Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If we could put all struggling students in a different classroom with ESOL support and extra aides - we would be able to do it cheaply. The whole school does not need ESOL or extra aides. Struggling students and disruptive students should not be in the regular classroom. It is as simple as that.
This is one big IDEA violation right here.
Children, including English language learners, those with learning disabilities (struggling students), and those with "disruptive" behavioral differences have a legal right to a least restrictive environment.
And you can also be white, wealthy and a fluent English speaker and still be a very disruptive student.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:If we could put all struggling students in a different classroom with ESOL support and extra aides - we would be able to do it cheaply. The whole school does not need ESOL or extra aides. Struggling students and disruptive students should not be in the regular classroom. It is as simple as that.
This is one big IDEA violation right here.
Children, including English language learners, those with learning disabilities (struggling students), and those with "disruptive" behavioral differences have a legal right to a least restrictive environment.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ESOL teacher here. Out of my 40 students, 32 of them are U.S. citizens. This is the case from year to year for the most part.
How can you know this if it is illegal to ask?
When students register for school, they are required to give their birth certificate. A copy is made and placed in their cumulative file. That’s how we know. Do you have kids? A parent would know this.
Not always. Not sure what the actual rule is, but we are at a FOCUS school, and we gets lots of students who come and go. At our school, we get a huge rush of K kids right before school starts, at the end of August, and the school is REQUIRED to let them attend. They cannot turn them away. So, we do have kids without appropriate documentation who enroll.
Also, FTR, it is incredibly easy to forge birth certificates from certain countries. We have had that come up as an issue in our cluster several times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ESOL teacher here. Out of my 40 students, 32 of them are U.S. citizens. This is the case from year to year for the most part.
How can you know this if it is illegal to ask?
When students register for school, they are required to give their birth certificate. A copy is made and placed in their cumulative file. That’s how we know. Do you have kids? A parent would know this.
Not always. Not sure what the actual rule is, but we are at a FOCUS school, and we gets lots of students who come and go. At our school, we get a huge rush of K kids right before school starts, at the end of August, and the school is REQUIRED to let them attend. They cannot turn them away. So, we do have kids without appropriate documentation who enroll.
Also, FTR, it is incredibly easy to forge birth certificates from certain countries. We have had that come up as an issue in our cluster several times.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ESOL teacher here. Out of my 40 students, 32 of them are U.S. citizens. This is the case from year to year for the most part.
How can you know this if it is illegal to ask?
When students register for school, they are required to give their birth certificate. A copy is made and placed in their cumulative file. That’s how we know. Do you have kids? A parent would know this.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ESOL teacher here. Out of my 40 students, 32 of them are U.S. citizens. This is the case from year to year for the most part.
How can you know this if it is illegal to ask?
Anonymous wrote:I've lived in Germany and I can confirm that kids are placed in language immersion schools for several months or years (depending on the student) before being mainstreamed into German schools. This is paid for by the government, although most people from DMV probably wouldn't think much of the quality of instruction or of the fact that they keep all of these German learners totally separated from the other students. There's usually no interaction at all. (It would be kind of like keeping all the SN kids in one classroom in the US.) I personally know someone who started in one of those schools and ended up insisting on getting a personal exception to mainstream earlier, before learning more than just a few words of German, because they were picking up one of the immigrant languages much more than actual German due to the other kids talking it all the time. They muddled through and eventually figured it out in a normal school, but definitely had ambition and intelligence way beyond what most students possess. The students don't just learn language in those classes, it's also the culture, main customs and traditions, and usually they simply can't move over until they reach a certain level.
However, you need to understand that Germany also has one of the strongest and most strict student tracking systems in any educational system in the world. From a relatively young age, kids are sorted and tracked according to their demonstrated ability. Most of the refugees and immigrants end up in the lowest tracks. Having different expectations and opportunities removes a lot of the behavioral issues in the schools, lowers teacher frustration, etc. They simply aren't trying to teach calculus to a bunch of kids struggling with basic math operations, etc etc. The kids in the lowest track get a lot more help with basic math and literacy subjects, take less academic electives, and almost always end up in something like a trades school. Which most are happy with since they learn practical skills and end up employable that way. And only the kids in the top track (where behavioral issues are very rare) end up eligible for university study (which is also basically free in comparison with the US). In this way, many German kids are totally insulated from the immigrants. So yes, Germany is quite welcoming when it comes to refugees and undocumented immigrants, but not at the direct expense of the German students.
Thanks for this context. There are elements of the German model (which is similar to an Eastern European model with which I'm personally familiar) that are an anathema to Americans. That includes strict tracking, which flies in the face of both American law (IDEA, ADA, LRE) but also our values about upward mobility and the potential of every child.
With that said, the discussion was about whether any other country in the world grants a right to an education, food, shelter, and target language instruction. The answer, of course, is yes.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:ESOL teacher here. Out of my 40 students, 32 of them are U.S. citizens. This is the case from year to year for the most part.
How can you know this if it is illegal to ask?
Are their parents US citizens? Very often these are the anchor kids.
Anonymous wrote:If all ESOL kids would be removed and all kids with parents who are illegal residents be removed from the school system - would the achievement gap among blacks be closed?