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    • AI-Powered, Integrated Unit Goals and Lesson Objectives for K-12 English Learners
    • AI as a Tool for Inclusive Bilingual Education
    • Raquel Sinai Newcomer Award Winning Essay
    • NJTESOL/NJBE Represented at the NJPSA/FEA Administrator’s Conference
    • Supporting Muslim Students During Ramadan: 4 Suggestions for Teachers to Consider
    • Seal of Biliteracy Scholarship Award Winner’s Essay
    • AI Tools in a ML Classroom
    • Reframing the Narrative: Why Are We Waiting to Value Home Languages?
    • Migrant Education Programs in New Jersey
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  • Home
    • Annual Voices Journal Submission Guidelines
    • Spring Conference Photos
  • Annual Voices Journal 2026
  • 2026 Spring Weekly Voices
  • 2026 Winter Weekly Voices
    • Season’s Greetings from the NJTESOL/NJBE Executive Board
    • NJTESOL/NJBE Scholarships and Awards for your students and you!
    • AI-Powered, Integrated Unit Goals and Lesson Objectives for K-12 English Learners
    • AI as a Tool for Inclusive Bilingual Education
    • Raquel Sinai Newcomer Award Winning Essay
    • NJTESOL/NJBE Represented at the NJPSA/FEA Administrator’s Conference
    • Supporting Muslim Students During Ramadan: 4 Suggestions for Teachers to Consider
    • Seal of Biliteracy Scholarship Award Winner’s Essay
    • AI Tools in a ML Classroom
    • Reframing the Narrative: Why Are We Waiting to Value Home Languages?
    • Migrant Education Programs in New Jersey
  • About Us
    • Mission Statement
    • Executive Board
    • Membership Information
    • The Hotlist

NJTESOL/NJBE Represented at the NJPSA/FEA Administrator’s Conference

By Keith Perkins, Supervisor SIG Representative

NJPSAFEA Administrator’s ConferenceWe all understand the importance of advocating for our students. Ensuring that they are given what they need to succeed academically, socially, and emotionally is critical to helping them achieve lasting success. NJTESOL/NJBE is committed to helping educators at all levels gain an understanding of how we can work to expand our understanding of multilingual learners and the various ways we can support them.

This past October, two of our executive board members presented at the NJPSA/FEA Conference held at the Ocean Casino Resort in Atlantic City, NJ where both presented on topics that helped to spark conversations, open minds, and provide knowledge on how we can further the mission of our organization. Social Media Coordinator and Lead Chairperson for The Countering Anti-Black Racism Committee, kiina dordoni, brought Black English to the forefront in her presentation entitled How Do We Get to Standard Academic English When MLs Are Learning Black English as a New Language? When I spoke with her about the workshop, one of the highlights she mentioned was how exciting it was for her to hear from participants that they came to the workshop expecting one thing, but left with a new perspective on the validity of Black English as a recognized linguistic presence.

Supervisor SIG Representative Keith Perkins offered a presentation designed to help leaders identify ways to help support a rapidly growing ML population while still honoring the presence of the existing community. Finding Common Ground: Evolving District Culture Through Demographic Shifts focused on his district of Irvington, which has made a dramatic shift in population from predominantly African American to one that is now over 40% multilingual learners. Large shifts like this can leave some people feeling left out or not heard as the district looks to service the needs of a growing ML community. This presentation sought to provide strategies that bring all stakeholders to the table and promote a culture that is both inclusive and supportive.

NJTESOL/NJBE members are experts in our field, and thus can serve as great sources of information for those who have a limited understanding of the Multilingual Learner world. Getting this knowledge out to school leaders was a great opportunity to advance the interests of MLs and their families. We would welcome the opportunity to continue advocating for our students and their families in presentations and workshops in conferences across the State of New Jersey and the country.

Keith Perkins, Ed.D.
Acting Director, Department of Multilingual Learners and World Languages
Irvington Public Schools

Announcements

2025 Spring Conference Silver Sponsor

Scholarships and Awards for you and your students – Start the applications now! There are 4th and 8th grade awards, high school, higher ed, and teacher ed scholarships, and the Judie Haynes grant for teachers – due date March 15th. The Barbara Tedesco award a bilingual or ESL teacher and collaborating educator is due Feb. 15th! The applications are here.

The Shore Chapter would like to cordially invite you to our in-person meeting at Belmar Elementary School on February 25, 2026. The focus of the meeting will be to provide MLL educators with an opportunity to connect, collaborate, and network, while also engaging in a professional development session focused on supporting multilingual learners and effective instructional practices. Professional Development certificates are available so come along and enjoy the presentation. For your convenience, the information is listed below:
Shore Chapter In-Person Meeting, February 25, 2026, 9:00 AM, Belmar Elementary, 1101 Main Street, Belmar, NJ 07719
Topic: Supporting Multilingual Learners and Effective Instructional Practices
Contact: Ms. Erin Hanas – ESL/MLL Professional Trainer, hanas@belmar.k12.nj.us

The Advocacy Committee will meet on February 19th at 5:00. If you would like to attend, complete this form and a link will be sent to you.

