Anonymous wrote:Is there a large population of immigrants from Germany in West Springfield (Orange Hunt Elementary School)?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
OP here. The school that offers Spanish immersion in our area does have a very high Hispanic population. I think it is about 1/3 Hispanic.
I think the point is for Spanish speakers to learn English and vice versa. DH thinks our kids should learn History in English and not Spanish.
I teach at a FCPS immersion school, although it is a language other than Spanish. I have the students for language arts and social studies...in English. They take math and science in the immersion language.
Math is taught in Spanish?!?! I would think that takes away a lot from the lessons.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
OP here. The school that offers Spanish immersion in our area does have a very high Hispanic population. I think it is about 1/3 Hispanic.
I think the point is for Spanish speakers to learn English and vice versa. DH thinks our kids should learn History in English and not Spanish.
I teach at a FCPS immersion school, although it is a language other than Spanish. I have the students for language arts and social studies...in English. They take math and science in the immersion language.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
OP here. The school that offers Spanish immersion in our area does have a very high Hispanic population. I think it is about 1/3 Hispanic.
I think the point is for Spanish speakers to learn English and vice versa. DH thinks our kids should learn History in English and not Spanish.
American kids should learn EVERYthing in English and not Spanish. Foreign language classes, regardless of language, are the exception.
Sadly in this area they are going to see Spanish everywhere they go because foreign invaders are being catered to.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
OP here. The school that offers Spanish immersion in our area does have a very high Hispanic population. I think it is about 1/3 Hispanic.
I think the point is for Spanish speakers to learn English and vice versa. DH thinks our kids should learn History in English and not Spanish.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
OP here. The school that offers Spanish immersion in our area does have a very high Hispanic population. I think it is about 1/3 Hispanic.
I think the point is for Spanish speakers to learn English and vice versa. DH thinks our kids should learn History in English and not Spanish.
Anonymous wrote:I think it is a little perplexing to run a Spanish immersion program at an overwhelmingly Hispanic population school.
I thought the point was to teach students English for those Hispanic children where Spanish is the primary language at home.
Anonymous wrote:Aren't these programs meant mainly to teach another language to students whose primary language is English? I have read that the younger a person is when introduced to a second language, the easier it is to learn another language. Fairfax County has elementary school programs in German and Japanese, in addition to Spanish. People in other countries begin to learn English at early ages, so it is good for English speakers to learn other languages, also.
Anonymous wrote:Aren't these programs meant mainly to teach another language to students whose primary language is English? I have read that the younger a person is when introduced to a second language, the easier it is to learn another language. Fairfax County has elementary school programs in German and Japanese, in addition to Spanish. People in other countries begin to learn English at early ages, so it is good for English speakers to learn other languages, also.