“…When this survey was repeated 5 years later with a national sample of programs, there was only minor change; 15% of bachelor's degree programs and 13% of associate degree programs reported requiring an entire course or more in the subject area of "working with bilingual children learning English as a second language" (Maxwell, Lim, & Early, 2006, p. 12). Lim, Maxwell, Able-Boone, and Zimmer (2009) did find that individual early childhood program requirements for course coverage in linguistic diversity were more variable when compared to course coverage in general cultural diversity. Only 14% of institutions required an entire course or more focused on linguistic diversity, while 47% required a course or more focused on general cultural diversity Downloaded by [University of Otago] at 12:56 25 July 2015 (Lim et al, 2009)-which, as indicated earlier, is not considered sufficient to effectively address the learning needs of DLLs.…”