Anonymous wrote:OP here. The school in question is Mundo Verde
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really can't understand all the hype about immersion programs. I'm not convinced that anyone knows how to do language immersion. It's just the latest educational fad. Coupled with all that touchy-feely IB stuff, what a waste of time. But if it makes you feel good, what the heck.
Monolingual is the new stupid.
Anonymous wrote:I really can't understand all the hype about immersion programs. I'm not convinced that anyone knows how to do language immersion. It's just the latest educational fad. Coupled with all that touchy-feely IB stuff, what a waste of time. But if it makes you feel good, what the heck.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really can't understand all the hype about immersion programs. I'm not convinced that anyone knows how to do language immersion. It's just the latest educational fad. Coupled with all that touchy-feely IB stuff, what a waste of time. But if it makes you feel good, what the heck.
There are established immersion schools in other parts of the US that have a track record and are doing well, so a "fad" here in DC, maybe, but not in other areas, especially outside of this country, where it is done well and the model has been around for many years (dating back to at least the 1970s/1960s).
Name one. And then explain how you know that it's "doing well".
WIS, successful bilingual graduates.
Doesn't sound like you know much about WIS. They conveniently flunk out students who don't become sufficiently bilingual. But maybe that's your definition of "doing well"
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really can't understand all the hype about immersion programs. I'm not convinced that anyone knows how to do language immersion. It's just the latest educational fad. Coupled with all that touchy-feely IB stuff, what a waste of time. But if it makes you feel good, what the heck.
There are established immersion schools in other parts of the US that have a track record and are doing well, so a "fad" here in DC, maybe, but not in other areas, especially outside of this country, where it is done well and the model has been around for many years (dating back to at least the 1970s/1960s).
Name one. And then explain how you know that it's "doing well".
WIS, successful bilingual graduates.
Anonymous wrote:I hope that immersion programs are not just a fad, but my gut tells me it is. I'd love to see a study that tracks YY students to see if they are truly bilingual five years after graduation. I know that China is super important because they are such a financial and military power and they are heavily invested in the USA (buying our debt, etc.) but I honestly can't imagine it being all that useful to be bilingual in Chinese. More power to those families who commit to learning Chinese...I just have the suspicion that when all is said and done learning Chinese in 2012 will be looked back on they way that Japanese became a fad in the 1980s. Spanish immersion, I understand more...more useful on a day to day basis in the States.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I really can't understand all the hype about immersion programs. I'm not convinced that anyone knows how to do language immersion. It's just the latest educational fad. Coupled with all that touchy-feely IB stuff, what a waste of time. But if it makes you feel good, what the heck.
There are established immersion schools in other parts of the US that have a track record and are doing well, so a "fad" here in DC, maybe, but not in other areas, especially outside of this country, where it is done well and the model has been around for many years (dating back to at least the 1970s/1960s).
Name one. And then explain how you know that it's "doing well".
The french immersion system in Canada:
http://www2.canada.com/vancouversun/news/editorial/story.html?id=144196bf-8a12-47e8-8109-b7be65a7bb9b
I have a child in an immersion school, and think it's stretching his mind in wonderful ways. However, I think that studies of French immersion or bilingual schools in Canada really don't apply here. French has official status as a second language, and an entire province where it's the official language. The US certainly has large areas where Spanish is the most commonly spoken language, but it lacks official status even at the local level, let alone protections for Spanish speakers at the national level. This gives Canadians incentives to be bilingual that the US simply lacks.