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Historial Context of Bilingual Education: Colonial Times

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Title: Historial Context of Bilingual Education: Colonial Times


1
Historial Context of Bilingual EducationColonial
Times
  • Colonizers, unified history, with unified
    traditions, and with a common language
  • European languages were treated with respect.

2
Colonial Times
  • Neither an official language nor a
    government-sanctioned body to regulate speech was
    adopted
  • Absence of a consistent language ideology
  • Debate over official English has been present
    creating resentment and a variety of pedagogical
    practices.

3
1700s to 1880s
  • 18th 19th c., inconsistency regarding language
    ideology
  • Defensive Pluralism (Havinghurst, 1978),
    preservation of maternal language and cultures
  • Laws were passed authorizing bilingual education.

4
1700s to 1880s
  • Czech was taught in Texas, French in Louisiana,
    and Spanish in the Southwest
  • 1900, 600,000 children, 4 of the elementary
    school population received instruction in German
  • Southwest, beginning of 20th c. Spanish or
    English was the language of the school
    curriculum.

5
1880s to 1960
  • 1889, American Protective Association promoted
    English-only schools
  • 1918 to 1920, the Bureau of Naturalization and
    the Bureau of Education of the US
  • 1923, English only instruction in 34 states

6
1880s to 1960
  • Anti-German hostility during War World I
  • Americanization classes and English-only
    curriculum to prepare immigrants

7
1880s to 1960
  • The debate over the role of the mother tongue
    continued
  • 1923, Meyer v. Nebraska, prohibition to teach
    foreign languages was unconstitutional
  • The case had little effect in promoting BE.

8
1880s to 1960
  • Linguistic and cognitive theories and research
    findings blamed bilingualism for academic failure
    and mental retardation.
  • English was the language of the educated
  • Ignorance of English was attributed to inferior
    intelligence.

9
1880s to 1960
  • Ethnocentric attitude American culture more
    desirable
  • Adoption of the sink-or-swim method also known as
    submersion.
  • ESL classes served only adults.

10
1960 to 1980
  • Isolated bilingual programs were created with the
    following characteristics
  • English and the students native language was
    used in all grades for language and content
    instruction
  • Some included English-speakers
  • Programs were examples of excellence.

11
1960 to 1980
  • National Defense Education Act of 1958 aimed at
    raising the level of foreign-language education
    in the US
  • 1964 Civil Right Act fostered linguistic
    diversity
  • 1965 Immigration Act, Asians and Latin American
    began to enter the country more
    language-minority students appeared in US
    classroom.

12
1960-1980
  • Fidel Castros Cuban Revolution of 1959 fostered
    BE to prepare children for their return home
  • 1963, Cuban community established a highly
    successful two-way bilingual education program at
    Coral Way Elementary School in Dade County, FL.

13
1960-1980
  • 1968 creation of the Bilingual Education Act
    --Title VII of the Elementary and Secondary
    Education Act
  • Act strove to help language minority students as
    an offshoot of President Lyndon B. Johnsons War
    on Poverty

14
1960-1980
  • Title VII was unclear with regards to bilingual
    education original goal was the maintenance of
    bilingualism, later replaced by the use of home
    language to facilitate the acquisition of English
    only.
  • Significant step in moving away from English-only.

15
1960-1980
  • As a result of Title VII, many elementary and
    some secondary BE programs and ESL programs were
    initiated, especially in the Southwest.
  • Many states reversed the English-only laws
    Massachusetts enacted its Transitional Bilingual
    Education Act (1971) more than 20 other states
    followed.

16
1960-1980
  • Program characteristics
  • Native language was to be used to initiate
    instruction English was taught as a second
    language, and later introduced in instruction
  • Bilingual education was an educational strategy
    to address the needs of the ELL the native and
    the main language did not have the same status.

17
1960-1980
  • 1974, Lau v. Nichols (414 US 5637) case
  • Lau v. Nichols verdict
  • abolish the sink-or-swim practices of the past
  • August 1974, Equal Educational Opportunities Act
    expanded bilingual practices to all schools.

18
1960-1980
  • 1975 Lau Remedies (Office for Civil Rights)
  • The law recommended bilingual education as the
    best approach for elementary education
  • Law contained instructions for identification,
    assessment, and mainstreaming of students.

19
1960-1980
  • 1975 Lau Remedies
  • BE should recommended for school districts with
    at least 20 ELLs of same language
  • BE programs must be based on sound theoretical
    approach
  • BE aimed at biliteracy and biliculturalism.

20
1960-1980
  • Research studies supporting bilingual education
  • Pearl and Lamberts (1962), Ben_Zeev (1977),
    Ianco-Worrall (1972), Segalowitz (1977)
    demonstrated cognitive flexibility, higher verbal
    and non-verbal ability, and increased ability to
    analyze syntax by bilingual speakers
  • Ability to differentiate between two languages is
    not an impediment.

21
1960-1980
  • Research studies supporting bilingual education
  • Pearl and Lamberts (1962), Ben_Zeev (1977),
    Ianco-Worrall (1972), Segalowitz (1977)
    demonstrated cognitive flexibility, higher verbal
    and non-verbal ability, and increased ability to
    analyze syntax by bilingual speakers
  • Ability to differentiate between two languages is
    not an impediment.

22
1960-1980
  • 1981, Castañeda v. Pickard in a case of
    violation of civil rights under the Equal
    Education Opportunities Act of 1974
  • Fifth Circuit Court of Appeals verdict
  • sound educational theory anchoring school plan
  • adequate resources and personnel
  • program reflecting sound practices and language
    and academic results.

23
1960-1980
  • 1981, Castañeda v. Pickard in a case of
    violation of civil rights under the Equal
    Education Opportunities Act of 1974
  • Court verdict
  • Emphasis on English language ability did not
    violate appropriate implementation
  • sound educational theory anchoring school plan
  • adequate resources and personnel
  • program reflecting sound practices and language
    and academic results.

24
1980 to Present
  • Reagan preservation of native languages was
    anti-American--funds for English immersion
    programs increased
  • Laus regulations were terminated as were
    compliance reviews
  • US English (1983), English Only, and English
    First began to gain support

25
1980-Present
  • CA Proposition 187 was approved restricting
    services to illegal immigrants
  • CA Proposition 227 passed English became the
    primary medium of instruction for
    language-minority students
  • Ron Unz, initiator of the proposition bilingual
    programs failed to teach children English
  • Other states followed the CA example, including
    AZ, CO, WA, and MA.

26
1980-Present
  • 1999, President Clintons administration
  • restored funding for BE programs
  • dropped a bill article allowing only 2 years to
    learn English, increasing funding for
    English-only immersion programs, and hindering
    the implementation of two-way BE programs.
  • 2001, President GW Bush proposed the No Child
    Left Behind Act, replacing the Bilingual
    Education Act (1968-2001)

27
1980-Present
  • 1999, President Clintons administration
  • restored funding for BE programs
  • dropped a bill article allowing only 2 years to
    learn English, increasing funding for
    English-only immersion programs, and hindering
    the implementation of two-way BE programs.
  • 2001, President GW Bush proposed the No Child
    Left Behind Act to replace the Bilingual
    Education Act (1968-2001)

28
1980-Present
  • Creation of the Office of English Language
    Acquisition, Language Enhancement and Academic
    Achievement for Limited English Proficient
    students (OELA) in charge of administering Title
    III of the NCLB Act of 2001.
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