Why ELL Students Need Specialized Science Instruction
Science classrooms are language-rich environments where students must comprehend complex concepts while simultaneously developing their English language skills. According to research published in Teaching and Teacher Education, ELL students often struggle with the dual challenge of learning content and language simultaneously.
Effective science instruction for ELLs requires educators to develop specific teacher skills that bridge content knowledge and language acquisition. These specialized teacher skills include understanding second language acquisition processes, recognizing cultural differences in learning styles, and implementing strategies that make content comprehensible.
The academic language of science—with its specialized vocabulary, complex sentence structures, and abstract concepts—can be particularly challenging for ELL students. Without appropriate instructional supports, these students may fall behind their peers despite having strong conceptual understanding.
“Science education is not just about learning facts and figures—it’s about developing scientific literacy and critical thinking skills that all students need for future success, regardless of their language background.”
Tip for Educators #1: Build a Rich Visual Learning Environment
Creating a visually supportive classroom is one of the most effective teacher skills for making science accessible to ELL students. Visual supports reduce language barriers and provide multiple pathways to understanding complex scientific concepts.

Effective Visual Supports for Science Instruction
Word Walls and Visual Dictionaries
Create science-specific word walls that pair key vocabulary with images, definitions, and examples. Organize terms by unit or concept to help students make connections between related ideas. Encourage students to add to these visual dictionaries throughout the unit.
Graphic Organizers
Use concept maps, Venn diagrams, and flowcharts to help students visualize relationships between scientific concepts. These tools support both content learning and language development by providing a framework for organizing information.
Labeled Models and Diagrams
Provide clearly labeled models, diagrams, and real objects that students can interact with. This hands-on approach helps ELL students connect scientific vocabulary with concrete objects and processes.
Visual Experiment Instructions
Create step-by-step visual guides for laboratory procedures. Combining pictures with simple text helps ELL students follow complex procedures independently while building their scientific vocabulary.
Developing these visual support teacher skills takes practice but yields significant benefits for all students, not just ELLs. Research shows that visual learning strategies improve comprehension and retention for diverse learners across subject areas.
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Tip for Educators #2: Implement Strategic Vocabulary Instruction
Science vocabulary presents a significant challenge for ELL students. Effective science teachers develop specific teacher skills for introducing and reinforcing academic language in meaningful contexts.
Three-Tiered Approach to Science Vocabulary
| Vocabulary Tier | Description | Examples | Teaching Strategies |
| Tier 1: Everyday Words | Basic vocabulary that most native English speakers know | water, plant, mix, hot | Use realia, pictures, and demonstrations to connect with known concepts |
| Tier 2: General Academic Words | Cross-curricular terms used across subject areas | analyze, compare, predict, observe | Explicit instruction with multiple examples across contexts |
| Tier 3: Domain-Specific Words | Specialized science terminology | photosynthesis, mitosis, precipitation | Connect to visuals, hands-on experiences, and familiar concepts |
Effective Vocabulary Instruction Techniques
Pre-teach Essential Vocabulary
Identify and introduce 5-7 key terms before each lesson. Focus on words that are critical for understanding the main concepts rather than trying to cover every technical term. Use visuals, demonstrations, and student-friendly definitions.
Word Walls with Categories
Create interactive word walls where students help categorize terms by concept, function, or relationship. This helps ELLs see connections between related scientific ideas and reinforces vocabulary in meaningful contexts.
Personal Vocabulary Journals
Have students maintain science vocabulary journals where they record new terms with definitions in their own words, visual representations, examples, and native language translations if helpful. These journals become personalized reference tools.
Word Parts Analysis
Teach common scientific prefixes, suffixes, and roots to help students decode unfamiliar terms. Understanding that “photo-” relates to light and “-synthesis” means putting together gives context for understanding “photosynthesis.”
Developing strong vocabulary instruction teacher skills is essential for making science content accessible to ELL students. By strategically introducing and reinforcing key terminology, educators can help students build the academic language needed for science success.
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Tip for Educators #3: Design Hands-On Inquiry Experiences
Hands-on, inquiry-based science activities provide ELL students with concrete experiences that support language development alongside content learning. These experiences allow students to demonstrate understanding through actions before they can fully express concepts verbally.

