(Press-News.org) English learners are, on average, less likely to graduate high school in four years than students who never needed to learn English in school. But social identities like race and gender make a difference, and some groups of English learners are actually more likely to graduate, according to a new study by a team of education researchers at NYU and the University of Houston.
For instance, young women who ever learned English in school are more likely to graduate in four years than young men who did not. Similarly, Black English learners tend to have better four-year graduation rates than Black peers who never needed to learn English in school.
"Language learning doesn’t happen in a vacuum, so students—both those who are currently learning English and students who have already become fluent in the language—have a whole host of social factors that influence their school trajectories in ways that might be really different from students who never had to learn English in school,” says Michael Kieffer, an associate professor of literacy education at NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development and the senior author of the study, which appears in the journal Educational Researcher.
“This study highlights the very diverse outcomes of students who learn English in school and shows that this group is not a monolith,” says Benjamin Le, a doctoral student at NYU Steinhardt and the lead author of the study. “We see that English learner classification does matter for high school graduation, but more importantly, the extent that it matters depends on other social identities of the student.”
Le, Kieffer, and their co-authors analyzed data for 127,931 New York City high school students who began 9th grade in 2013 and 2014 to see whether students graduated on time, defined as graduating within four years. Their data included race/ethnicity, gender, socioeconomic status, and English learner status. They classified English learners based on whether students had ever received federally mandated language services to become proficient in English (“ever-ELs”) and compared them with students who never had to learn English in school (“never-ELs”).
Overall, their findings showed that never-ELs were four percent more likely to graduate within four years than ever-ELs, consistent with previous research. However, comparing English learner status with the added variable of gender revealed different outcomes: ever-EL young women were four percent more likely to graduate than never-EL young men. In addition, Black students were the only racial/ethnic group for which English learners were more likely to graduate in four years. Latine English learners were found to be the least likely to graduate in four years, and Asian/Pacific Islander ever-ELs were substantially more likely to graduate than Latine and Black students, regardless of the latter groups’ English learner status.
Differences in graduation between ever-ELs and never-ELs also depended on socioeconomic status. Ever-ELs in low-income neighborhoods (where the median household income was below $40,000) were equally likely to graduate compared to never-ELs in similar neighborhoods. But in middle- and high-income neighborhoods with household incomes above $40,000, ever-ELs were less likely to graduate than never-ELs in similar neighborhoods.
The study was supported by a grant (R305C200016) from the Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Department of Education.
END
How likely are English learners to graduate from high school? New study shows it depends on race, gender, and income
Analysis of four-year graduation rates of English learners shows influence of individual characteristics
2024-05-06
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
SwRI’s Herron named 2024 ASSP Safety Professional of the Year
2024-05-06
SAN ANTONIO — May 6, 2024 —The American Society of Safety Professionals (ASSP) has named Southwest Research Institute’s Matthew Herron, M.S., P.E., CSP, CPE, its 2024 Safety Professional of the Year. The award is presented annually to an ASSP member who demonstrates outstanding achievement in the occupational safety and health (OSH) field while also advancing the OSH profession overall.
“It’s a great honor to be recognized by the ASSP as Safety Professional of the Year,” said Herron, a lead safety engineer in SwRI’s Mechanical Engineering Division. “I firmly ...
Long-term cardiovascular outcomes in children and adolescents with hypertension
2024-05-06
About The Study: Children diagnosed with hypertension had a higher associated long-term risk of major adverse cardiac events compared with controls without hypertension. Improved detection, follow-up, and control of pediatric hypertension may reduce the risk of adult cardiovascular disease.
Authors: Rahul Chanchlani, M.B.B.S., M.D., M.Sc., of McMaster University in Hamilton, Canada, is the corresponding author.
To access the embargoed study: Visit our For The Media website at this link https://media.jamanetwork.com/
(doi:10.1001/jamapediatrics.2024.1543)
Editor’s ...
CRIPSR gene editing leads to improvements in vision for people with inherited blindness, clinical trial shows
2024-05-06
KEY TAKEAWAYS
BRILLIANCE trial results showed 11 out of 14 treated participants experienced some improvements in vision and quality of life measures.
CRISPR-based therapy was found safe with no dose-limiting toxicities reported.
Mass Eye and Ear researchers say their findings support continued research and clinical trials of CRISPR therapies for inherited retinal disorders.
BOSTON- (MAY 6, 2024) Results from a groundbreaking clinical trial of CRISPR gene editing in 14 individuals ...
Improvement seen in most participants of pioneering CRISPR gene editing trial
2024-05-06
PORTLAND, Oregon – About 79% of clinical trial participants experienced measurable improvement after receiving experimental, CRISPR-based gene editing that is designed to fix a rare form of blindness, according to a paper published in the New England Journal of Medicine.
“This trial shows CRISPR gene editing has exciting potential to treat inherited retinal degeneration,” said Mark Pennesi, M.D., Ph.D., a corresponding author on the paper, an ophthalmologist and Oregon Health & Science University’s lead scientist for the Phase ...
Cybersecurity education varies widely in US
2024-05-06
PULLMAN, Wash. -- Cybersecurity programs vary dramatically across the country, a review has found. The authors argue that program leaders should work with professional societies to make sure graduates are well trained to meet industry needs in a fast-changing field.
