Lisa JohnsonKelly CostnerROCK HILL, SOUTH CAROLINA — Winthrop University's Richard W. Riley College of Education has been awarded a U.S. Department of Education grant to focus on English language acquisition. The grant provides close to $550,000 in funding each year for five years, totaling nearly $3 million. Winthrop was one of only 49 institutions out of 337 applicants nationwide and the only South Carolina institution to receive the grant.
The new initiative, entitled NExT LEVEL: NETwork for Leading Education that Values English Learners, will continue to build
off a 2007 Winthrop grant entitled Teaching Teachers WELL that also focused on English
Learners (ELs).
For the new grant, Winthrop will partner with the Lancaster County School District, York School District 3 and York School District
4, which have experienced dramatic increases in English Learner populations.
"South Carolina as a state has seen a 150 percent average increase in English Learners,"
said Lisa Johnson, co-principal investigator of the grant and director of Winthrop's Jim and Sue Rex Institute for Educational Renewal and Partnerships. "This increase is occurring so fast that institutions and schools struggle with
preparation to meet the unique needs of second language learners and their families.
We received feedback from our partner schools that this is a significant need and
an area in which teachers are asking for support."
The grant's ultimate goal, according to Johnson, is to provide a high quality education for every student.
The grant will utilize the established Winthrop University-School Partnership Network
to provide systemic and embedded professional learning opportunities to teachers,
administrators, parents and faculty to meet identified needs of English Learners.
Kelly Costner, co-principal investigator of the grant and coordinator of middle level
education, said that the grant will prepare current teachers to better address the
needs of English Learners in their classrooms and will assist them with getting content
across to students when language is a barrier. He and colleague Elke Schneider, co-author
of NExT LEVEL, have worked together to support teachers in these efforts since their
collaboration on the 2007 Teaching Teachers WELL project.
NExT LEVEL is a natural next step that will fund graduate course work for teachers who want to pursue certification for teaching ELs; it will support Winthrop's educator preparation faculty with professional development allowing them to learn and develop new EL skills; and it will allow current Winthrop teacher candidates to take advanced course work focusing on
ELs.
The grant also will help districts implement a six-week Parent Institute in their schools. "Teachers and administrators share that they are challenged by the
parent component of educating English Learners," said Johnson. "How do you engage,
how do you reach out to parents beyond sending home a translated newsletter? The U.S.
education system is difficult to navigate even for native speakers who have experienced
it since kindergarten; imagine the challenge for those who have not."
A kick off meeting will be held Oct. 24 to plan for the grant's implementation.
"We're appreciative of the support that we have received while pursuing this grant,
and we have benefited from the expertise of our school partners and colleagues in
the design and content of this project," said Costner. "We're excited about this opportunity as we know it is going to address a significant
need in our communities."
For more information, please contact Costner at costnerk@winthrop.edu or call 803/323-2478.