Leonard,
You got it - mastering English is the first step to education and education is the step to determining income potential.
ELL = “Socioeconomically disadvantaged”
On the Coastside, ‘No English’ means farm labour, landscaping and day labour for men and for the women, working as maids in the hotels. This is not a negative statement on the work; but that these are the jobs that don’t provide adequate income. CUSD has guaranteed an adequate supply of cheap labour.
I have never really definitively concluded whether it is: incompetence, indifference or worse!
CUSD receives extra money for ELL instruction and apparently, by results, the money goes elsewhere:
[Number and Percent of Students Redesignated to FEP (with school data]
This miserable result is even worse, in that CUSD classifies as ELL apparently by parent name (if it sounds Latino to them)...if the parents complain in English, the kids are moved to the correct class and they reclassify the child as R-FEP to make it look like they are actually teaching. As a real irony, the longer the kids stays as ELL, the longer the money comes in, without results.
[upload: 10Aug06_District_Report_on_ELL: slide 24]
Your ‘guess’ is correct, CUSD has refused to look at anything which would approach, let alone match, a “crash course” criteria for English acquisition. They prefer “Sheltered English”, aka, ‘Segregated by Language’ with 80% of the ELL students. Then there is the “Spanish Immersion” called abandon the Latino before they acquire English at Cunha Middle School. Last year, only 22 students were moved to “English Language Mainstream Class” by CUSD.
OTOH, parents of 6 kids had the chutzpah to use [CCR 11301(b)] which permits a parent or guardian of an English Learner to request, at any time during the school year, that a child be placed in English Language Mainstream Classroom and be provided with additional and appropriate services.
As to your question: ‘how can a school in California legally provide a program of instruction in a language other than English?’
CDE Answer: “Parents of English learners must sign yearly waivers of consent prior to placement of their child in a two-way immersion program.”
Do you think the CUSD waiver tells the mother there is less than a 50-50 shot that CUSD will ever teach her child English?
Ken