CABR’s January meeting was the kickoff to our Spring Book Study, Cultivating Genius: An Equity Framework for Culturally and Historically Responsive Literacy (2020) by Gholdy Muhammad. It is not too late to join. Please complete this Google form if you want to participate. There are Questions for Further Consideration at the end of each chapter. Please consider journaling your responses to these questions, as they will drive the conversation in each of our meetings. If you want to just sit in on this fascinating conversation, fill out this Google Form.

Register for the 2026 Spring Conference
Theme – Unlock Your Potential: BE Multilingual – Celebrating 50 Years of NJBE
You can attend in person at the Hyatt Regency Hotel, May 19, 20, & 21 (Tuesday, Wednesday & Thursday) OR view the Virtual Library Conference: May 27 through August 20
Registration is open through April 24, 2026 or until capacity is reached.
See more information here.

Supporting Neuroplasticity
in Multilingual Learners

Challenging, culturally responsive assignments can create a dynamic that supports students’ language development and critical thinking.

By Sarah Said and Thamir Aljobori

Said and Aljobori propose that it is possible to support language growth while providing opportunities for higher level thinking. This can be accomplished through “Productive struggle [which] is the space where students encounter tasks that push them slightly beyond their comfort zone, requiring effort, reflection, and persistence to succeed. This struggle, when framed positively, builds resilience and encourages students to take ownership of their learning. For multilingual learners, it also enhances their ability to process and internalize new language structures in meaningful ways, making the learning experience richer and more impactful.”

The authors list these examples.

  • Students could write a paragraph about a scene from a difficult text when it is accompanied by a creative mural.
  • Have students work on a project that requires problem-solving instead of writing an essay about an issue in their community.
  • In STEM, after introducing the necessary vocabulary in students’ home language and English, students note their observations and create diagrams.
  • Involve students in a task such as analyzing the relevance of cultural artifacts, which can help them recognize the value of their backgrounds.
  • Analyze artwork or literature created in their community, and finalize the project using Canva.
  • Conduct research about the effects of a local environmental problem.
  • Find advances in STEM from researchers in students’ cultures, and explore their experiments.

 

Said and Aljobori claim that maintaining rigor that engages English learners in higher level thinking is necessary to avoid creating a gap in their education. Moreover, when our classrooms encourage “critical thinking and problem-solving, … we foster productive struggle and engage learners through thinking that supports neuroplasticity.”

You can read more about it here.

Raquel Sinai Newcomer Award Winning Essay
and
Exploring the mediating role of anxiety between resilience and academic achievement in students’ English learning

ARTICLES

Season’s Greetings from the NJTESOL/NJBE Executive Board

NJTESOL/NJBE Scholarships and Awards for your students and you!
and
8th Grade Award Winner’s Essay

AI-Powered, Integrated Unit Goals and Lesson Objectives for K-12 English Learners
-Lynn Shafer Willner

AI as a Tool for Inclusive Bilingual Education -Lizdelia Piñón
and
Teachers Lean on AI to Help English Learners as Schools are Pushed to Integrate the Technology -Norah Rami

Raquel Sinai Newcomer Award Winning Essay -Emilly Pereira Lima
and
Exploring the mediating role of anxiety between resilience and academic achievement in students’ English learning -Honggang Liu, Xiaobing Lu, & Yi Yan

NJTESOL/NJBE Represented at the NJPSA/FEA Administrator’s Conference -Keith Perkins, Supervisor SIG Representative
and
Supporting Neuroplasticity in Multilingual Learners -Sarah Said & Thamir Aljobori

Supporting Muslim Students During Ramadan: 4 Suggestions for Teachers to Consider -Naashia Mohamed
and
Teaching About Eid al-Fitr and Eid al-Adha: Activity Ideas for Your Classroom -Naashia Mohamed

Seal of Biliteracy Scholarship Award Winner’s Essay -Lourdes Ramirez
and
Using Language Portraits to Explore Students’ Identities -Naashia Mohamed

Reframing the Narrative: Why Are We Waiting to Value Home Languages? -Veronica Murillo
and
Dispelling the Myth of “English Only”: Understanding the Importance of the First Language in Second Language Learning -By Elsa Billings and Aída Walqui, WestEd

Migrant Education Programs in New Jersey -Kathleen Fernandez, Executive Director NJTESOL/NJBE
and
Pedro J. Rodriguez High School Scholarship Winner’s Essay: “More Than Luck” -Hazlett Arguedas Cornejo

NJTESOL/NJBE Voices Editorial Board

Executive Director
Kathleen Fernandez

President
LeighAnn Matthews, Bridgewater-Raritan Public Schools

Past-President
Michelle Land, Randolph Township Schools

Layout
Dale Egan, Bergen Community College

Technology
Marilyn Pongracz, Bergen Community College

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