Students may have regular care-taking responsibilities that include younger siblings, grandparents, or other family members/neighbors.

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Older siblings' responsibilities during family separation

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How to Support the Social and Emotional Health of Middle/High School ELLs

How to Support the Social and Emotional Health of Middle/High School ELLs

Teacher sits with high school student

Learn about the unique responsibilities, strengths, and social-emotional needs of English language learners (ELLs) and immigrant students in middle and high school from Michelle Lawrence Biggar, a veteran ELL educator in New York State.

Working with middle and high school English Language Learners (ELLs) presents a unique set of opportunities, benefits, and challenges. In order to achieve the highest level of success in the classroom, it's important to acknowledge these factors and understand how they affect student learning.

Even with great instruction, success in the classroom will become that much more difficult to achieve if the social and emotional needs of a student are not met. This is especially true for middle and high school ELLs, who often have significant responsibilities at home.

This article will provide an overview to how you can support the social-emotional well-being of your students with practical strategies. Educator voices from around the country are also featured in the related videos.

You can learn about teaching this age group from the other articles in this series:

Getting to Know Your Students

Why relationships matter

The better you know your students, the more effective your work with ELLs will be. Building relationships with students can help:

  • increase student confidence
  • provide meaningful connections to students' interests and experiences
  • inform your instruction and support.

Your role: Look for ways to get to know your students and build relationships, and stay attuned to clues about their schedules and responsibilities outside of school. Look for opportunities to interact informally before or after school, at lunch, during advisory periods, or through extra-curricular activities. Advisory periods can also be a good time to check in with students on classwork, their credits, or updates on how they are doing.

Video: Getting to know my students

Video: How advisory periods are helping my students

Video: Why building relationships with ELLs matters

Learning about students' prior experiences

While it's important not to ask too many questions of students right away, learning more about their past experiences can help give you some important information. For example, many ELLs are part of unique populations of students who might have shared some similar experiences, including:

  • refugee students
  • migrant farmworkers
  • unaccompanied children
  • Indigenous students
  • students in mixed-immigration-status households
  • internationally adopted students
  • students with interrupted formal education.

Learning about these special populations can give you context for students' experiences as you get to know their own unique circumstances and stories. It can also alert you to the possibility of trauma. If students may need additional mental health support, consult with family liaisons and mental health professionals at your school to identify possible resources and services that might be appropriate.

Video: Why an Indigenous student hid his background

Video:A long journey on a cattle raft

Family Responsibilities

Impacts of COVID-19

Learn how COVID-19 pandemic has affected ELL/immigrant families from the following:

Many ELLs at this age are responsible for much more than the average teenager, and have a complex set of transitions and concerns to face — even moreso now due to the COVID-19 pandemic. During the pandemic, it was not uncommon for teachers of older ELLs to receive assignments in the middle of the night after students finished working a late shift or got their siblings to bed.

In addition, many students in immigrant families may have significant responsibilities, especially if a family member, parent, or caregiver is not yet in this country or has been deported/detained. You can learn more about supporting the social-emotional needs of immigrant students from our related resource guide.

Financial responsibilities

Some students contribute to the family's financial needs by working outside the home. They may work all weekday evenings and on weekends.

Household responsibilities

Other students care for younger siblings while their parents go to work. Cooking dinner for the entire family and cleaning the house are common tasks for students when they get home. All of this — and they have to complete their homework too.

Translation responsibilities

Your ELLs may be the most proficient English speaker in their family. As a result, they are often called upon to take care of adult business. ELLs accompany family members to various appointments with doctors, landlords, tax agents, social services, etc. While that beginning level student in your 1st period class may have limited language skills when compared to his classmates, at home, s/he may be the only one who can speak English. In addition, look for opportunities to share information about finding language access support with families when possible.

Your role: The best thing you can do as a teacher is talk to your students about their responsibilities at home. If necessary, work out alternative plans for them to complete assignments and make up work if they miss school. Most importantly, lend them an ear if they need to talk and let them know that they are supported.

Video: Older siblings' family during family separation

Video: When bilingual children translate for their families

Setting students up for success

The importance of structure

By coming to a new country, with an unfamiliar culture, and a foreign language so many aspects of older ELLs' lives have been disrupted. Creating structure in the classroom offers students comfort and familiarity, and sets them up for success. Students know what to expect and as a result, stress and anxiety are reduced. While this is important for all students, it is especially helpful for students with little or no formal education.

