Bilingual
education in US in its infancy, but growing
"Brazil, with a 'z' or an's'?" asks a girl. "In Spanish, it's with an's,' in English with a 'z,'" another kid answers. Just another day in a bilingual class at a Los Angeles school.
"Brazil, with a 'z' or an's'?" asks a girl. "In Spanish, it's with an's,' in English with a 'z,'" another kid answers. Just another day in a bilingual class at a Los Angeles school.
A
sign that proclaims "Bienvenido/Welcome" is pinned above the
blackboard of this class in a bilingual program at Franklin High School.
It's
Thursday morning, and in history class, teacher Blanca Claudio asks her 11- and
12- year old students to find Mesoamerica -- an area stretching from southern
Mexico through Central America -- on the map.
Half
of the population of Los Angeles -- the second most populous US city after New
York -- is of Hispanic origin, and Latinos make up 16 percent of the US
population, making them the largest single ethnic minority group in the
country.
In
addition, even though Spanish is the second most spoken language in the United
States and commonly heard in Los Angeles, not even this city has a large bilingual
school program.
Most
such programs are just designed to serve as a bridge so that foreign students
can learn English, and then move on take the mainstream English-language
classes.
However,
fully bilingual programs -- in which kids take some classes in English and
others in another language -- like the one at Franklin are set to expand
starting July 1 when a law called Proposition 58 comes into effect. Although
Franklin is called a high school, it also includes a middle school. So it has
kids as young as 11.
Passed
by 73 percent of voters in a referendum that was held in November, Proposition
58 allows school districts to expand their bilingual education programs if
parents so request.
"Under
Prop 58, it's about all kids. Parents of monolingual students could take
advantage of dual-language programs," said Hilda Maldonado, director of
multilingual education for the Los Angeles Unified School District. "We
consider it a win-win approach for all kids to become bilingual."
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'Parochial' about languages -
There
is not a single bilingual public school in Los Angles, nor are there any plans
right now to open one.
In
addition, the bilingual programs that do exist cover few students. Claudio's
sixth grade class, for instance, is part of a plan that benefits 40 of the
1,400 students at Franklin High School, which is 91 percent Latino.
Nevertheless,
many of those kids of Hispanic origin do not speak Spanish: the custom of
passing it on one from one generation to the next was gradually lost in the
country where bilingualism has triggered heated debate.
"The
United States has traditionally been very parochial, very provincial, with
respect to language learning," said Claude Goldenberg, a professor at the
Graduate School of Education at Stanford University.
For
a long time, the idea was that classes in America had to be taught in English
only. So many Latino immigrant parents sacrificed their language so their
children would adapt better to their new country.
Maldonado
said many Latinos themselves do not see the advantage of bilingual education,
although "second, third, fourth-generation parents have seen the value of
bringing back their heritage language."
Goldenberg
said that, in general, people are showing more interest in bilingual education,
and estimates that the number of bilingual programs in America has gone from
300 to 2,000 in recent years. There is no consolidated national figure because
schools in America are managed at the local level. "Middle class Anglos
can see the advantages of their children learning two languages," said
Goldenberg. Besides Spanish, in Los Angeles there are bilingual education
programs in Korean, Mandarin Chinese, Arabic and Armenian.
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Traveling the world -
The
goal in bilingual programs is for students to learn two languages as their
mother tongues. "It is hard to get used to it but it is fun to learn a
different language and different cultures," said Lulu Mykytyn, 11, who has
been in a bilingual program for the past year.
She
still struggles a bit in Spanish but expressed confidence she will be fluent
when she finishes high school.
Another
girl, Stella Ferguson, speaks Spanish a bit better. Then there is Colin Smith,
whose Spanish is almost perfect and features a nice Mexican accent. He has been
in bilingual classes since grade school.
"I
do not want to be trapped in just one place. I want to travel all over the
world," said Daniela Enamoured, 12, whose family hails from El Salvador.
Under
an agreement with an elementary school in the same mainly Latino neighbourhood
of Highland Park, Franklin expects to take in 20 new students next year to
launch its first bilingual ninth grade program.
From
sixth to eighth grade -- kids aged 11 to 13 -- students take three classes in
Spanish and three in English.
In
high school -- grades 9 to 12 and kids aged 14 to 18 -- it is four in English
and two in Spanish. "I do believe in bilingual education," said
Franklin principal Regina Marquez Martinez. "This is a vision."
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