This is the first in a series of three articles on the Limited English Proficiency for families in K12.
The most recent National Center for Education Statistics (NCES) estimate shows that in Fall 2021, 10.6% of public school students (about 5.3 million) were classified as English Learners. And while this is a huge part of school communities, families who are not proficient in English are frequently underrepresented in surveys.
Survey experts often identify this group as being at higher risk for under-response or nonresponse, since language barriers, mistrust, and logistical challenges can make participation more difficult. As a result, many districts may be missing the voices of a significant segment of families when collecting feedback and data. This concern is becoming increasingly urgent as the number of English Learner (EL) students and Limited English Proficient (LEP) households continues to grow in many regions, making it essential for districts to adopt intentional, targeted strategies to better engage these families.
Why Participation from LEP Families is Essential
When LEP families are unable to participate in surveys, districts risk gathering feedback that does not fully reflect the broader community. And, if the data captures only a portion of family perspectives, school improvement decisions can end up being guided by an incomplete, and potentially misleading, understanding of community needs.
Survey responses from LEP families often highlight important unmet needs, especially around communication, language services, and student support. When districts improve LEP family participation, they gain clearer insights that can help them direct resources where they’re needed most (MidTESOL, 2021). Increasing participation among these families is critical for:
- Ensuring representative feedback so survey results reflect the experiences and needs of the entire community, not just the families who face fewer barriers to responding.
- Promoting equity in decision-making by making sure historically underrepresented voices are included when shaping policies, programs, and school improvement plans.
- Identifying unmet needs and gaps in communication, services, or supports that may be overlooked when LEP families are missing from the data.
- Improving trust and relationships by demonstrating that the district genuinely values input from all families and is committed to listening and responding.
- Strengthening student outcomes since meaningful family engagement is linked to attendance, achievement, and overall student wellbeing, especially for multilingual learners.
- Meeting compliance and accountability expectations by ensuring districts can document inclusive outreach and engagement practices as required in many state and federal programs.
Inclusive Data Collection Builds Trust and Supports Compliance
The U.S. Department of Education’s Family and Community Engagement Framework (2021) emphasizes that inclusive data collection is essential to ensuring that culturally and linguistically diverse voices are reflected in the policies and programs districts develop. The practice of ensuring all families can participate helps build institutional credibility and strengthens the sense of trust and belonging within the district.
Additionally, transparent survey practices send a strong message of respect and inclusion, especially for immigrant and multilingual communities (ED.gov, 2022). Inclusive participation also matters from a compliance standpoint. Under ESSA Title I and Title III, districts are required to demonstrate meaningful family engagement. Evidence of robust multilingual participation strengthens compliance documentation and can support state equity audits (ED.gov, 2021).
Next Steps for LEP Family Participation
Understanding why LEP family participation matters is only the first step. While the need for inclusive feedback is clear, many districts struggle with how to reach multilingual families in meaningful ways.
To learn ways to engage your community members in feedback opportunities read our blog on Strengthening School Communities: Strategies to Enhance Meaningful Engagement. Additionally, stay tuned for Parts 2 and 3 of this blog series. In Part 2, we explore the most common barriers that prevent LEP families from participating in surveys, and the research-backed strategies districts can use to overcome them.



