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| This editorial originally appeared in the LA Times on July 28, 1998 © Los Angeles Times
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Scrambling Toward 227
BUSINESSMAN RON K. UNZ AND HIS ALLIES had at least two goals in mind last year when they drafted Proposition 227: to end bilingual education in California, and to ensure that the initiative would withstand a court challenge if it won voter approval.
A: Much was made during the campaign about the initiative's call for a one-year English immersion program instead of bilingual education. Critics said many students would be left to sink or swim because few would become fluent in English in just one year. But here's where the initiative hedged. It said that limited-English students should get help through English immersion for a time "not normally intended to exceed one year" and that they should be mainstreamed after they had acquired a "good working knowledge" of English. The emergency regulations say that students can, in fact, stay longer than one year in English immersion classes, unless their parents object. And they appear to grant local educators considerable leeway to define a "good working knowledge" of the language. So a student in one district with a high standard for fluency might stay longer in an English immersion classroom than a student with equal abilities in another district with a lower standard. A: The regulations, in line with federal court rulings, require school districts to continue to provide extra help to such students until they have reached a level of proficiency skill on a par with the average native English speaker in the district, and until they have made up any ground lost in other subjects while they were learning English. There is no time limit on such help. A: The regulations explicitly say that parents "must be provided" with a full description of the English immersion program "and any alternative courses of study" the district would offer. A: Probably. The initiative does not ban the use of other languages in a classroom. To have done so would have invited a judge to block the law. Instead, it says that English immersion classes must have "nearly all" instruction in English. The emergency regulations do not elaborate on what that means. Many local educators are crafting plans that include a fair amount of native language instruction in a classroom, whether through aides or credentialed teachers. A: Yes. The initiative itself allows parents to apply for waivers allowing their children to take bilingual classes. But there are several caveats. Parents must apply annually, in person, for the waivers. Students must fit into one of three categories: those who already know English and whose parents want them to learn another language; those who are 10 or older and are thought to need an alternative program; or those who have documented "special physical, emotional, psychological or educational needs." The new state regulations say that school officials must have "substantial evidence" to the contrary to turn down a waiver request; initiative supporters say that the state board misinterpreted the law on that point. Any school in which 20 or more students in a given grade are granted waivers will be required to offer bilingual education. Finally, the quasi-independent "charter" schools are exempt from the initiative and from almost all of the state education code. But they are a tiny fraction of the public school system--about 150 schools out of 8,000. A: The initiative did not put any state agency in charge of enforcement. But it specified that dissatisfied parents could sue a school board member, an administrator and even a teacher for "willfully and repeatedly" breaking the law.
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