany our 2021 evaluation study by Loyola Marymount University’s Center for Equity for English Learners (CEEL), in partnership with the Wexford Institute, which determined SEAL improved teaching practices and SEAL English Learners demonstrated stronger engagement as well as positive language development and academic outcomes.

Each of the case studies include detailed examples of:

  • Districts’ approaches to getting buy-in from teachers and school leaders
  • Funding the initiative
  • Providing ongoing professional development
  • Specific school examples of SEAL instructional practices and outcomes

Finally, as part of this series SEAL is releasing Overview: The SEAL Model and Its Implementation Across Three Exemplar Districts. The Overview is perfect for anyone looking to get an introduction to SEAL, including its origin story, central design principles, staffing, professional development structure, and highlights from its pilot and expansion efforts.

Connect with us on TwitterLinkedIn or Facebook to follow the release of our case study series over the coming months.

Read Case Studies

BTPDP Policy Brief Now Available!

Read our findings in our latest policy brief: Building the Supply of Bilingual Teachers in California: Evidence From State Investment Shows Districts Should Look Closer to Home for Bilingual Teacher Candidates.

This brief contains background on the Oak Grove/SEAL Bilingual Teacher Professional Development Program (BTPDP) project and how it demonstrated positive results by increasing the supply of fully authorized bilingual educators and supporting all teacher participants in deepening their expertise around dual language/bilingual pedagogy.

Click here to learn more

More on the Oak Grove/SEAL BTPDP! This article by Martha I. Martínez, Ph.D., SEAL and Guadalupe Díaz Lara, Ph.D., California State University, Fullerton, was featured in the March 2022 issue of CABE’s Multilingual Educator magazine.

SEAL in the Field

SEAL’s Session with Oak Grove School District at the California Latino School Boards Association (CLSBA) 

Jorge Pacheco Jr. President of the California Latino School Boards Association, Trustee of the Oak Grove School District, Public School Teacher; Amy Boles, Assistant Superintendent of Educational Services, OGSD; SEAL Executive Director Anya Hurwitz

On August 26, SEAL and Oak Grove School District leadership led a conference session at CLSBA titled “Effective leadership, Good Governance, and Partnerships: How the SEAL model facilitates joyful learning for Dual Language Learners/English Learners” where they highlighted how the district embraced, adopted and adapted the SEAL model. They shared how the district strengthened the implementation, alignment, and sustainability of the SEAL model within and across multiple school sites by prioritizing teacher voice, collaboration and professional development, expanding SEAL into the upper elementary grades, and focusing on family partnership. All of this can be found in our new Oak Grove School District Case Study, the first of three case studies authored by Social Policy and Research Associates.

Read Oak Grove Case

Demonstration Site Visit

This 2022-23 school year, SEAL is back to providing demonstration site visits for educators, policymakers, and community members. We are excited to open SEAL classrooms to continue to show the field what asset and research-based, joyful learning can and should be when we center multilingual learners in our educational systems. Fill out this form if you would like to attend an upcoming demonstration visit in San Jose or Los Angeles.

CTC FEEDBACK on the P-3 ECE Specialist Credential

One of SEAL’s newest team members, Senior Program Specialist Karen Salinas Ascencio, submitted written commentary advocating for more explicit inclusion of home language as an asset, bilingualism, biliteracy, and family partnerships at the August 26th California Commission on Teacher Credentialing (CTC) meeting. Tune in for the upcoming meeting in October as commissioners will continue discussions and listen to community input on the new PK-3 Early Childhood Education Specialist Instruction Credential. For a quick overview of the August meeting read CSBA’s blog update.

Summer Learning Lab: The English Learner Roadmap in Action

In June, the first cohort of K-6 educators participated in the Summer Learning Lab, an intensive 10-day professional learning opportunity designed by SEAL and a partnership with Californians Together as part of EL RISE! The cohort of 25 from El Grove School District included teachers, coaches, and administrators who spent time together putting their ELR principles into action. Co-teaching and planning allowed teachers to try new strategies while observing and supporting each other to build a shared understanding of implementing English learner strategies.  While the Summer Learning Lab does serve as an academic enrichment for students, it is primarily designed to serve as high-quality professional development for teachers. EL RISE! Is an Educator Workforce Investment Grant by the California Department of Education that supports the implementation and builds the professional capacity of educators across the state on the California English Learner Roadmap (ELR) policy.

