“…Finally, the preservice teachers saw a role for language in certain science practices (e.g., argue, explain) but less so in others, and they mainly emphasized the contributions of linguistic modalities (listening, reading, speaking, writing) to scientific sense‐making, with less attention to other semiotic resources (e.g., gesture, drawing). One bright spot was that preservice teachers, many of whom were multilingual themselves, reflected on how their own science learning experiences could have been more linguistically sustaining, for example, by expanding beyond, in one teacher's words, science “always [done] through the standard English academic language” (González‐Howard et al, 2022). The researchers concluded that, without opportunities to critically reflect on their understandings of language, science, and the integration of the two, preservice teachers would likely engage MLs in science in limited and limiting ways (González‐Howard et al, 2022).…”