In the review, published in the Proceedings of the Association for Computing Machinery’s Technical Symposium on Computer Science Education, a Washington State University-led research team found a shortage of research in evaluating the instructional approaches being used to teach cybersecurity. The authors also contend that programs ...
New vaccine effective against coronaviruses that haven’t even emerged yet
2024-05-06
Researchers have developed a new vaccine technology that has been shown in mice to provide protection against a broad range of coronaviruses with potential for future disease outbreaks - including ones we don’t even know about.
This is a new approach to vaccine development called ‘proactive vaccinology’, where scientists build a vaccine before the disease-causing pathogen even emerges.
The new vaccine works by training the body’s immune system to recognise specific regions of eight different coronaviruses, including SARS-CoV-1, SARS-CoV-2, and several that are ...
Simulated chemistry: New AI platform designs tomorrow’s cancer drugs
2024-05-06
Scientists at UC San Diego have developed a machine learning algorithm to simulate the time-consuming chemistry involved in the earliest phases of drug discovery, which could significantly streamline the process and open doors for never-before-seen treatments. Identifying candidate drugs for further optimization typically involves thousands of individual experiments, but the new artificial intelligence (AI) platform could potentially give the same results in a fraction of the time. The researchers used the new tool, described in Nature Communications, to synthesize 32 new drug candidates for cancer.
The technology is part of a new but growing trend ...
Human ‘neural compass’ pinpointed in new study
2024-05-06
A pattern of brain activity that helps prevent us from getting lost has been identified in a new study, published in Nature Human Behaviour.
Researchers at the University of Birmingham and Ludwig Maximilian University of Munich have for the first time been able to pinpoint the location of an internal neural compass which the human brain uses to orientate itself in space and navigate through the environment.
The research identifies finely tuned head direction signals within the brain. The results are comparable to neural codes identified in ...
Personalized screening early in pregnancy may improve preeclampsia detection
2024-05-06
Research Highlights:
A personalized screening algorithm for preeclampsia in the first trimester of pregnancy may help clinicians better predict who is at risk for developing the condition and who may benefit from treatment with a daily, low-dose aspirin.
In this study of more than 7,000 women, the new screening method, which combined maternal history, biomarker tests and ultrasound tests, was better at identifying preeclampsia risk in than current risk factor-based guidelines.
Embargoed until 4 a.m. CT/5 a.m. ET Monday, May 6, 2024
DALLAS, May 6, 2024 — A new screening algorithm for preeclampsia combining maternal history, ...
Expanding a lymph node, boosting a vaccine
2024-05-06
Expanding a lymph node, boosting a vaccine
A biomaterial vaccine enhances and sustains lymph node expansion following vaccination, boosting anti-tumor immunity in an animal model.
By Benjamin Boettner
(BOSTON) — Each one of us has around 600 lymph nodes (LNs) – small, bean-shaped organs that house various types of blood cells and filter lymph fluid – scattered throughout our bodies. Many of us have also experienced some of our LNs to temporarily swelling during infections with viruses or other pathogens. This LN expansion and subsequent contraction can also result from vaccines injected nearby, and in fact ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Columbia University Fertility Center named #1 by Newsweek
Two prominent Boston Children's Hospital scientists elected to National Academy of Sciences
Vegetation changes accelerated climate shifts during the late Miocene, study finds
Scientists discover key to taming unrest at Italy’s Campi Flegrei
Study reveals details of process driving evolution and major diseases
NCSA director Bill Gropp honored with prestigious ACM award
The future of brain activity monitoring may look like a strand of hair
New gene-editing therapy shows early success in fighting advanced GI cancers
nTIDE May 2025 Jobs Report: Employment of People with Disabilities Remains in a Holding Pattern
SCAI honors members for outstanding service and dedication
NRG Oncology adds new committee leaders in lung cancer and imaging
Sun safety declining in Canada amid rise in skin cancer cases
Pennington Biomedical highlights how cellular quality control contribute to insulin resistance related to type 2 diabetes
ACM honors those who shape technology's future
ESE and ESPE joint event to call for stronger national and EU action on endocrine disruptors
Call for papers: Commemorative collection honoring Dr. Judith Campisi
New studies highlight potential of artificial intelligence to improve outcomes for patients with heart failure and cardiac arrest
Space junk falling to Earth needs to be tracked. Meteoroid sounds can help
Dust in the system — How Saharan storms threaten Europe’s solar power future
“It’s like they have a superpower”: Genetic analysis of all-women extreme divers finds changes linked to blood pressure, cold tolerance
The all-female Korean Haenyeo divers show genetic adaptions to cold water diving
Antivenom neutralizes the neurotoxins of 19 of the world’s deadliest snakes
Postpartum care differences in LGBTQ+ and non-LGBTQ+ individuals
Medicaid unwinding linked to disruptions in opioid addiction treatment
State-level tax policy, cancer screening, and mortality rates in the US
Lactate mediates training of our innate defenses
Sutter Health study highlights the power and potential of ambient AI to improve clinician well-being
How mid-Cretaceous events affected marine top predators
How will 13 million farmers fight back against sea level rise? New global model simulates adaptation, migration, and survival in the face of climate crises
PSU study gauges public's willingness on microplastic interventions
[Press-News.org] How likely are English learners to graduate from high school? New study shows it depends on race, gender, and incomeAnalysis of four-year graduation rates of English learners shows influence of individual characteristics