Structuring Effective Inquiry for ELL Students
Scaffolded Investigations
Design investigations with appropriate scaffolding that gradually releases responsibility to students. Begin with highly structured activities and progress toward more open-ended inquiry as students develop confidence and skills.
Collaborative Learning Groups
Strategically pair ELL students with supportive peers who can serve as language models. Create heterogeneous groups that allow ELLs to contribute their strengths while developing language through authentic scientific discussions.
Multimodal Data Collection
Provide options for recording observations and data beyond traditional written formats. Allow students to use drawings, photographs, voice recordings, or digital tools to document their findings before translating them into written English.
Sentence Frames for Scientific Discourse
Support scientific discussions with sentence frames that model academic language: “I observed that _____ when _____” or “My evidence suggests _____ because _____.” These frames scaffold communication while reinforcing key vocabulary.
“When ELL students engage in hands-on science activities, they develop conceptual understanding that serves as a foundation for language development. The concrete experiences give meaning to the academic vocabulary they’re learning.”
Developing teacher skills for designing effective inquiry experiences requires thoughtful planning and an understanding of both science content and language acquisition principles. The most successful activities provide multiple entry points for students at different language proficiency levels.
Sample Scaffolded Inquiry Activity: Investigating Plant Growth
Beginning Level Support: Provide step-by-step visual instructions, pre-labeled diagrams for recording observations, and word banks for describing plant parts.
Intermediate Level Support: Offer sentence frames for predictions and observations, partially completed data tables, and guided questions for analysis.
Advanced Level Support: Supply academic vocabulary lists for conclusions, peer discussion prompts, and models for scientific explanations.
By differentiating supports while maintaining high cognitive demands, teachers can develop the teacher skills necessary to make inquiry accessible for all language proficiency levels.
Tip for Educators #4: Integrate Language and Content Objectives
Effective science instruction for ELLs requires teachers to develop the teacher skills needed to plan for both content and language development simultaneously. By explicitly identifying and sharing both types of objectives, educators help students understand what they’re expected to learn and how they’ll demonstrate that learning.
Writing Effective Dual Objectives
| Component | Content Objective Example | Language Objective Example |
| Observable Action | Students will identify the main parts of a plant cell. | Students will describe cell parts using comparative adjectives (larger, smaller, thicker). |
| Measurable Outcome | Students will explain three functions of the cell membrane. | Students will use cause-effect sentence structures to explain membrane functions. |
| Specific Skill | Students will compare plant and animal cells using a Venn diagram. | Students will use the vocabulary terms “similar,” “different,” “both,” and “unlike” in written comparisons. |
Strategies for Implementing Dual Objectives
Make Objectives Visible
Post both content and language objectives in student-friendly language at the beginning of each lesson. Review them with students and refer back to them throughout the lesson to maintain focus on both dimensions of learning.
Align Assessment with Objectives
Ensure that assessments measure both content understanding and language development. Provide multiple ways for students to demonstrate content knowledge while they’re still developing English proficiency.
Scaffold for Language Functions
Identify the specific language functions required (describing, explaining, comparing) and provide appropriate supports such as sentence frames, word banks, or model responses that help students meet language objectives.
Reflect on Both Dimensions
Include reflection questions that address both content and language learning: “What did you learn about ecosystems today?” and “What new vocabulary helped you explain your ideas?”
Developing the teacher skills to effectively integrate language and content objectives takes practice but significantly improves outcomes for ELL students. This approach ensures that language development is not left to chance but is systematically supported throughout science instruction.
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Tip for Educators #5: Implement Culturally Responsive Science Teaching
Culturally responsive teaching is a powerful approach that connects science content to students’ cultural backgrounds, prior knowledge, and lived experiences. For ELL students, this connection is particularly important as it validates their identities while making science more relevant and accessible.

Key Elements of Culturally Responsive Science Teaching
Connect to Students’ Funds of Knowledge
Identify and incorporate the knowledge, skills, and experiences that students bring from their homes and communities. For example, students from agricultural backgrounds may have rich knowledge about plant growth that can connect to lessons on botany or ecosystems.
