site index  |  ED.gov
National Center for Education Statistics Home
 
  
NCES Fast Facts

Bilingual education / Limited English Proficient students

Question:
How many limited English proficient students are in U.S. public schools, and how accessible are bilingual education programs for them?

Response:
Overview of Public Elementary and Secondary Schools and Districts: School Year 2001-02 reports that some 47 states (including the District of Columbia) reported the number of students who were English language learners (ELL) and receiving English language services. In California, there were 1.5 million ELL service recipients (one-fourth of all students) in 2001-02, while Texas reported more than half a million (one in seven students) receiving ELL services.

Further information is available from the 1993-94 Schools and Staffing Survey:

  • Over 2.1 million public school students in the United States are identified as limited English proficient (LEP) students. They account for 5 percent of all public school students and 31 percent of all American Indian/Alaska Native, Asian/Pacific Islander, and Hispanic students enrolled in public schools.
  • LEP students are concentrated in the West, in urban areas, and in large schools with 750 or more students. Schools with 20 percent or more minority students and 20 percent or more students receiving "free or reduced-price lunches" are also more likely to enroll LEP students.
  • Schools can use a combination of methods to identify LEP students. The most frequently reported methods are teacher observation or referral, home language survey or assessment, and previous student record.
  • Seventy-six percent of public schools with LEP student enrollments provide English as a second language (ESL) programs, and 36 percent have bilingual education programs. Bilingual education programs are generally implemented in schools with higher concentrations of LEP students than in schools with smaller numbers of LEP students.
  • About one-third of public schools with LEP student enrollments provide both ESL and bilingual education programs, and 71 percent of all LEP students attend these schools. Thirteen percent of schools (4,832) enrolling LEP students have neither ESL nor bilingual programs, and 3 percent of all LEP students (59,373) attend these schools.
  • Forty-two percent of all public school teachers have at least one LEP student in their classes. Only 7 percent of these teachers have classes in which over 50 percent of their students are identified as LEP.
  • Thirty percent of public school teachers instructing LEP students have received training for teaching LEP students, and fewer than 3 percent of teachers with LEP students have earned a degree in ESL or bilingual education.
SOURCE: U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (2003). Overview of Public Elementary and Secondary Schools and Districts: School Year 2001-2002 (NCES 2003–411); U.S. Department of Education, National Center for Education Statistics. (1997). SASS 1993-94: A Profile of Policies and Practices for Limited English Proficient Students: Screening Methods, Program Support, and Teacher Training (NCES 1997–472).


Related Tables and Figures: (Listed by Release Date)


Other Resources: (Listed by Release Date)
NCES
Headlines
 
•  Register Now! 18th Annual MIS Conference, 2005
•  New Training Seminar Announced for Early Childhood Longitudinal Study
•  JUST RELEASED! A Decade of Undergraduate Student Aid
NCES Home  |  Publications  |  Surveys & Programs  |  Quick Tables & Figures  |  Data Tools
Search  |  Help  |  News Flash  |  NCES Staff  |  Contact NCES  |  Site Index
National Center for Education Statistics
Institute of Education Sciences, U.S. Dept. of Education
(map) 1990 K Street, NW, Washington, DC 20006, USA, Phone: (202) 502-7300