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Prof. Manny Maestre SouthWest Florida College

ESOL Foundations -Week #2 English Language Learners in Florida Florida Consent Decree Individual & Institutional Racism. Prof. Manny Maestre SouthWest Florida College. This week will touch upon very important subject areas that affect all current and future educators :.

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Prof. Manny Maestre SouthWest Florida College

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  1. ESOL Foundations -Week #2English Language Learners in Florida Florida Consent DecreeIndividual & Institutional Racism Prof. Manny Maestre SouthWest Florida College

  2. This week will touch upon very important subject areas that affect all current and future educators : • Who are English Language Learners in Florida schools • The Florida Consent Decree and it’s components • Individual vs. Institutional Racism • Stereotypes vs. Generalizations

  3. Florida Statistics 2007-2008Categorical Enrollment informationStatewide Totals and Per County Information http://www.fldoe.org/eias/eiaspubs/xls/fsir/2007-08/Mem_Category_Dist_0708.xls

  4. Evolution of Policy for ELL’s • One out of every five students in Florida's K-12 public schools is classified as an English Language Learner (ELL). • Policy-makers increasingly use standardized testing, even as they debate the appropriate instructional methods for an ever-increasing population of non-native English speaking students. • The state of Florida annually provides equal educational opportunities to almost 300,000 non-native English speaking students who have been identified through surveys and testing as Limited English Proficient (LEP). • The Florida Department of Education (FDOE) strives to meet both the letter and spirit of the 1990 Consent Decree between the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC) and the Florida Department of Education. • The Consent Decree requires each LEP pupil to receive “equal access to programming which is appropriate to his or her level of English proficiency, academic achievement, and special needs.”

  5. Continued… • In the past several years, there has been a simultaneous increase in the number of English Language Learners and the accountability pressures placed upon schools at the local, state, and federal levels. To meet the needs of its English Language Learners, it is recommended that the state of Florida: • Increase funding for the Office of Multicultural Student Language Education (OMSLE). • Provide funding that would permit research organizations to conduct external evaluations, in order to allow closer monitoring of the Consent Decree’s mandate to annually collect comparative data on English Language Learners and native English speakers. • Enhance teacher education programs at the in-service and pre-service levels by mandating that ESOL teachers be certified in the areas they teach, recruiting high quality (particularly minority) teachers, and removing exemptions for Consent Decree-mandated ESOL training of teachers. • Focus Resources on High School English Language Learners who are at risk for dropping out of school.

  6. The issue at hand…. • The state of Florida offers economic and aesthetic incentives that continue to attract new residents from around the United States and the world. Between 1990 and March 2000 more than one million (1,030,449) newcomers chose Florida as their home, a 23.5 percent increase over the previous decade in the number of residents moving into the state. The diverse backgrounds of Floridians are most clearly reflected in their home languages. In the 2000 Federal Census, 23.1 percent of Florida residents over the age of five reported that they spoke a language other than English. About one in 10 stated that they spoke English “less than very well.”[i] Many areas of South Florida are considered informally bilingual, but English remains the official language of instruction and assessment in the public schools and is the means for economic and educational improvement. • [i] GCT-11 (2000). Language, School Enrollment and Educational Attainment: 2000. U.S. Census Bureau. Retrieved March 5, 2004, from http://factfinder.census.gov/servlet/GCTTable?_bm=y&-geo_id=01000US&-reg=DEC_2000_SF4_U_GCTP11_US9:0 01&-ds_name=DEC_2000_SF4_U&-_lang=en&-redoLog=true&-mt_name=DEC_2000_SF4_U_GCTP11_US9&-format=US-9&-CONTEXT=gct

  7. Issue at hand continued… Throughout the 1990s, Florida was the fourth most populous state in the nation and had the third-largest number of foreign-born residents, trailing only California and New York.[i] Florida’s location has historically attracted trade and migration from Central and Latin America. Although the presence of Spanish-speaking individuals in Florida dates back to the 1500s, the 1959 revolution in Cuba is typically viewed as the beginning of modern immigration to the state. During the last four decades of the twentieth century, Florida received newcomers of varied political status. Some were refugees, including federally-designated Cuban/Haitian entrants, Central Americans who received Temporary Protected Status from the federal government, and undocumented aliens. Currently, three-quarters of immigrants to Florida are from Caribbean and Latin American nations. 2 Executive Office of the Governor and Florida Advisory Council on Intergovernmental Relations (1994, March ). The UnFair Burden: Immigration's Impact on Florida. Tallahassee, FL: Author.