Highlight Diverse Scientists
Introduce students to scientists from diverse cultural backgrounds, particularly those who share cultural identities with your students. Discuss their contributions and the challenges they overcame, helping students see themselves represented in the scientific community.
Use Culturally Relevant Examples
Frame scientific concepts using examples that connect to students’ cultural experiences. When studying heat transfer, reference cooking methods from students’ home cultures; when discussing medicinal plants, invite students to share traditional remedies from their communities.
Address Environmental Justice
Incorporate discussions of environmental issues that affect students’ communities, such as water quality, air pollution, or access to healthy food. These real-world connections make science relevant while developing critical thinking skills.
Developing the teacher skills needed for culturally responsive science teaching requires ongoing learning about students’ cultures and a willingness to adapt curriculum to make meaningful connections. This approach benefits all students by broadening perspectives and demonstrating the relevance of science to diverse communities.
Culturally Responsive Science Project Example: Community Water Quality Investigation
Students investigate water quality issues in their local community, connecting scientific concepts of pollution and water testing to real environmental concerns. The project incorporates:
- Interviews with community members about water usage and concerns
- Scientific testing protocols with multilingual instructions
- Comparisons of water conservation practices across cultures
- Presentation of findings to community stakeholders in multiple languages
Research by Lee & Buxton (2017) demonstrates that culturally responsive science teaching significantly improves engagement and achievement for ELL students by validating their identities while developing essential science concepts and practices.
Implementing These Tips for Educators in Your Classroom
Transforming science instruction for ELL students doesn’t happen overnight. Effective implementation requires intentional planning, ongoing assessment, and a commitment to developing the teacher skills needed to support both language and content learning.

Planning for Success
Start Small and Build
Begin by implementing one strategy at a time rather than trying to transform your entire approach at once. For example, focus first on developing visual supports for a single unit, then add language objectives, and gradually incorporate other strategies as your teacher skills develop.
Collaborate with Colleagues
Partner with ESL specialists, bilingual educators, or other science teachers to share resources and ideas. Collaborative planning strengthens both content and language instruction while distributing the workload of creating scaffolded materials.
Gather Baseline Data
Before implementing new strategies, collect data on ELL students’ current science performance and language development. This baseline will help you measure the effectiveness of your interventions and adjust your approach as needed.
Create a Resource Library
Develop a collection of reusable resources such as visual vocabulary cards, graphic organizers, and sentence frames that can be adapted across science units. This investment of time upfront will pay dividends throughout the year.
Monitoring Progress and Adjusting Instruction
Signs of Effective Implementation
- Increased ELL participation in class discussions
- Improved performance on science assessments
- Greater use of academic vocabulary in speaking and writing
- Higher engagement in inquiry activities
- Students making connections between concepts
- ELL students taking on leadership roles in group work
Challenges to Address
- Limited planning time for creating scaffolded materials
- Wide range of language proficiency levels in one classroom
- Balancing language support with content rigor
- Assessing content knowledge separately from language skills
- Limited resources in students’ home languages
- Pressure to cover curriculum at a rapid pace
Remember that developing effective teacher skills for ELL science instruction is an ongoing process. Reflect regularly on what’s working and what needs adjustment, and don’t hesitate to seek additional professional development to enhance your practice.
Conclusion: Empowering ELL Students in Science
Implementing these five Tips for Educators can transform science instruction for English Language Learners, creating classrooms where all students have access to rigorous content while developing essential language skills. By building a rich visual environment, implementing strategic vocabulary instruction, designing hands-on inquiry experiences, integrating language and content objectives, and embracing culturally responsive teaching, educators can ensure that linguistic diversity becomes an asset rather than a barrier in science education.
Developing these specialized teacher skills requires time, practice, and ongoing professional growth. However, the impact on student learning makes this investment worthwhile. When ELL students experience success in science, they gain not only content knowledge but also the confidence and skills needed for future academic and career opportunities.
As you implement these strategies, remember that small changes can make a significant difference. Start with one approach, monitor its effectiveness, and gradually expand your repertoire of teacher skills to support ELL science learning. Your efforts will create more equitable classrooms where all students can discover the wonder of scientific exploration.
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