Stay tuned for more updates on our EL RISE! professional development series. For questions, please contact Charice Guerra.

SEAL Trainer, Patricia Montes Pate, modeling the strategy of Deconstructing Text from their Dialogic Read Aloud for the Elk Grove staff and Sacramento County Office Partners.

SEAL Shares Best Practices at California Department of Education Webinar

On August 18, SEAL joined Fresno County Superintendent of Schools and Family Biliteracy for the California Department of Education’s (CDE) webinar: Multilingual Support Strategies for Young Learners in Preschool through 3rd Grade. Panelists shared best practices to support educators in their work to meet the needs of multilingual learners and English learners across preschool through third grade settings. To receive CDE news related to P-3 initiative and to ensure you receive updates about future webinars, email “subscribe” to subscribe-cdep3updates@mlist.cde.ca.gov.

Project PEARLL Is Underway!

SEAL is participating in Project PEARLL, a new federal grant-funded project in partnership with Loyola Marymount University’s Center for Equity for English Learners to improve language and literacy achievement for English learners in Los Angeles Unified elementary schools and to increase the pipeline of highly qualified bilingual teachers. An application process has been underway and approximately 45 teachers across eleven schools were selected to participate. Project PEARLL will provide a comprehensive, research and evidence-based Professional Learning (PL) program for district and school leaders, coaches, teachers, and families to improve learning environments and classroom instruction for ELs, assisting educators who work with ELs in meeting high professional standards and preventing Long Term English Learner status by improving student language and literacy achievement. Learn more about the PEARLL in this update and this EdSource article.

Merced Professional Learning Series

We recently kicked-off the one year Merced Professional Learning Series: Centering English Learners in the Classroom with the Merced County Office of Education (MCOE). In an inspirational and joy filled day, more than 40 teachers, district administrators, coaches and MCOE staff joined us to begin the journey of mutual commitment and collective learning for the success of our English Learners and their families in K-3. This series is designed around four topic driven cycles of learning, practice, and reflection. At the end of the series, participants gain a deeper understanding of the research and best practices that help to interrupt the long-term English Learner cycle by leveraging their strengths and centering their needs in the classroom. We look forward to our ongoing partnership with MCOE.

Upcoming Events

See you at Ed Trust–West’s Education Equity Forum 2022

SEAL is excited to present at Ed Trust–West’s upcoming Education Equity Forum 2022 on Tuesday, September 20, 2022. Our session titled “The Importance of Professional Learning for Early Care Educators that Centers the Needs of DLLs” will be delivered by Dr. Martha I. Martinez, SEAL’s Senior Director of Research & Evaluation and Karen Ascencio, SEAL’s Senior Program Specialist. This session will focus on SEAL’s work with early childhood educators to better serve dual language learners (DLLs) and their families and share key findings from our work that highlight the urgent need for DLL-focused professional development.

This forum will sell out fast. Register for Ed Trust–West’s Education Equity Forum TODAY!

CS Fundamentals

We NEED schools in CA to center multilingual learners in their Community Schools approach!! This Workshop, coming to a region near you, can help: Community Schools Fundamentals Workshops (Sac, San Jose, San Diego, and Fresno)

California is investing billions in Community Schools efforts. Here is an opportunity to identify your community school muscles, strengths and opportunities with your team in real time!  Learn how you can center the assets and needs of multilingual learners, families, and multilingual practices in Community Schools approaches.

Join the CA Community Schools Learning Exchange, the National Center for Community Schools and their partners for a two-day event specifically designed for district, school, COE, and community partner teams to level set, identify collaboration opportunities, and build upon new and existing strategies for student success. These workshops are for everyone – current and future grantees.

Join a workshop near you:

Register Now

WEBINAR! EL RISE! Develop a District-Wide English Learner Master Plan

This two-session interactive institute happening on October 18, 2022, and November 2, 2022, will help LEA teams create a plan to develop a district-wide English Learner Master Plan aligned to the research-based California English Learner Roadmap policy. Participants will receive resources included in the Center for Equity for English Learners’ English Learner Master Plan Playbook to develop a strategy for beginning or refining their approach to writing their EL Master Plan. Alignment with EL Roadmap principles and elements will be highlighted.

