Elizabeth Howard
University of Connecticut Associate Professor
Storrs, CT
Elizabeth R. Howard is an associate professor of bilingual education in the Neag School of Education at the University of Connecticut, where she teaches graduate courses on linguistic and cultural diversity and recently launched an
online graduate certificate in educating bilingual learners. Her research focuses on dual language education, biliteracy development, and the preparation of teachers to work with multilingual learners, and she is currently the principal investigator of a federally funded grant investigating the development of sociocultural competence in dual language programs and its role in equitable bilingualism and biliteracy attainment. She has also served as a principal investigator or co-PI of several large-scale, federally funded research projects exploring various aspects of the literacy development of bilingual learners, often in the context of dual language programs. Her books include
Realizing the vision of two-way immersion: Fostering effective programs and classrooms;
Preparing classroom teachers to succeed with second language learners: Lessons from a faculty learning community; and
Culturally and linguistically responsive education: Designing networks that transform schools. She is also the lead author of a number of professional resources for dual language educators, including
Guiding Principles for Dual Language Education, the
Dual Language Program Planner, the
Two-Way Immersion Toolkit, and the
Two-Way Immersion Observation Protocol (the Dual Language SIOP). Her most recent publication is the forthcoming book
Dual Language Tandem Teaching: Coordinating Instruction across Languages through Cross-Linguistic Pedagogies (Velázquez Press), and together with co-author Shera Simpson, she co-founded Dual Language Connections, a small business that provides technical and interpersonal assistance to dual language educators to support the successful coordination of instruction across languages. Previously, she has worked as a senior research associate at the Center for Applied Linguistics and as a bilingual teacher in California and Costa Rica.