Your role: Create a structured, well-managed classroom for your ELLs. Establish classroom routines, post daily schedules, and make sure students have a copy of their daily schedule that they can refer to easily.

Video: Helping ELLs understand the difference between rules and procedures

Fitting in

ELLs want to fit in with their American peers, but at the same time they want their identities and cultures validated. This is an ongoing, internal struggle for most students. This struggle may also follow them home where their desire to adopt certain U.S. cultural values clashes with their parents' desire to uphold their own traditional values.

Your role: It's important to be cognizant of such struggles and the added stress it may have on students. As teachers, the best we can do is build rapport with our students, ask questions, listen, welcome their cultures in our classroom, and offer help and understanding to their unique circumstances.

Encouraging students' interests and activities

Finding out what your ELLs' interests are is a great way to set students up for success. It also highlights students' strengths and sometimes reveals talents you didn't know students had.

Your role: Ask students about their interests, talents, and hobbies. Make sure that students have information about extra-curricular activities and talk with them about whether there are ways to help fit some activities into their schedules. In addition, look for ways to incorporate hands-on learning where students can feel successful while still learning a new language.

Video: My students' many talents

Video: Cheering for my ELLs in our state soccer championship

Featured video: Supporting newcomer students

You Are Welcome Here (#DearbornWelcome) is an award-winning 20-minute film highlighting how the Dearborn, MI public school district is helping its newcomer immigrant students succeed.

You Are Welcome Here: Supporting the Social and Emotional Health of Newcomer Immigrants

Looking at the whole child: Conversations with an award-winning social worker

Meet Dr. Rola Bazzi-Gates, a special education coordinator for Dearborn Public Schools and Michigan's 2016 Social Worker of the Year. Learn how her personal experience living through conflict helped prepare her to support students and families today.

About the Author

Michelle Lawrence is a high school ELL teacher in New York state. See more from Michelle in:

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How COVID-19 Is Impacting ELL and Immigrant Families

How COVID-19 Is Impacting ELL and Immigrant Families

Mother saying good-bye to child before school wearing face masks

How is the COVID-19 pandemic impacting ELL and immigrant families? Here's what schools need to know as they partner with families throughout this year.

Note: This article is part of our guide on distance learning for ELLs.

In order for schools to serve English language learners (ELLs) effectively through COVID-19 and beyond, it's critical to understand some of the impacts of the pandemic on their communities. These impacts can affect everything from whether a student is completing assignments at home to the ability of a family member to self-quarantine after contracting COVID-19.

We encourage schools to partner with families and organizations to learn more about particular impacts in their community — strong partnerships can make a valuable difference in finding solutions together!

COVID-19 and refugees

Learn more about the impacts of COVID-19 on refugees — and how they are helping with the pandemic response.

The Impacts of COVID-19 on Immigrant Communities

There is a complex constellation of factors and stresses impacting immigrant families during the COVID-19 pandemic. While numerous non-immigrant families are also experiencing many of these challenges, it is important for schools serving ELL and immigrant students to understand how these factors are affecting their specific communities — and to understand why 75% of the young people who are dying from COVID-19 are minorties.

ELL and immigrant families may be facing high rates of COVID-19 in their communities that may related to:

In addition, families may be facing hardship due to:

  • loss of income and food security
  • loss of housing
  • threats of eviction or reporting families to the authorities based on immigration status
  • concerns about child care, supervision, and safety
  • lack of/limited access to economic relief at the local, state, or federal level for undocumented immigrants
  • grief and/or a loss of caregivers
  • stress, anxiety, and depression
  • multiple children cooped up in crowded quarters
  • gaps in access to flu vaccines
  • returning to deteriorating school buildings with poor ventilation that may increase risk of COVID-19 transmission and exposure.

