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Framework Comparison ELL/ESOL Standards & Instruction

WIDA vs SIOP — Which Framework Is Right for Your ELL Program?

By Kuliso Team May 7, 2026 11 min read
Categories: ELL Instruction EdTech Comparison

If you're designing or refining an ELL program, you've run into both names: WIDA and SIOP. They come up in the same conversations, sometimes as if they're interchangeable, sometimes as if choosing one means rejecting the other. Neither is accurate.

WIDA and SIOP are different kinds of tools that address different questions. WIDA answers: what should ELL students know and be able to do? SIOP answers: how should teachers deliver instruction so ELL students can access it? The confusion is understandable — both live in the ELL space, both influence lesson planning, and many resources mix them together without explaining why they're not the same thing.

This guide separates them clearly, compares them honestly, and helps you figure out which one (or combination) fits your program's actual needs.


What is WIDA?

WIDA (World-class Instructional Design and Assessment) is a consortium of U.S. states that develops English Language Development (ELD) standards, assessments, and professional learning tools for PreK–12 English language learners. As of 2026, over 40 states and Washington D.C. are WIDA members.

The core WIDA product for schools is the WIDA English Language Development Standards Framework — a set of proficiency level descriptors across six levels (Entering, Emerging, Developing, Expanding, Bridging, and Reaching) and four language domains (Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing). States use WIDA standards to define what "English proficiency" means, set reclassification benchmarks, and design ELP curricula.

The associated assessment, ACCESS for ELLs, measures student proficiency across the four language domains and generates composite and domain-specific scores. Many states require ACCESS scores for ELL identification, programming decisions, and reclassification from ELL status to Proficient.

40+
U.S. states using WIDA standards
6
WIDA proficiency levels (Entering → Reaching)
4
Language domains: Listening, Speaking, Reading, Writing

WIDA's four language domains

👂 Listening
Comprehending oral language in academic and social contexts. Interpreting meaning from spoken discourse, directions, and content-area instruction.
🗣️ Speaking
Producing oral language for academic and social purposes. Participating in discussions, presenting information, and using academic vocabulary.
📖 Reading
Comprehending written academic language. Extracting meaning from informational and literary texts across content areas.
✍️ Writing
Producing written language for academic and communicative purposes. Expressing ideas in content-specific genres with appropriate structure and vocabulary.

What WIDA is — and what it isn't

WIDA is a standards and assessment framework. It tells you what proficiency looks like at each level. It does not tell teachers exactly how to teach — it doesn't specify lesson structures, instructional techniques, or classroom protocols. A teacher who understands WIDA knows what a Level 2 Developing student should be able to produce; she still needs an instructional model to know how to get them there.

WIDA Strengths
  • Widely adopted — used in 40+ states
  • Clear proficiency level descriptors for curriculum alignment
  • ACCESS assessment is a gold standard for ELP measurement
  • Strong integration with state ELL identification systems
  • 2020 Standards update includes translanguaging and multilingual practices
  • Rich professional learning resources through WIDA consortium
WIDA Limitations
  • Not an instructional model — doesn't tell teachers how to teach
  • Requires significant professional development to implement with fidelity
  • ACCESS assessment is high-stakes; not a formative tool
  • Standards can be abstract without concrete instructional scaffolds
  • Does not cover content-area instruction delivery methods

What is SIOP?

SIOP (Sheltered Instruction Observation Protocol) is an instructional model developed by Jana Echevarría, MaryEllen Vogt, and Deborah Short through a research project funded by the National Center for Research on Education, Diversity & Excellence (CREDE). It was originally designed for sheltered content instruction — where content-area classes are taught specifically to ELL students using techniques that make academic content comprehensible while developing English language skills.

The SIOP Model consists of eight components and 30 features that define what high-quality sheltered instruction looks like. Teachers are observed (and self-evaluate) against these features using the SIOP protocol — which is where the name comes from. It's both a model for what instruction should look like and an observation rubric for measuring whether teachers are implementing it.

The 8 SIOP components

Component 1
Lesson Preparation
Content and language objectives posted, content concepts appropriate for age and proficiency, supplementary materials used.
Component 2
Building Background
Concepts linked to students' backgrounds and experiences, prior knowledge activated, key vocabulary explicitly taught.
Component 3
Comprehensible Input
Speech appropriate for ELP level, academic tasks explained clearly, visual and kinesthetic supports used.
Component 4
Strategies
Scaffolding techniques used consistently, higher-order thinking skills promoted, students use learning strategies.
Component 5
Interaction
Frequent structured interaction between students, grouping configurations support objectives, students given wait time.
Component 6
Practice & Application
Hands-on activities, activities integrated all language skills, students apply content and language knowledge.
Component 7
Lesson Delivery
Content objectives clearly supported, language objectives supported, students engaged 90%+ of class time.
Component 8
Review & Assessment
Key vocabulary reviewed, key content concepts reviewed, feedback given on student output, assessment of student comprehension.

