Graduate Student Dissertations, Theses, Capstones, and Portfolios

Date of Award

6-22-2026

Document Type

Dissertation

Granting Institution

Lynn University

Degree Name

Doctor of Education (Ed.D.)

Degree Program

Educational Leadership

Department

College of Education

First Advisor

Dr. Kelly A. Burlison

Second Advisor

Dr. Jennifer J. Lesh

Third Advisor

Dr. Adrian Ocampo

Abstract

This research study examined the misalignment between policy compliance and instructional practice within English for speakers of other languages (ESOL) programs in K–12 public education. Although federal and state mandates require equitable access and services for English language learners (ELLs), compliance with these requirements has not consistently resulted in effective classroom practice. The problem of practice focused on how educators interpreted and enacted ESOL policies and the extent to which these practices aligned with the intent of the Multicultural Education, Training, and Advocacy (META) Consent Decree and related accountability frameworks.

A qualitative research design was used to explore educators’ perceptions and experiences. Data were collected from teachers and instructional leaders working with ELLs through a survey organized into three constructs: teacher efficacy, curriculum, and instruction. Descriptive analysis was conducted on the Likert-scale items. Open-ended responses were analyzed using thematic coding, allowing for a deeper understanding of how compliance was enacted in practice.

Findings revealed a pattern of surface-level compliance, where educators demonstrated awareness of ESOL requirements but described limited capacity to implement sustained, language-rich instructional strategies. Participants emphasized procedural tasks, such as documentation and accommodations, rather than integrated approaches to language development. Themes also highlighted systemic constraints, including limited job-embedded professional learning, inconsistent support structures, and competing accountability demands.

The study concluded effective ESOL implementation requires coherent, practice-based professional learning that strengthens teacher efficacy and instructional expertise, moving beyond compliance toward meaningful instructional improvement.

Comments

External Committee Member: Dr. Adrian Ocampo

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