The epoch times

California’s new school language law increases bureaucracy.

Learning a New ⁣Language Is Nothing New

Ever since the first two groups ⁢of people speaking different languages met and, after⁤ not killing one another, ‌decided to trade and intermingle, they ⁤had to learn one another’s languages. In America, after the Revolution of 1776 ⁤and the Constitution of 1787, gradually English pushed aside the other languages in the country.‌ Such as the German ⁢of the Pennsylvania Dutch (really Germans); the Dutch of the⁢ settlers ‍in the Hudson Valley, such as the Roosevelts; the ‌French in​ Vermont and Louisiana; and the Spanish of Florida and the Southwest.

Three of my grandparents were immigrants from Europe and spoke German dialects. The two grandmothers came as young children and quickly learned English, which is typical. A young kid picks ‍up a new ⁣language like a sponge.

My paternal ‍grandfather, whose name I bear, came over in 1905 when he was 14 and first started working in ​the coal mines of Pennsylvania. He then moved to Detroit and worked on one ⁤of⁣ Henry Ford’s assembly lines.

More Bureaucracy

According ‍to EdSource’s article on AB 714, “Separating data on newcomers from other English learners is important, said Jeannie Myung, director of policy research at Policy Analysis for ⁣California Education, or PACE, an independent research center at Stanford University that focuses on ‍education.”

Along the way, he studied English‌ every chance ⁢he could ‍in night school. I still have his well-thumbed ⁢English-to-German and German-to-English ‌pocket dictionaries. He ⁤always spoke with an accent much like Arnold Schwarzenegger’s. But he was well-read and always began the day ⁢with a Detroit newspaper.

Conclusion: Excessive ⁣Education Bureaucracy

Programs such​ as⁢ those advanced by AB 714 are a symptom of a greater problem:⁣ A pointlessly ​bureaucratic ‌education system. It‌ grants high salaries and easy jobs to the educrats who run it,‍ but wastes the time⁢ of⁤ everyone involved.

It’s good‍ to sample a little of the educationese put into these ‌bills, showing the bill authors themselves need a course in writing plain ⁣English. Among other things, the bill will require the State Department of ⁢Education to (A) curate‌ and maintain on its internet website⁤ information regarding requirements, best practices, and ‍available state and federally funded programs for newcomer⁣ pupils and (B) publicly report on an annual basis on​ its internet website the enrollment of newcomer pupils.

And it will require⁣ the‍ Instructional Quality Commission‌ “to consider including content designed to ⁢provide teachers with resources to meet the unique ⁣academic and English language development needs of newcomer pupils.”

Learning⁤ Made Easier

Actually, today it’s even easier with ​plentiful lessons in all languages free on YouTube. Or such fairly cheap resources as Pimsleur,‌ Babbel, Duolingo, Busuu, Rosetta Stone, and numerous ​others.

Google Translate also provides quick and quite ⁤accurate translations from almost any language ⁣to another. ⁢I use ⁣it whenever I come upon ‍a foreign article and need to get the gist of what’s in it.

And​ the main streaming‌ video services, such as ⁣YouTube, Netflix, Hulu, and‍ Amazon Prime, offer subtitles in different languages. Thus, a Spanish-speaking person learning English can play‌ a movie in ⁤Spanish, but see the English subtitles; or vice versa.

And it will “require that local educational​ agencies comply with ⁤the above-described coursework exemptions, pupil consultation ⁢and notice requirements, acceptance of coursework completed at ​other schools, and other requirements‌ for⁢ newcomer pupils, as defined, instead of for pupils participating in⁢ a newcomer ‍program. ‌By imposing new​ duties on local educational agencies, the bill would impose ⁣a state-mandated⁣ local program.”

Immigrant​ Success Stories

The many millions of immigrants⁤ who came⁤ here as adults learned English ‌much as did my grandfather: by​ direct⁢ immersion in ⁤the English language and culture and intense ⁣study of their new tongue.

That’s also how I learned Russian at the Defense Language Institute at Monterey, Calif., in a 52-week course ⁤in 1978–79. As soon as ‍we learned some ⁢basic words and phrases and the new alphabet, it ‌was what linguists ⁢call “total immersion.” All our teachers were native Russian speakers, exiles from the communist Soviet Union. They insisted we speak in the language we were learning.

Russian ​is harder ⁢to learn for English-language speakers than Spanish, German, or Italian. But it’s easier than⁢ Chinese. Yet all of us learned​ it ⁤in that one year and left being quite fluent. We had to be, because our job was listening to Red Army troops planning to invade West ⁢Germany.

Rich Cultural Diversity

I‌ also grew up in⁣ a Detroit suburb where many families were ⁣immigrants, mainly from Europe, but also ⁢from the Middle East, Iran, China,⁢ India, Mexico, and Japan. Detroit’s districts still are known by this:⁤ Greektown, Corktown (Irish, who⁢ already spoke English), Poletown, Germantown, Mexicantown, etc. Windsor, Canada,⁤ just across the Detroit River, had a Chinatown.

And it will impose new bureaucratic requirements and costs on the state, as well as⁢ on local school‍ districts. Although the‌ districts will be “reimbursed”​ for the added expense.

Immigrant Determination

If an immigrant like‍ my grandfather can learn‌ English with “total immersion,” anybody can. He was “just off the boat,” a phrase I​ heard a lot growing up, meaning he went through Ellis Island, then was shipped inland to a job‌ and whatever ⁤fate his own hard‌ work and moxie could bring ⁣him.

Although he never attended high school, in addition to learning English, while working ‍in the Ford factory, ​he ‍took carpentry courses and went into that trade. He‌ took more⁣ courses and became ‌a⁢ Master Carpenter ⁤and cabinetmaker. ⁣He eventually worked putting cabinets in the mansions of the Ford⁤ family in whose factories he had worked.

After⁣ he retired in the early 1950s, the Fords called him back to work for them again in the ‌early 1960s before he retired ⁤for good and lived to 83. That’s how ​he⁣ came here ​and​ raised a family.

It’s a typical American immigrant story. Tens of millions of other immigrants have done‍ the same thing.‍ No‌ education bureaucracy needed.

Views expressed ‌in this⁤ article are opinions⁣ of the author and do not necessarily reflect⁤ the⁣ views⁤ of The Epoch Times.


" Conservative News Daily does not always share or support the views and opinions expressed here; they are just those of the writer."
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