Click here to register

SEAL Joins the National Committee for Effective Literacy

We are proud to announce that we are part of a national effort that centers on evidence-based literacy for multilingual learners. The National Committee for Effective Literacy (NCEL) is made up of researchers, teachers, educators, administrators, school board members and advocates from across the nation with expertise in literacy and the education of emergent bilingual/multilingual students. Visit NCEL to learn more and join efforts to uplift research, policies and practices so that all students are taught literacy based on their identified strengths and needs.

Effective Literacy Podcast

To better understand the research and what works regarding reading pedagogy and literacy, join hosts Victoria and Anna, two educators passionate about all things literacy, along with expert guests and industry friends, in a deep-dive investigation into what literacy is, and how the students within the US education system could be better serviced when it comes to modern literacy methods. They interview experts from across the nation with extensive knowledge in literacy and discuss how best to support our students, specifically our multi-lingual learners, in becoming literate individuals by the time they graduate. New episodes will be released on the first and third Monday of each month.

Hear Podcast Episodes

WEBINAR: Effective Literacy Instruction for Multilingual Learners

Hear our own Dr. Laurie Olsen present about effective literacy for English Learners! On Wednesday, September 21 from 4:00 – 5:30 p.m., join the National Committee on Effective Literacy (NCEL), in collaboration with the U.S. Education Department’s Office of English Language Acquisition (OELA) and the National Association of English Learner Program Administrators (NAELPA) for a webinar with panelists discussing best practices and leadership actions to promote effective literacy programs that honor the multilingual brain and leverage the linguistic and cultural assets of multilingual learners. Don’t miss this great speaker line up. Register HERE.

If you have questions in advance of the webinar, please send them to: askncela@manhattanstrategy.com and insert the webinar title into the subject line.

Click here to register

SEAL in the News!

Reading, math scores fell sharply during pandemic, national study shows

This article from Texas newspaper The Eagle reports on a new federal study revealing decline of math and reading scores for America’s nine-year-olds and highlights what schools around the country are doing to combat learning loss. SEAL is highlighted for our efforts to help bilingual educators in California.

Read more

Dual-immersion programs show promise in fighting enrollment declines

In this EdSource article by Zaidee Stavely, we read encouraging news that dual-language immersion programs “are so much in demand that some school districts have been able to stop declining enrollment or even grow enrollment in a school by beginning a dual-language program.” Three of our SEAL partner districts are featured in this article: Berryessa Union School District, Franklin-McKinely School District, and Newark Unified School District.

Read more

Frustration after bilingual education bill dies in State Assembly

A bill that would have helped school districts open more dual-language immersion programs failed to pass the California State Assembly last month. Senate Bill 952 would have established a program to offer at least 20 school districts technical assistance and grants of up to $750,000 each to expand or establish dual-language immersion programs. In this EdSource article by Zaidee Stavely, SEAL Executive Director, Anya Hurwitz, delivers our statement that SB 952 would have been a step forward to realizing the promise of an equity-focused multilingual educational system.

Read more

Welcome to SEAL

Karen Ascencio

Karen Ascencio joins us as Senior Program Specialist. Karen has been in the field of education for over 30 years. Her primary focus has been on early learning in the classroom and administration. She holds a Bachelor’s Degree in Child Development, a Master’s Degree in Early Childhood Education, a Child Development Program Director Permit, and a CTE Credential in Education, Child Development, and Family Services. Learn more.

Patricia E. Chavez

Patricia E. Chavez joins us as Head of External Relations to lead SEAL’s communications efforts and serve as a thought partner on strategy, communications, and effective relationship building with leaders in the policy and advocacy space. With more than 25 years of experience, Patty has dedicated her career to building partnerships and public support on causes that facilitate community transformation.  Learn more.

Dr. Kentaro Iwasaki

Dr. Kentaro Iwasaki joins us as Head of Programs and will play a critical role in reimagining SEAL’s programmatic work in a way that responds to changed and shifting conditions in public education. He has a passion for personal, team, and systems-level change that stems from his own experiences of deep transformative growth in public education.  Learn more.

