Tuesday, February 9, 2016

Public Schools Stifling Spanish: The English Language Learner Dilemma


            Picture this: it’s your first day of kindergarten. You may have just moved to a new neighborhood, one that is middle class compared to the block you used to live on. You are excited to meet new friends and learn all about new subjects at school…there’s just one problem. You don’t speak English.



A classroom depicts diversity in their students’ languages.
            This scenario happens all too often nationally in our public schools. Teachers are not equipped to teach or understand Spanish, so the children that come into class with this perceived “deficit” are pushed to the wayside. They are labeled incompetent, delayed, and even learning disabled. They are pushed further and further down the ranks of the educational class level hierarchy, until they are forced to be in class levels inappropriate to their skills, if only given the right chance. It is imperative that these discriminatory situations be abolished, but for that to happen one must educate themselves on the wrongs of our education system.

            In her article in The Atlantic, Melinda D. Anderson states that "one in four school children ages 5 to 17 speak a language other than English at home.” This striking statistic should be enough to jolt those in the education system to reevaluate the direction that our schools are taking to educate students who are not from a purely American background, and who do not speak the same language as their born-and-bred American classmates. Another issue regarding ELL students is the debate over whether it is more important for those who are considered ELLs to leave their culture behind and adopt the American way of life, or whether it should be their school’s priority to make them feel accepted in what may be foreign territory to them. To create even more difficulty for these students, the newly enacted Common Core Standards are holding all students to more difficult and rigorous standards, but now English Language Learners have another hurdle to clear. The critical thinking and vocabulary demands on students under these standards are more intense than ever, pushing students who may not be proficient in English into a deeper rut when trying to achieve in school using their second language. On the elementary level, it is concerning to come to terms with the fact that these students simply are not getting the correct pedagogical education that they need to succeed in the future. The controversial nature of these tests determining the futures of English language proficient students is one which is in the forefront, while struggling ELLs are left to add another reason to their list of why they will potentially not attend their dream college or be destined to follow the career paths of their immigrant parents because the American school system dictated to them that once again, they were not good enough. Closing the achievement gap for these students will be one of the most important issues for public school officials to grapple with in the future of standardized testing and curriculum shifts to come.

            American public schools must learn the origin of the detriment of their English Language Learners is not to stifle their original language, but to allow it to thrive and perpetuate learning. Made example by Anderson through research on public schools in California, the move toward not singularly teaching students in English has shown benefits for the English Language Learner population. By interweaving the cultures of these exceptional learners, the classroom will reap the benefits of multicultural learning and closing the learning and cultural representation gap for all students. By doing this, we can exemplify the exclamation made in the image above, and support bilingual classrooms for the betterment of all students.