Published: November 17, 2003
by: Jennifer Re
Opponents of bilingual education said "I told you so" last spring, when the state Department of Education announced test scores for "English learners." Those in English-only classrooms scored higher on a test of their English skills than students in "bilingual education," who spend part of the day studying English and the rest studying other subjects in their home language.
More than five years ago California voters passed Proposition 227, requiring public schools to be taught "overwhelmingly" in English "unless at least 20 parents in one grade request bilingual education." Now less than one in 10 English learners are in bilingual classroomsbefore Prop. 227 it was almost one in five.
Most students who enter the system with limited English spend one year in intensive English classes, then move to mainstream classrooms.
Has Prop. 227 helped or harmed "English language
learners?"
Helped!
Experiment after experiment with bilingual education
has shown its failure to teach English. The test scores
have confirmed this. Bilingual education is not used
anywhere else in the world. English has become the
world's unofficial language (especially for
business and technology).
Ron Unz, initiator of Proposition 227
When I told the school we speak Spanish at home, they put my son (who could speak English) in a 50-50 Spanish-English class (illegal under Prop. 227).
I'm against children taking bilingual classes because (they) don't give them the proper grammar they need to succeed in high school and college. Kids are sponges for languages. They watch TV; kids in the neighborhood talk to them in English. If we tell kids they have a language barrier, it holds them back. We should get the right to learn the proper business language.
So we asked them to put him in full English immersion.
When he got into the English class he was able to
focus more.
Lourdes Oliva, producer, Radio Bilingue
Some Good Effects
One positive is that the districts are adopting new
materials that are better at addressing the needs
of English learners. We also have more qualified aides
to assist students, some who can provide follow-up
in the home language. And more teachers now have (training
in teaching English learners).
Gary Dixon, prinicipal, Gardenhill Elementary
School, La Mirada
It's not good for the kids, but in some ways
it was good for the teachers. It made bilingual programs
clean up their act and show results, not only in the
primary language but also in teaching English. I'm
not sure it was the best way to do it, but in some
respects it has made programs more accountable.
Liz Aguirre, teacher, Bowling Green Elementary
School, Sacramento
Harmed!
(Prop. 227 created) a situation where English learners
are set up for failure because they are not able to
get any help in their native language. As a result,
the kids don't want to go to school. They feel
like low achievers.
What about last spring's tests, when students
in English-only classes got higher scores? Not
every district still has bilingual programs. The ones
that do tend to be large urban districtsthose
test scores will probably be lower.
David Sanchez, veteran teacher, Santa Maria
School District, secretary-treasurer, California Teachers
Association
In my experience, Prop 227 has been destructive to (English learners). While they develop the ability to communicate in English rather quickly, they haven't developed the English vocabulary and concepts for academic subjects.
I'm now teaching a group of English learners,
all in English, and they have a great deal of difficulty
in writing and in understanding complex concepts in
reading. If they had been developing those abilities
all along in their primary language, that could transfer
into English.
Paul Huebner, L.A. elementary school teacher,
East Area Chair for United Teachers of L.A.
Proposition 227 undermined the potential of many
students to be bilingual. Kids who speak a foreign
language are taught English at the expense of their
native language, which they lose and then have to
re-learn later.
Francisco Jimenez, novelist and Santa Clara
University professor
English immersion may help some students learn English
faster but it does not work for everyone. And many
Chinese parents value Chinese bilingual programs because
it enhances their connection to their child.
Christina Wong, policy advocate, Chinese
for Affirmative Action
Our school doesn't have any Spanish-speaking teachers at the primary level. Parents are coming to me saying that in kindergarten and first-grade, their kids come home crying because they don't understand, saying they hate school.
Then they come to us at the intermediate level and
they know they can't read, although they try
to hide it. Some of these students will drop outlook
at the drop-out rate for Latino students.
Lydia Cruz, teacher, Clayton B. Wire Elementary
School, Sacramento
The Issue Is Quality!
For me, both programs work if they are implemented
well. The question isn't whether someone teaches
in English, the question is how well someone teaches
English.
Howard Bryan, director of bilingual education
at Santa Ana Unified School District
The bilingual programs in my district are not
very organized, and certainly not as well staffed.
We don't have the trained teacherswe
don't even have a textbook. I don't think
[bilingual education] has been done well on a large
scale in California ever. (But) I think what we do
with bilingual education is better than taking their
language away at kindergarten.
Marta Gardner, bilingual teacher, Esperanza
Elementary School in L.A.
There's reams of research showing that effective bilingual programs develop students' academic and English proficiency as successfully or more successfully than English-only. The research also shows that most students can't learn English in one year.
(In last spring's tests) the scores of students in English-only programs moved up, but kids in bilingual education made greater gains proportionally.
But students in English-only classes still scored
higher.
Because parents whose kids are at the lowest level
of English proficiency put them into bilingual programs!
Norm Gold, former director of bilingual education
for the California Department of Education
As a principal, I found that Prop 227 can be successful only when four conditions are present:
- A competent teacher who knows English-teaching strategies
- After-school and summer (tutoring) that's at least partly in the student's primary language
- Students who come in with some literacy skills
- At least three hours a day of English language teaching
In the current budget environment, that's tough to get.
In Fresno County we have dual immersion bilingual education in Khmer and Spanish (English-speaking students learn the other language while speakers of that language learn English). The research is pretty clear. Scores of the English learners in those programs are behind in the beginning, but by seventh or eighth grade they are caught up and in some cases ahead.
As we become more of a global society, the ability
to be completely fluent in both languages is importantbut
without primary language support, they may not be
fluent in both.
Kathryn Catania, coordinator of programs
and student support, Fresno County Office of Education
For more information on English immersion and bilingual education:
- California Association for Bilingual Education [1]
- California State Department of Education [2]
- California Teachers Association [3]
- California Tomorrow [4]
This article originally appeared in the September/October
2003 issue of Children's Advocate, published
by Action Alliance for Children.
http://www.connectforkids.org/node/520
Links:
[1] http://www.bilingualeducation.org
[2] http://www.cde.ca.gov
[3] HTTP://www.cta.org
[4] http://californiatomorrow.org