Anonymous wrote:I don’t believe families really go for language, they go to socialize and find families like themselves. Language immersion charter are some what like private schools for educated middle class families.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Huge mistake unless you’re fine wasting your time with mediocre spanish at the expense of English and math. Sorry!
My 5th grader kid started in K and he is testing 2 grade levels above in math and English. He understands everything and watches movies in Spanish, can speak it to natives, etc…
If you are not a troll then sorry that your kid did not do well. Immersion is not for everyone. If you have an above average kid where things come easily, it’s a great experience.
If your kid struggles in core subjects then no, immersion is not for you because your kid needs more time in it
But is your child literate in Spanish (reading at a 5th grade level). I find that parents think their kids are more advanced than they actually are in the target language. I work at a dual language school (English side) and the Spanish teacher always tells parents how advanced their child is in Spanish. I think she’s just being nice because the same kids are high risk on the Spanish MAP assessment.