Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:No.
My problem is not LATINO parents and their children. I am all for language immersion for my child.
My problem is lower income families. There is nothing good about poverty. Poverty is a curse. And many children and parents are traumatized because of that.
Maybe you can verbalize what exactly you’re afraid of.
Are you afraid your kids will catch The Poverty? Are you afraid your kids will accidentally touch Walmart quality clothing? Or they’ll be invited to a play date at someone’s *gasp* apartment? Poverty isn’t contagious. I’m not sure what your issue is. Unless your issue is just being around poor people.
Anonymous wrote:No.
My problem is not LATINO parents and their children. I am all for language immersion for my child.
My problem is lower income families. There is nothing good about poverty. Poverty is a curse. And many children and parents are traumatized because of that.
Anonymous wrote:No.
My problem is not LATINO parents and their children. I am all for language immersion for my child.
My problem is lower income families. There is nothing good about poverty. Poverty is a curse. And many children and parents are traumatized because of that.
Anonymous wrote:Yes, we sent our kids to a daycare/preschool like that (there were a handful of full pay families in each classroom). It was a great school! Our oldest learned Spanish before English. Sadly, our public elementary school doesn't teach Spanish so they lost their second language skills, but they are doing fine with English now. The only challenge for me was communicating with some of the teachers who came from Latin America, but my spouse was fairly fluent so took charge there. All of the Spanish-speaking parents also spoke English, fortunately. We set up class playdates at local playgrounds.