It's also important to keep in mind the following:

  • ELL and immigrant families may be reluctant to send their children back to school for saftey reasons, but may also feel that remote learning is not an equitable or effective solution for their children.
  • Limited access to school transportation may make getting to the school impossible for families, or increase the distance students have to walk, even in winter months.
  • Many immigrant families live in multi-generational homes. Students or families may be concerned about high levels of risks to grandparents at home, and grandparents may be the primary adults supervising schoolwork.
  • Older children may also have big responsibilities, including care for younger siblings or working outside of the home. As a result of the pandemic, students may be the primary breadwinners in their family.
  • Children may be going to their parents' workplace during the day if there is no child care available.
  • Even if immigrants do have access to certain benefits, they may be afraid that using them will adversely affect their immigration cases or lead to deportation.
  • Families may be concerned about the health of relatives overseas or the impact of travel restrictions.
  • Families may be sending remittances to relatives in other parts of the country or abroad.
  • Families who have recently arrived in the U.S., including refugees, may have recently experienced months or years of trauma or upheaval even before the pandemic.
  • College students, who may also now be their family's breadwinners, may be vulnerable without the food and housing available on their campus or putting their education and career plans on hold.
  • American Indian and Alaska Native families have also been extremely hard hit by the pandemic.

At the same time, this uncertainty and upheaval comes at a time when many immigrant families were already facing hardship and many immigration-related concerns. Immigrant advocates and medical personnel are sharing numerous examples of immigrants who are not seeking medical care related to the COVID-19 out of fear of consequences for their immigration applications or fear of deportation.

This puts many immigrants and their families at risk who may work as essential personnel or who may not have qualified for federal economic relief due to immigration status. (The government has specified that COVID-19 care will not be used as part of public charge considerations, yet the communication around the public charge issue has left many families with more questions and answers.)

As a result, the combined pressures of the pandemic and heightened immigration enforcement have put a significant strain on families, making it difficult for them to support children's learning at home, especially if parents are working outside of the home.

Resource collections

For more on this topic, see the following resources:

Related headlines

Dr. Jesse Bump, a Lecturer on Global Health Policy and Executive Director of the Takemi Program in International Health at Harvard University, notes that this crisis is shining a light on the longstanding cracks in our social safety net and the inequities that impact millions of families every day.

"There is a thin thread that holds life together," he says, "and when it gets thinner, it breaks more easily."

Video: Housing challenges for immigrants during COVID-19

Juliana Urtubey, Nevada's 2021 Teacher of the Year, talks about some of the housing challenges that immigrants are facing during COVID-19.

Video: Social-emotional support for immigrant students during COVID-19

Nathaniel Provencio, Associate Superintendent of Prince William County Schools in Northern Virginia, talks about the impact of COVID-19 on his district's immigrant families, as well as the importance of social-emotional support for students during this time.


Identifying Families' Strengths

At the same time, it's important to keep families' strengths in mind at all times. ELL educators know what many in their school communities have not had the privilege to witness — the depths of commitment and sacrifice that ELL families have gone to on behalf of their children, the extraordinary measures they are taking to keep their families safe during the pandemic, and their courage in the face of great adversity.

They also have strong networks among their communities, and they are the best source of information on how the pandemic is impacting their children. While the challenges of this crisis are significant, many families will persevere — if their child's school invites them to the table as partners.

Resource: See strengths-based outreach ideas in EL Family Engagement During Coronavirus from Immigrant Connection

What Schools Can Do

Multilingual COVID-19 resources

Stay attuned for clues about families' experiences during COVID-19

As educators get to know their students and families, it's important stay attuned for clues about families' experiences during COVID-19 so far. Every family has their own unique story, many of which may be traumatic, and so it is important to build trust with families from the beginning of the relationship. Families may also have a wide range of questions and concerns related to this crisis based on their own perspective and experience.

In order to prepare for any conversations that may arise, look at the following:

If you are just getting to know a family, you may wish to talk with a family liaison or community partner in order to figure out:

  • how to handle communication with sensitivity and communicate most effectively with the family
  • what issues or topics you should keep in mind or understand better
  • if you should be aware of any cultural considerations in your communication.

If a family member is comfortable communicating with you, you might ask:

  • how everyone is doing
  • how students have responded to new schedules, ways of learning, or school closures
  • if students or families have any questions or concerns or need any particular kind of support
  • what some challenges of COVID-19 have been
  • if there have been any silver linings/opportunities for their family.

Make social-emotional health a priority throughout the coming year.

Students may have high levels of anxiety with few outlets for support or discussion; disruptions to that stability may be particularly challenging for these students to manage. For many students who have experienced trauma, they may still be struggling with the loss of the daily routine, as well as the safe haven school provides, both physically and emotionally. Teachers who work regularly with ELLs may be able to identify key areas of concern among students, as well as some ideas for addressing those concerns.