What SIOP is — and what it isn't

SIOP is an instructional delivery model. It tells teachers how to structure their instruction so ELL students can access content. It does not specify what students should know at each proficiency level, and it does not provide an assessment system. A teacher implementing SIOP with fidelity knows how to structure a lesson for ELL students; she still needs WIDA standards to know what language outcomes she's targeting.

Key insight: SIOP was originally validated specifically for sheltered content instruction — content-area classes designed for ELL students. Many educators now apply SIOP techniques in mainstream inclusion classrooms, but the evidence base is strongest in dedicated ELL settings. This doesn't mean it's wrong to use SIOP in mainstream classrooms — it's just worth knowing what the research was actually studying.
SIOP Strengths
  • Research-validated instructional model with a strong evidence base
  • Specific, observable, and measurable teacher behaviors
  • Built-in observation protocol for coaching and teacher evaluation
  • Addresses content and language objectives simultaneously
  • Applicable across all content areas (math, science, social studies, ELA)
  • Well-developed professional development ecosystem
SIOP Limitations
  • 30 features across 8 components — high-fidelity implementation requires sustained PD
  • Not a standards framework — doesn't define proficiency levels or assessment benchmarks
  • Originally designed for sheltered settings; adaptation to mainstream requires care
  • Heavy initial investment in teacher training (30–40 hours minimum)
  • No built-in assessment — relies on separate tools for measuring ELP outcomes

WIDA vs SIOP: Side-by-Side Comparison

Here's the full comparison. The most important column is "What question does it answer?" — that's the root of the distinction.

Dimension WIDA SIOP
What question does it answer? What should ELL students know and be able to do at each proficiency level? How should teachers deliver instruction to make content comprehensible for ELL students?
Framework type Standards & assessment framework Instructional delivery model
Primary focus Student language proficiency outcomes Teacher instructional practices and behaviors
Assessment component Yes — ACCESS for ELLs (annual state assessment) Observation only — SIOP protocol is a teacher observation rubric, not a student assessment
Proficiency levels defined Yes — 6 levels (Entering through Reaching) No — does not define or measure student proficiency levels
Lesson planning guidance Indirect — can inform objectives and differentiation by level Yes — Component 1 (Lesson Preparation) directly structures lesson planning
Scaffolding approach Proficiency level descriptors guide what scaffolds are appropriate at each level Explicit scaffolding techniques (visual supports, sentence frames, think-alouds, graphic organizers) are built into the model
Teacher training requirement Moderate — deep understanding of ELP levels, language domains, and standards alignment Significant — 30–40 hours initial PD, ongoing coaching, observation cycles
Content-area integration Partial — 2020 Standards include content-area language but not instructional delivery Core feature — SIOP was designed specifically for content-area instruction with ELL students
Adoption scope 40+ U.S. states; state-mandated in most WIDA member states Widely used; not state-mandated; adopted through district and school choice
Who "owns" it WIDA Consortium (University of Wisconsin–Madison) CAL (Center for Applied Linguistics) / commercial publishing (Pearson)
Can be used together? Yes — complementary, not competing. WIDA defines the target; SIOP guides how to get there.
Kuliso support Full — lesson planner aligns to WIDA standards by ELP level and language domain Full — lesson planner structures output around SIOP components including content and language objectives

When to Use WIDA, SIOP, or Both

The honest answer: most programs benefit from both. But the context in which each framework matters most differs.

When WIDA is the primary driver

WIDA is non-negotiable if you're in a WIDA member state. Your ELL students are assessed on ACCESS, their proficiency scores determine programming decisions, and your instruction must target the right level. In this context, WIDA standards are the foundation of your curriculum design — everything else builds on top.

WIDA is also the right anchor for:

When SIOP is the primary driver

SIOP is most valuable when your challenge is teacher instructional practice — specifically, how general education teachers deliver content instruction to ELL students in mainstream settings. If you have ELL students in science, social studies, or math classes with teachers who don't have deep ELL training, SIOP gives those teachers a concrete, observable framework to improve their practice.

SIOP is also the right tool for:

When to use both

The strongest ELL programs integrate both frameworks. WIDA defines what students need to achieve and provides the assessment infrastructure to measure it. SIOP provides the instructional delivery model that helps teachers actually get students there.

The clearest way to think about it

WIDA is the destination map. It tells you where ELL students need to be — what they need to produce in Listening, Speaking, Reading, and Writing at each proficiency level, and how you'll know when they've arrived. SIOP is the vehicle. It tells teachers how to drive — how to structure lessons, scaffold input, facilitate interaction, and review learning so students can actually make the journey. You need both the map and the vehicle.

What about programs in non-WIDA states?

