fate of ESL?

From: Fran Keenan (fran@cal.org)
Date: Tue Oct 31 1995 - 11:16:25 EST


Received: (news@localhost) by literacy.nifl.gov (8.6.8/940311.01ccg) id LAA24046 for nifl-esl@novel.nifl.gov; Tue, 31 Oct 1995 11:16:26 -0500
Path: literacy.nifl.gov!nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov
From: Fran Keenan <fran@cal.org>
Newsgroups: nifl.esl
Subject: fate of ESL?
Date: 31 Oct 1995 11:16:25 -0500
Organization: National Institute for Literacy
Lines: 30
Sender: listproc@literacy.nifl.gov
Distribution: nifl
Message-ID: <s0960587.001@cal.org>
Reply-To: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov
NNTP-Posting-Host: literacy.nifl.gov
Originator: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov
X-Mailer: Novell GroupWise 4.1
Apparently-To: nifl-esl@literacy.nifl.gov
Status: RO
X-Status: 

Something to consider: In a recent national study of adult education
programs, (the NEAEP),  the following statistics about adult ESL
students were given:

45% were employed; 36% were not in the workforce; 18% were
unemployed. (**Only a small percentage of ESL students count among
the unemployed.**)

89% had not received public assistance in the past year. (**ESL
students are generally not "on welfare."**)

How will funding for ESL services fare once states (probably
governors) receive block grants for welfare (with a mandate to get
people working) and block grants for workforce development-- the push
of the Workforce Development Act (S. 143) and the CAREERS Bill (H.R.
1617) that by year's end are expected to be signed into law by the
President? 

Are ESL services being championed at the state level?

Are they doomed unless tied to workforce development?

Does anyone have any strategies for navigating the upcoming changes?


Fran Keenan
NCLE
fran@cal.org



This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue Jan 11 2000 - 13:21:40 EST