  8. One out of every five students in Florida's K-12 public schools is classified as an English Language Learners (ELL).[i] Spanish (71.3 percent) is the most common language among Florida’s English Language Learners (ELL), followed by Haitian-Creole (11.4 percent). Overall, ELL students represent 257 countries and speak more than 200 different languages.[ii] • [i] Florida Department of Education. (2002-03). Percentage of LEP Students. Retrieved from http://www.fldoe.org/ • Faircloth, P., Office of Multicultural Student Language Education (OMSLE) (2004, February 9). Telephone Communication with the Author. Total number of LEP students as of October 2003 was 288, 413. • Vázquez, R., Office of Multicultural Student Language Education (2004, February 9). Telephone Communication with the Author. The terms "LEP" (Limited English Proficient) or "LEP" (Language Enriched Pupil) have been replaced by the U.S. Department of Education with "ELL" (English Language Learner). The Office of Multicultural Student Language Education (OMSLE) prefers "LEP", Limited English Proficient. • [ii] Office of Multicultural Student Language Education (2001). Native Languages. Annual Status Report on the Implementation of the Consent Decree in the League of United Latin American Citizens (LULAC), et al.,1990: State Synopsis. Tallahassee, FL: Florida Department of Education.

  9. The diverse student population presents certain challenges to Florida’s educators and policy-makers. Florida Statutes and State Board of Education Rules (Chapter 1003.56) require the provision of instruction in the English language.[i] Since the 1960s, a series of federal laws, court decisions, and guidelines—including Title VI and VII of the Civil Rights Act of 1964; passage of the 1968 Bilingual Education Act; the Supreme Court decision Lau v. Nichols (1974); the Office of Civil Rights’ Lau Remedies; and the Equal Education Opportunities Act of 1974—have reaffirmed the rights of English Language Learners to accessible public schooling that is adequate to their needs.[ii] Florida has had in place since 1990 a Consent Decree that outlines the identification, services, and compliance of school districts to ensure “equal and comprehensible instruction” to these students – approximately 20 percent of the state’s school-age population.[iii] [i] Florida Statute Title 48, Chapter 1003.56. Retrieved from http://www.flsenate.gov/Statutes/index.cfm?mode=View%20Statutes&SubMenu=1&App_mode=Display_Statute&Search_String=&URL=CH1003/Sec56.HTM

  10. Background Information • On August 14, 1990, the Consent Decree was signed in the United States District Court. The Consent Decree—also known by the name of the plaintiffs, Multicultural Education Training Advocacy, Inc.(META) or English Speakers of Other Languages (ESOL) Consent Decree—was the result of a class action complaint filed on behalf of a coalition of eight minority rights advocacy groups in Florida. The plaintiffs had alleged that the State Board of Education had not complied with its obligations under federal and state law to ensure that Florida school districts provide equal and comprehensible instruction to Limited English Proficient (LEP) students.

  11. Background Cont. • On September 10, 2003, the State Board of Education and LULAC, through META representation, signed an agreement, a negotiated modification to the 1990 Consent Decree. The Stipulated Agreement, signed by U.S. District Court Judge Federico Moreno, is currently active in all of Florida's school districts. The Stipulated Agreement does not diminish any options for ESOL endorsement or coverage outlined in the 1990 Consent Decree. It does, however, expand some of the original provisions.

  12. First, it provides an additional option through which a certified teacher may obtain ESOL coverage. Second, the amendment requires training, including post-certification hours, for all persons holding administrative and guidance counselor positions (60 hours). Last, the new 2003 amendment allows the plaintiffs to secure access to the ESOL teacher test and provide input that becomes part of the test’s design.[i][i] Lopéz, A. (October 8, 2004). Memorandum to the Author. Re: Newly Approved Modification to the Consent Decree. LULAC et al. vs. Florida Board of Education, et al. Case no. 90-1913-CIV-Moreno. September 10, 2003 Stipulation Modifying the Consent Decree. United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida, Miami Division.

