\Anonymous wrote:Wow - Navy newsletter just went out and SOL scores went up a lot this year under the new principal - very impressive!!! Also, almost all the vacant positions are filled! Looking forward to fall!
Anonymous wrote:Wow - Navy newsletter just went out and SOL scores went up a lot this year under the new principal - very impressive!!! Also, almost all the vacant positions are filled! Looking forward to fall!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
I'm an ESOL teacher in a different district. We have this situation. Very few of my students were born outside of the US. They are American citizens. Their parents speak Spanish and Arabic. Many of their English speaking classmates would qualify for ESOL if I tested them. They are far from proficient in English. Our elected officials aren't failing us when this has nothing to do with them. It has everything to do with the 14th Amendment which has been the law of this country since just after the Civil War. It's the same law that gives citizenship to you and your kids.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
The immigrant communities in Fairfax live near each other in very packed in conditions (often two families to an apartment ). My students will often tell me that they live with their mom, aunt, uncle, and cousins in an apartment. My school takes from a very large low income apartment complex so your school can fill up with ESOL students quickly.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Something is terribly wrong and our elected officials are failing our society if you have schools where half the kids are esol. No wonder there is a teacher shortage. How can schools keep up?
Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Yes in that case it would be, but not the case at our school. Very rare to have a kid that doesn't speak English.
Anonymous wrote:It is when half of your class is ESOL!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Update: Librarian position has been filled!
Yes I just came on here to say that. Librarian is probably one of the lesser important but at least it is some progress. esol is probably the least important.
ESOL is the least important?
Wow.
Our school doesn't have many esol kids. The esol teacher would usually work with kids that spoke perfect English but also spoke a second language at home and these kids needed extra help with reading. In the many years my kids have been at our school we have only encountered 2 kids that didn't speak much English. Also, young kids pick up a new language very easily. Signed, parent and former esol kid.