Postsecondary education has become increasingly important as the gap in earnings between high school and college graduates continues to widen (Pew Research Center, 2014). Census Bureau data indicate that 88% college graduates and 77% of those with some college were employed, as compared with 69% of high school graduates (McFarland et al., 2017). Although postsecondary education outcomes have generally improved for students with disabilities as a whole, progress has not been consistent across disability, racial/ethnic, and socioeconomic subpopulations (Newman et al., 2011). These differential outcomes are particularly apparent for a growing sector of the U.S. school population: those who are dually identified as English learner (EL) students with disabilities. Many of these students face multiple barriers to postsecondary success, including those associated with disability intertwined with challenges linked to language and literacy development (Klingner, Artiles, & Barletta, 2006), structural barriers associated with individual-and community-level discrimination and poverty, and diminished access to high performing, resourced schools (Samson & Lesaux, 2015). To help address some of these barriers, researchers have focused on identifying the secondary transition practices and predictors related to improved postschool success (e.g.