  13. Florida Consent Decree- Group Activity • Please divide yourselves into 6 equal groups. • Each group will receive one section of the Consent Decree. • You are to follow the instructions for this activity per the guidelines handed out to you- can be found attached in your syllabus. • Be creative- each group will present their findings to the class. • You will have 25 minutes to complete your presentations.

  14. Stereotypes VS. Generalizations • Generalizations: • All statements of fact or truth require generalization. A generalization is a statement based on a finite set of observations and experiences and yet which claims to hold true for the larger set, even for those cases that have not been seen or experienced. All generalizations, then, can be said to be theoretical. They offer a theory about how things are in general. Thus the statement "All trees have leaves" is a useful generalization, though no one person has ever been able to validate it by inspecting every tree on earth or every tree that has ever existed, and no one knows what trees will be like in the future. And of course most trees do not have leaves at various times of the year, and some trees are evergreens with needles instead of leaves. The generalization originates in a rational effort to categorize, not in an irrational effort to oppress. The function of the generalization is to allow people to work better with trees, not to harm trees. The effect of the generalization, however, is to increase people's ability to manipulate nature to human ends, and so like all acts of knowledge this one affects the power balance between knower and thing known.

  15. Stereotypes: • A stereotype is a particular kind of generalization, a subset of generalization. Stereotypes: • originate within and are caused by a history of socio-political struggle between unequal groups within a region, nation, or society • present generalizations which function to create or sustain inequalities of value, power, and/or wealth among socially constructed groups (by race, age, sex, class, religion etc.) • are intended to harm or have a negative effect as regards the object of the stereotype, or can reasonably be predicted to do so • circulate repeatedly and systematically in a culture so that they are accepted as "common sense" truths by many people in the culture, even those who are the object of the stereotype • disguise or distort the truth through caricature and misrepresentation based on only partial aspects of a person or situation • appeal to the prejudices of the audience, exploiting these by attaching them to emotions of pleasure or hatred that are reinforced often by casting stereotypes within frameworks of entertainment

  16. Racism and Prejudice- Oppression all around • Oppression is a broad term which encompasses thoughts and feelings of prejudice and discrimination to a certain group or groups of people. This may sound startling but even in advanced countries such as America; the crude form of oppression still exists to this day. Oppression comes in various forms. The resulting effect of oppression, however, all leads to inequality of treatment and loss of opportunities for some groups of people

  17. Prejudice • Prejudice refers to a negative attitude towards a certain group or groups formed without previous knowledge or reason. Prejudice is a major component of oppression.  Discrimination, on the other hand, is the act of making personal distinctions in treating a specific group. Discrimination is often manifested in excluding or denying opportunities or fair treatment to the targeted group.  Oppression is often apparent in cases of prejudice and discrimination.

  18. Racism • Racism is oppression experienced by a certain group due to race, skin color, ethnicity or physical traits limited to the group. America’s long struggle of oppression through racism is evident in its history of discriminating Blacks, Hispanics, Native Americans, Asians and other minority groups.

  19. 3 levels of Racism • Racism exists in three levels: personal or individual racism, institutional racism and cultural racism.  Personal racism pertains to a person’s prejudice on a certain group because of race or skin color. Institutional racism refers to policies of institutions such as school, businesses and other establishments that could limit opportunities of certain groups due to race or skin color. Institutional racism is oftentimes unintentional. Cultural racism pertains to standards or cultures that contribute disadvantages to a certain race or skin color.

  20. Types of Racism • Practices of racism can be as explicit as intimidation, graffiti or physical violence. It could also be done implicitly such as ethnic slurs or in the form of tasteless humor. Methods of hiring, apartment rentals, educational or company policies could sometimes inadvertently contribute to racism too.  Either way, racism contributes to unfair treatment and loss of certain opportunities to the target race or group • Source:http://www.bukisa.com/articles/13999_racism-and-oppression

  21. Time to put it into ACTION: • Cultural Scenarios/Role Play Group Activity • Please divide yourselves into groups of 4. • Choose a scenario. • Follow instructions per activity guidelines • Be prepared to present to classmates and discuss outcomes. • Turn in questionnaire sheet with names of group members for grade.

  22. ANY QUESTIONS???

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