View Content #13545
Contentid | 13545 |
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Content Type | 1 |
Title | NPR Feature: In Miami, School Aims For 'Biliterate' Education |
Body | From http://www.npr.org/2011/10/25/141584947/in-miami-school-aims-for-bi-literate-education In Miami, School Aims For 'Biliterate' Education by Claudio Sanchez October 25, 2011 Every morning, shortly after 8 o'clock, students at the Coral Way Elementary School pledge allegiance to the flag and stand for the national anthem. Then Spanish becomes the language of instruction. In one fourth-grade class, reading assignments, science, math and social studies lessons are entirely in Spanish. After lunch, classes switch to English. Most of the 1,500 students at the school are low-income, but their test scores are among the highest in the city. After eighth grade, many go on to Miami's top private and public high schools. Some take up a third and fourth language. There are about 440 public bilingual immersion schools across the country, up from only a handful in the 1970s. A growing number today teach Mandarin and French, not just Spanish. But in some states — California, Arizona, Colorado and Massachusetts — bilingual immersion programs are banned because a majority of voters don't think children can learn proper English and hold on to a foreign language and culture at the same time. Listen to the report and read the accompanying article at http://www.npr.org/2011/10/25/141584947/in-miami-school-aims-for-bi-literate-education |
Source | NPR |
Inputdate | 2011-11-06 10:11:33 |
Lastmodifieddate | 2011-11-06 10:11:33 |
Expdate | Not set |
Publishdate | 2011-11-07 00:00:00 |
Displaydate | Not set |
Active | 1 |
Emailed | 1 |
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