Virginia SOL Practice for Multilingual Students: What Teachers Need to Know
Why SOL Practice Hits Different for ELL Students
Virginia's Department of Education (VDOE) provides SOL practice items and released tests that are excellent for native English speakers. For multilingual students, those same materials can create a compounding barrier: the language of the test becomes an obstacle that prevents students from demonstrating the content knowledge they actually have.
The research is clear. According to the WIDA Consortium, ELL students typically reach conversational English fluency (BICS) within 2–3 years, but academic language proficiency (CALP) — the kind needed for standardized tests — takes 5–7 years to develop. Virginia SOL assessments are dense with CALP-level vocabulary, complex syntax, and domain-specific terminology.
The result: multilingual students score lower than their actual content knowledge warrants. Teachers know their students understand the material — they just can't show it on the test.
How VDOE SOL Standards Apply to ELL Students
ESOL Program Participation and SOL Testing
Virginia requires ELL students to participate in SOL assessments. ESOL program students are entitled to specific testing accommodations under VDOE guidelines, including extended time, bilingual dictionaries, and in some cases, translated versions of non-reading assessments. However, accommodations only help if students have been practicing in a way that mirrors how they'll be tested.
The Language Proficiency Gap in SOL Practice
Most SOL practice materials assume a baseline of English academic language that many ELL students haven't yet developed. A student might understand the concept of "civic responsibility" in Spanish, Amharic, or Vietnamese — but freeze when the SOL question asks them to "evaluate the significance of civic participation in a democratic society."
Effective SOL prep for multilingual students requires two tracks working simultaneously:
- Content knowledge development — teaching grade-level SOL objectives in the student's strongest language so the concept is solid
- Academic language scaffolding — building the English vocabulary and sentence structures specific to each SOL content area
How Kuliso Aligns to Virginia SOL Standards
Kuliso was built specifically for multilingual learners in standards-aligned classrooms. Every lesson in Kuliso maps to specific state learning standards, including Virginia SOL objectives across math, science, social studies, and English.
Native Language First, English Instruction Second
Kuliso's core approach — teaching content in the student's home language before transferring to English — is directly supported by decades of research and reflects the bridge approach validated by bilingual education researchers. When a student learns what "conductors and insulators" means in their home language, the English SOL terminology becomes a vocabulary mapping exercise rather than a concept-learning challenge.
SOL-Tagged Practice Items
Kuliso's adaptive assessment engine tags practice questions to specific SOL grade-level objectives. Teachers can assign practice aligned to exactly the SOL strand a student needs — not generic test prep, but precision-targeted practice.
| SOL Subject Area | Kuliso Coverage | Languages Available |
|---|---|---|
| Math (K–8) | All SOL math strands, grade-by-grade | 246+ |
| Science (3–8) | Life, Earth, Physical science objectives | 246+ |
| Social Studies (K–8) | Civics, geography, history objectives | 246+ |
| English (Reading) | Comprehension, vocabulary, fluency | Bilingual scaffolding |
Practical SOL Prep Strategies for Multilingual Classrooms
Strategy 1: Concept-First, Language-Second Sequencing
Before drilling SOL practice items, ensure students have a solid grasp of the underlying concept in their most proficient language. Use Kuliso to deliver the concept lesson in the student's home language, then transition to English practice items. This sequence prevents the language barrier from masking content gaps that don't actually exist.
Strategy 2: SOL Vocabulary Walls in Two Languages
Every SOL content area has a core vocabulary set. Build bilingual vocabulary walls that pair each SOL term with its equivalent in your students' primary languages. Kuliso's Vocabulary Builder supports this with cognate detection — flagging when an English academic term has a close cognate in Spanish, French, Portuguese, or other Romance languages. For Spanish-speaking students especially, this is a significant academic advantage.
Strategy 3: Use Released VDOE Items Alongside Native Language Explanations
VDOE releases SOL practice items annually. Use these authentic items for test familiarity, but pair them with Kuliso's explanations in the student's home language when a student gets an answer wrong. Understanding why a practice item is incorrect — in the language they think in — is more valuable than repetitive drilling.
Strategy 4: Scaffold Academic Language Explicitly
SOL assessments use specific sentence structures: "which best explains," "based on the passage," "what is most likely to." Explicitly teach these linguistic frames. Students who recognize these patterns can focus their cognitive resources on the content, not the language of the question.
Teachers using Kuliso for SOL prep report that students who practice in their home language first show measurably greater retention on English-language assessments. The concept sticks — the language transfer follows.
The Role of ESOL Accommodations in SOL Testing
VDOE permits specific accommodations for ELL students during SOL testing. The most effective accommodations are those students have practiced with regularly — not just during the test itself.
Kuliso supports accommodation-consistent practice:
- Bilingual glossaries — students can access definitions of non-tested vocabulary in their home language
- Extended response time simulation — untimed practice mode mirrors the extended time accommodation
- Text-to-speech — for listening-based learning styles
- Simplified language scaffolding — progressively building academic language complexity
See student accommodation profiles for how to set up individual accommodation plans in Kuliso.
What Virginia Teachers Are Saying
ESOL specialists in Virginia school districts using Kuliso describe the same pattern: students who previously scored Below Proficient on SOL assessments begin showing growth when content instruction meets them in their home language. The SOL doesn't get easier — students get better prepared for it.
The goal of SOL prep for ELL students isn't to make tests easier. It's to ensure the test measures what it's supposed to measure: content knowledge — not English proficiency. When instruction is multilingual, assessments stop punishing students for being bilingual.
Building a Year-Round SOL Prep Plan for Multilingual Learners
Waiting until spring to ramp up SOL prep is the most common mistake in ELL classrooms. For multilingual students, SOL preparation is most effective as a year-round practice, not a test-season sprint.
A sustainable approach:
- Fall: Establish home language baselines. Use Kuliso's diagnostic assessments to identify which SOL strands each student has conceptual mastery of — regardless of English proficiency.
- Winter: Targeted concept building in home language + academic vocabulary development in both languages.
- Spring: Shift emphasis to English-language practice items and test format familiarity. Students arrive at SOL prep with concepts intact — only the English needs reinforcing.
See How Kuliso Works for Virginia SOL Prep
Watch how Kuliso maps to VDOE SOL objectives and delivers concept instruction in your students' home languages — so every student can show what they actually know.
See How It Works in Your Classroom