US: National K - 12 Foreign Language Survey

Francis Hult francis.hult at utsa.edu
Sat Nov 15 14:11:00 UTC 2008


National K - 12 Foreign Language Survey

 

Funder: U.S. Department of Education, International Research and Studies Program 

September 2006 - August 2009

 

The Center for Applied Linguistics (CAL) conducts a national survey of foreign language instruction in public and private elementary and secondary schools every decade to provide an updated national and regional portrait of foreign language instruction in the United States. Working with Westat, a leader in survey research, we are currently analyzing results from the third survey to be able to show trends in foreign language education at three points in time (1987, 1997, 2008). 

 

Survey questionnaires were mailed to a stratified random sample of more than 5,000 elementary and secondary schools across the country in October 2007. Data collection was completed in June 2008. The response rate was 76%. 

 

The survey was designed to help us understand, among other issues, current patterns and shifts over time in these areas:

Foreign language enrollments 

Number of schools offering foreign languages 

Types of foreign language programs offered

Foreign language curricula and methodologies in use

Teacher qualifications and training

Effects of No Child Left Behind legislation on foreign language instruction

Survey data will be examined and presented according to various factors that may affect language instruction, including these: 

Type of school (public or private)

Location of school (urban, rural, or suburban)

Socioeconomic status of students

Percentage of minority students enrolled in the school

Geographical region (e.g., Northeast, Pacific Northwest)

 

The survey results will present national and regional data; state-by-state data are not an outcome of this survey. Answers to the following questions will also be presented in the final survey results:

How is students' language proficiency assessed? 

Do teachers integrate national and/or state foreign language standards into their instruction? 

How much do teachers use the foreign language in the classroom? 

 

The overarching theme in the analysis will be how the data can be used to help our country increase and improve language teaching in elementary and secondary schools over the next decade. 

 

More information:

http://www.cal.org/projects/flsurvey.html

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