Molly Moyer

Molly Moyer joins us as a Program Specialist with over ten years of experience working with diverse students and teachers in grades PK-5 where she demonstrated success in developing the language, literacy, and numeracy skills of students while cultivating a rich classroom community. Learn more.

Cindy Tinajero

Cindy Tinajero joins us as a Program Specialist and is an award-winning bilingual social justice advocate with six years of teaching experience in diverse socio-economic communities. She earned her Master of Arts in Education in Reading & Literacy degree from Point Loma Nazarene University and her Bachelor of Arts in Business degree from California State University Bakersfield. Learn more.

Armando Zumaya

Armando Zumaya joins us as Head of Development and will lead SEAL’s fundraising, including overseeing the planning and implementation of a long-range fundraising plan. A 36-year nonprofit fundraising veteran, he has been published in the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Nonprofit Times, Stanford Social Innovation Review, Grassroots Fundraising Journal, Advancing Philanthropy, and other publications in the US, Canada, UK, South Africa and Mexico. Learn more.

SEAL 2022 September Newsletter2023-04-06T11:30:10-07:00

Inspiration from Three School Districts Successfully Implementing SEAL

2023-04-06T11:43:53-07:00

Dear Partners,

Inspiration can come from many places, but at SEAL we find ourselves *most* inspired by the districts, schools, and talented educators we’ve worked shoulder to shoulder with to build joyful, engaging classrooms that center English Learner/Dual Language Learners. That’s why we’re so excited to announce that over the next three months we’re highlighting three dynamic school districts that paved the way to implement SEAL: Oak Grove School DistrictRedwood City School District, and Mountain View School District.

Today, we’re proud to release and present the Oak Grove School District Case Study at the 2022 California Latino School Boards Association Unity (CLSBA) Conference. This is the first of three case studies authored by Social Policy and Research Associates.

SEAL and Oak Grove School District leadership will lead a conference session later today at CLSBA titled “Effective leadership, Good Governance, and Partnerships: How the SEAL model facilitates joyful learning for Dual Language Learners/English Learners” where we’ll highlight how the district adopted the SEAL model in 2013 after broader education policy shifts led district leaders to create a new approach to educating EL students. We’ll share how the district strengthened the implementation, alignment, and sustainability of the SEAL model within and across multiple school sites by prioritizing teacher voice, collaboration and professional development, expanding SEAL into the upper elementary grades, and focusing on family partnership.

Each of the case studies include detailed examples of:

  • Districts’ approaches to getting buy-in from teachers and school leaders
  • Funding the initiative
  • Providing ongoing professional development
  • Specific school examples of SEAL instructional practices and outcomes

Our reports also offer critical learnings from the districts’ implementation experiences and considerations for other school districts and policymakers looking to implement SEAL.

Finally, as part of this series SEAL is releasing Overview: The SEAL Model and Its Implementation Across Three Exemplar Districts. The Overview is perfect for anyone looking to get an introduction to SEAL, including its origin story, central design principles, staffing, professional development structure, and highlights from its pilot and expansion efforts.

Connect with us on TwitterLinkedIn or Facebook to follow the release of our case study series over the coming months.

Culturally and linguistically affirming education is an equity and social justice issue for our students and our nation. These case studies demonstrate the power and potential for SEAL to make education systems change that is equitable and just for California’s increasingly diverse student body.

Read the Case Studies

In partnership,

Dr. Anya Hurwitz

Inspiration from Three School Districts Successfully Implementing SEAL2023-04-06T11:43:53-07:00

Help Us Welcome SEAL’s Newest Leaders

2023-04-06T12:05:55-07:00

Dear Colleagues,

SEAL’s work aims to build systems and practices that support multilingual language development, literacy, and joyful learning— for Dual Language/English Learners and ALL students. Our newest leadership team members embody the values and bold leadership needed to transform practice and systems. We are honored to welcome Kentaro Iwasaki, Patricia E. Chavez, and Armando Zumaya to the SEAL family! Please help welcome them and read more about their backgrounds below.

 

Dr. Kentaro Iwasaki

Dr. Kentaro Iwasaki joins us as Head of Programs and will play a critical role in reimagining SEAL’s programmatic work in a way that responds to changed and shifting conditions in public education.