The best way to address these social-emotional challenges is through collaboration with educators, social workers and/or counselors, family liaisons, and administrators. Putting together a "crisis support team" can offer an opportunity to:

  • address key issues and priorities, especially if they are affecting multiple families
  • brainstorm ideas on how best to partner with families and gather their input and ideas
  • discuss cultural considerations that might impact how to handle communication with students and families
  • identify community partners
  • identify resources and strategies for support
  • develop a list of activities or strategies that educators can use as part of their instruction
  • identify key strategies that families can use to support their children
  • identify clues to these stressors that educators can look for (without making assumptions)
  • consider how these issues might impact students' ability to complete schoolwork
  • develop a protocol for addressing challenging situations or behaviors.

Schools can also include these topics in their family outreach and encourage families to:

  • keep talking with their children about the pandemic and how it is impacting daily life
  • help their children stay in touch with family and friends
  • contact a trusted adult at the school with any questions, especially around abuse or trauma
  • look for ways to embed social-emotional learning throughout the curriculum.

In the classroom

Rather than making these topics central to student discussions, prepare some possible responses in case students do bring these topics up. Look for ways to strengthen your student relationships and social-emotional learning throughout the year in order to provide a safe and supportive space for student growth and learning.

 

Look for ways to strengthen families' safety net.

There are also ways that schools and districts can make a difference in the daily lives of their families. Here are some ideas to get started:

  • If the district plans to make schools meals available, ensure that all families have access to that information. Teachers have reported that some districts are sending this information only in English. Some families are unlikely to be able to pick up meals during the mid-day. Many school districts are collaborating with community agencies and local businesses/restaurants. You can learn more about what your school district is doing in order to communicate that to families. You may be able to learn more about distribution sites through district, state, or news websites. The non-profits focused on hunger on this list may also have updated information.
  • When possible, connect families with services/programs that can:
    • help alleviate hardship in the event of school closures, missed meals, or lost wages
    • provide medical care and support (especially if you suspect families are uninsured)
    • provide social-emotional and mental health support for students and families.
  • Look for opportunities to create new local partnerships (such as those used by community schools) that can help address these needs.
  • Learn more from the following from our guide on how schools can support immigrant students.

Dr. Bump urges educators and advocates to encourage ELL, immigrants, and anyone under pressure from COVID-19 to reach out to make their needs known. There are and will continue to be major distributional problems and an important part of the solution if for people to speak up when they need something — whether it's health care and services, food, or domestic goods. Speaking up will also make it easier to connect those people and institutions that are willing and able to help others.

 

Bullying and Discrimination Related to COVID-19

Unfortunately, the COVID-19 pandemic has also given rise to bullying, harassment, and discrimination, both for immigrant communities as well as for Asian American communities. This has taken place in schools and beyond, including in medical settings where health professionals are being harassed.

Here are some tips to address these trends:

  • Use resources like this comic, available in multiple languages, for class discussions, as well as these resources for talking about coronavirus.
  • Remind students of how to treat each other with respect, as well as school rules on bullying and discrimination.
  • Become familiar with strategies for preventing the bullying of ELL and immigrant students.
  • Ask administrators at the school and district level to make public statements regarding bullying and harassment.
  • Note that federal officials are keeping track of this issue. According to Education Week, "The civil rights arm at the U.S. Department of Education has urged schools to address the harassment of certain students amid ongoing concerns over the spread of the coronavirus."
  • Share statements that other districts have made speaking out against bullying, such as the statements put out by Seattle Public Schools.

You can learn more from:

Making the Most of Lessons Learned

Despite the tremendous challenges of this time, it is possible for positive things to come out of this crisis, including:

  • better communication and collaboration among schools, families, and communities
  • resourceful solutions for addressing different needs
  • a push towards more equitable access for digital learning.

Professor Bump notes that this kind of crisis highlights our sense of community and resourcefulness as well as the good and generous nature of the American people. "People want to help each other out," he says, and this crisis will continue to provide some very concrete ways to do so.

It is our hope that these ideas offer some steps that you, your colleagues, or district and community leaders / partners can take on behalf of your English learners and immigrant students — steps which may just have some positive impacts for the future.

 

Acknowledgements

Special thanks to Kristina Robertson, Glenda Macal, Giselle Lundy-Ponce, Kathy Evans, and Dr. Jesse Bump for their contributions to this article.

Reprints

You are welcome to print copies or republish materials for non-commercial use as long as credit is given to Colorín Colorado and the author(s). For commercial use, please contact info@colorincolorado.org.