As teachers of MLs, we serve students and teachers through many roles. We coplan alongside teachers, we co-teach with our colleagues, and we work with students in small-group instruction too. Collaboration is a critical factor in the success of these. In this episode, Dr. Katie Toppel, Sara Sparks, and Stacy Brown share their unique and valuable perspectives. We talk about what collaboration is and what it isn’t. We discuss ways to build cooperation with colleagues who are resistant at first. And these leaders in our field, share their tips for collaboration. I know you’ll enjoy hearing from Katie, Sara, and Stacy just as much as I did. Dr. Katie Toppel is the newest member of the SIOP author team. She is currently a K-5 English Language Development Specialist in Oregon serving multilingual learners through co-planning, co-teaching, and small-group instruction. Dr. Toppel’s instructional background includes experience teaching kindergarten and first grade in addition to being a K-12 Support Services Teacher at the Franconian International School in Germany. She has taught courses in the ESOL endorsement series at Portland State University and continues to support teachers in their professional learning journeys. Dr. Toppel co-authored DIY PD: A Guide to Self-Directed Learning for Educators of Multilingual Learners and is also a co-founder of #MLLChat_BkClub on Twitter, which provides educators with opportunities to engage in virtual book studies focused on improving practices for multilingual learners. Twitter: @katietoppel Instagram @Toppel_ELD LinkedIN Katie Toppel, Ed.D Sara Sparks is an ESL Specialist who loves serving emergent bilinguals and working alongside campus administrators and teachers. Sara works with secondary ESL and newcomer students and works hard to ensure that they receive an equitable education. She has been an ESL Specialist for 4 years. Prior to that, she was a middle school reading teacher for 11 years. She is currently working on her doctorate in educational leadership. Her dissertation focus is the effects acculturative stress has on emergent bilinguals’ academic performance. Twitter @sarasparks21 Stacy Brown is a trauma and policy specialist, bilingual ELD educator, and international emergency case worker. She serves survivors in the US and 58 countries in North and South America, Europe, Asia, and the Middle East, assisting with issues related to displacement, war and severe conflict, education, healthcare, mental health, legal crises, and language, labor, and human rights. When in Oklahoma, she teaches English language development and intermittently serves as an ORR contractor outside of Oklahoma. She has served in leadership for TESOL International Association and TESOL affiliates for 16 years and serves in leadership with multiple organizations dedicated to protecting and advocating for immigrant families worldwide. LinkedIn Stacy Brown