He has a passion for personal, team, and systems-level change that stems from his own experiences of deep transformative growth in public education. He spent sixteen years as a high school math teacher and department head, mostly at Mission High School in San Francisco Unified, which instilled in him a vision and relentless drive for high-quality instruction for students furthest from the center. His eleven years as a non-profit leader at ConnectED, overseeing projects focused on STEM and English Learners with over 40 district partners, equipped him to engage in the complex and rewarding work of systems change in the education sector. Kentaro is a National Board Certified teacher and recipient of the Presidential Award for Excellence in Math and Science Teaching.

Kentaro can be reached at kentaro@seal.org.

 

Patricia E. Chavez

Patricia E. Chavez joins us as Head of External Relations to lead SEAL’s communications efforts and serve as a thought partner on strategy, communications, and effective relationship building with leaders in the policy and advocacy space.

Patty has dedicated her career to building cross-sector partnerships and public support on issues and causes that facilitate community transformation. An adept storyteller with more than 25 years of experience, she has worked in public, private, and nonprofit sectors leading initiatives that create and execute brands, strengthen marketing and communications, foster strategic partnerships, and expand relationships with policymakers, education leaders, partners and stakeholders. As a former Councilmember, Patty has a unique combination of legislative and community experience and cultural competency that drives her work with diverse populations to strengthen the voice of underrepresented communities. Among the various initiatives, Patty led coordination efforts for San Diego County of Education to increase civic and community support for quality early education and transitional kindergarten programs.

Patty can be reached at pattyc@seal.org.

 

Armando Zumaya

Armando Zumaya joins us as Head of Development and will lead SEAL’s fundraising, including overseeing the planning and implementation of a long-range fundraising plan.

Armando is a 36-year nonprofit fundraising veteran. He has served in many roles including Chief Development Officer, Vice President of Development, and Director of Major Gifts. He is known especially for his work at Cornell University, Cal Berkeley, the San Francisco Opera, Playworks, Pivot Learning Partners, the Mexican Museum, and the USS Hornet Museum. He is experienced in a wide range of fundraising methods but is known for his innovative work in major gifts prospecting, cultivation design, the use of prospect research, and DEI in fundraising. He helps lead volunteer associations and groups that promote Latinx in fundraising and improved fundraising for Latinx nonprofits. He has been published in the Chronicle of Philanthropy, Nonprofit Times, Stanford Social Innovation Review, Grassroots Fundraising Journal, Advancing Philanthropy, and other publications in the US, Canada, UK, South Africa and Mexico.

Armando can be reached at armando@seal.org.

 

Kentaro, Patty, and Armando join our dynamic executive leadership team that includes Ben Buis, Patty Delaney, and Dr. Martha I. Martinez. I couldn’t be more excited to welcome additional strategic leaders as we chart the course for SEAL’s future.

Sincerely,

Dr. Anya Hurwitz

Executive Director

 

Join: SEAL Leadership in Action

California Latino School Boards Association’s Unity Conference

A presentation with SEAL & Oak Grove School District on Friday, August 26, 2022

Session Title: 

Effective leadership, Good Governance, and Partnerships: How the SEAL model facilitates joyful learning for Dual Language Learners/English Learners and ALL students

Moderator: 

  • Patricia E. Chavez, Head of External Relations, SEAL

Presenters: 

  • Dr. Anya Hurwitz, Executive Director, SEAL
  • Amy Boles, Assistant Superintendent, Oak Grove School District
  • The Honorable Jorge Pacheco, Jr., Board Member, Oak Grove School District

Learn more about California Latino School Boards Association’s Unity Conference

 

Ed Trust–West’s Education Equity Forum on Tuesday, September 20, 2022

Session Title: 

The Importance of Professional Learning for Early Care Educators that Centers the Needs of DLLs

Learn more about the session

Presenters: 

  • Dr. Martha I. Martinez, Senior Director of Research & Evaluation, SEAL
  • Karen Ascencio, Senior Program Specialist, SEAL

This forum will sell out fast. Register TODAY!

Learn more about Ed Trust–West’s Education Equity Forum

Help Us Welcome SEAL’s Newest Leaders2023-04-06T12:05:55-07:00
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