Non-WIDA states (Texas, California, Florida, and a few others) have their own ELP standards frameworks. Texas uses ELPS (English Language Proficiency Standards) and TELPAS. California uses CA ELD Standards. Florida uses NGSSS/CELLA. In these states, SIOP is still applicable as an instructional model — SIOP doesn't require WIDA. Align SIOP's content and language objectives to your state's ELP standards instead. The instructional techniques transfer.


How Kuliso Supports Both Frameworks — Plus Five Others

Kuliso's AI lesson planner was built specifically for ELL teachers navigating multiple framework requirements simultaneously. Here's what that means in practice:

📋
WIDA Alignment
Lesson plans are calibrated to the correct WIDA ELP level with appropriate language complexity, vocabulary, and scaffolding for each domain.
🏗️
SIOP Structure
Plans include content and language objectives, building background, comprehensible input strategies, and review — the core SIOP components built in by default.
🌍
247+ Language Scaffolds
Bilingual sentence frames and native-language instructional support for 247+ languages — aligned to the student's WIDA proficiency level.
Multi-Framework Support
Also supports Danielson, Marzano, T-TESS (Texas), VDOE, and iTeach/Florida. Specify your required framework and get plans that satisfy all of them.

The practical value: an ESOL teacher in a WIDA state running a co-taught social studies class with a Danielson-based evaluation framework can generate a lesson plan that is simultaneously WIDA Level 3-aligned, SIOP-structured, and Danielson-scaffolded — without manually cross-referencing three different framework documents. That's two to three hours of planning time returned every week.

Kuliso also supports the student-facing side: adaptive AI tutoring that adjusts language complexity to match a student's current WIDA proficiency level in real time, plus life skills curriculum for secondary ELL students who need real-world readiness alongside academic English development.

Lesson plans that are WIDA-aligned and SIOP-structured — automatically

Kuliso's AI lesson planner handles framework alignment so you don't have to. Specify your grade, content area, ELP level, and framework — get a complete lesson plan in minutes. Supports WIDA, SIOP, Danielson, Marzano, T-TESS, VDOE, and iTeach/Florida simultaneously.

Try the Lesson Planner → For Teachers →

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the difference between WIDA and SIOP?
WIDA is a standards and assessment framework that defines what ELL students should know and be able to do at each proficiency level (Entering through Reaching) across four language domains. SIOP is an instructional delivery model that tells teachers how to structure their instruction to make academic content comprehensible for English learners. WIDA answers "what are students aiming for?" SIOP answers "how should teachers teach?" They're complementary — most effective ELL programs use both.
Can a school use both WIDA and SIOP?
Yes — and many of the strongest ELL programs do. WIDA provides the standards framework and proficiency benchmarks that define instructional targets. SIOP provides the instructional delivery model for how teachers meet those targets. They operate at different levels: WIDA at the curriculum design level, SIOP at the lesson delivery level. Using both creates a coherent program where teachers know what students need to achieve and how to teach in a way that gets them there. Kuliso's lesson planner supports both frameworks simultaneously.
Which states use WIDA standards?
Over 40 U.S. states and Washington D.C. use WIDA English Language Development standards. Notable WIDA states include Illinois, North Carolina, Wisconsin, Colorado, Georgia, New Jersey, Indiana, and many others. Non-WIDA states use their own ELP frameworks: Texas uses ELPS/TELPAS, California uses CA ELD Standards, and Florida uses its own standards. If you're in a WIDA state, WIDA alignment is required — not optional.
Is SIOP only for sheltered content classrooms?
SIOP was originally developed and validated for sheltered instruction settings — content-area classes specifically designed for ELL students. However, its eight components and 30 features are broadly applicable in any classroom that includes ELL students, including mainstream co-taught classes. Many general education teachers use SIOP techniques without formally teaching sheltered content. The research base is strongest for sheltered settings, but the instructional principles transfer well to mainstream inclusion models.
How much teacher training does SIOP require?
Implementing SIOP with fidelity typically requires 30–40 hours of initial professional development, followed by ongoing coaching and observation cycles. SIOP has eight components and 30 specific features — embedding all of them as consistent classroom practice takes time. Many districts phase SIOP implementation over two to three years, starting with a subset of components. WIDA requires less behavioral change from teachers but deeper understanding of the ELP level descriptors and how to use them for instructional differentiation.
Does Kuliso support both WIDA and SIOP?
Yes. Kuliso's AI lesson planner generates lesson plans that are WIDA-aligned at the standards level and SIOP-structured at the instructional delivery level. It also supports Danielson, Marzano, T-TESS (Texas), VDOE (Virginia), and iTeach/Florida. Teachers can specify one or multiple frameworks and get a lesson plan that satisfies all of them simultaneously — without manually cross-referencing standards documents. The planner also generates bilingual sentence frames for 247+ languages, calibrated to the correct WIDA proficiency level.