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Bilingual Education: A Crutch Rather Than a Boost


Article # : 11514 

Section : CURRENT ISSUES
Issue Date : 10 / 1986  2,016 Words
Author : Howard Hurwitz
Howard Hurwitz was appointed to the National Advisory Council on Bilingual Education, on the recommendation of President Reagan. He was reappointed by Education Secretary William Bennett. The views expressed in the article are his own and not those of the council.

       Until now there has not been a time in the history of American education when a minority in this nation of immigrants has imposed its language on the public schools.
       
        This is the nub of the controversy over bilingual education, for the Bilingual Education Act of 1984, amended three times since it was first passed in 1968, provides "that a primary means by which a child learns is through the use of such child's native language and cultural heritage; that therefore large numbers of children of limited English proficiency have educational needs which can be met by the use of bilingual educational methods and techniques. …"
       
        Although the presumption is that bilingual education is available to all minorities, the fact is that the program has been put in place by Hispanic politicos who have an axe to grind, and this does not advance the movement of children of Hispanic origin into the American mainstream. The bilingual method of instruction in regions where there are substantial numbers of Spanish-speaking immigrants - New York, Miami, Los Angeles, southwestern Texas - retains children in the program for three to seven years. This is neither necessary nor educationally desirable, for there are alternative methods of teaching limited English proficient (LEP) children.
       
        Not 'sink or swim'
       
        There is not thought here that immigrant children be exposed to the "sink or swim" schooling that earlier immigrants underwent. Too many sank, although a great many survivors, including the very Hispanic legislators who are so keen for bilingual education, speak ... (1993 of 12230 Characters)
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