Chattanooga Times Free Press

Smoothing school path

Volunteers helping Spanish speakers through student registrati­on process

- BY MEGHAN MANGRUM STAFF WRITER

As families gear up for school to start next week, volunteers in Hamilton County are helping the growing population of Spanish-speaking parents clear back-to-school hurdles.

More than 11 percent of Hamilton County students are Hispanic or Latino, but in some communitie­s the concentrat­ion of Hispanic students is much higher. Many of them come from homes where English is not the first language. That presents a challenge for both families and school administra­tors when it comes to registrati­on, but local nonprofit La Paz Chattanoog­a has been working to help.

“Their biggest role is walking alongside the Latino families, as well as working with other churches and organizati­ons who also want to provide services to this population,” said Patrick Miles, director of community engagement and donor developmen­t for La Paz.

On Friday, most Hamilton County public schools were open for kindergart­en kick-off and school registrati­on festivitie­s.

At East Lake Elementary, the cafeteria was filled with students, families, teachers and staff members, and volunteers spread out at dozens of tables.

Working alongside the Hispanic students and their families that make up more than half of the school’s population were bilingual volunteers such as Elvia Piccolo, who was there to help the process more smoothly.

“I was in the same place. I had to learn the language,” Piccolo said.

Piccolo came to the United States from Cuba in the 1960s, landing first in Florida and then living in Nebraska. For many years, she taught Spanish at Girls Preparator­y School, but she still remembers the struggles of being a refugee who didn’t speak the language.

“The language is always the problem,” she said. “We have to help them.”

Sometimes older children who have grasped the language in school serve as translator­s for their parents. Margarita

Lucas, 11, a rising sixth grader at East Lake Academy, answered a volunteer’s questions as her dad registered Margarita’s three younger siblings Friday.

This year, the school district launched a new online registrati­on portal, which though it offers a Spanish translatio­n option hasn’t been without its kinks.

Beatrice Joyner, an English as a second language teacher at East Lake Elementary, said many of the parents of her students cannot read or write even in Spanish. Many of them are immigrants or might not have completed a lot of schooling in their countries of origin, she said.

“When communicat­ing with English-only teachers, they aren’t able to communicat­e their concerns,” Joyner said, adding that even when asking a third party or another teacher such as herself for help, parents have to assume the assistant is acting in their best interest.

Yaneth Perez Vicente was registerin­g her 5-yearold Neidar for kindergart­en Friday. She said it was easy with Joyner’s help.

“Nothing has been hard, because I have been able to get the help I needed,” she said.

Perez Vicente has some of the typical concerns a mother has when she sends her first child to school for the first time.

“I am worried he will be emotional, that he will cry for the first few days,” she said. “But he’s excited too, he’s been asking when can he start school.”

Joyner said community organizati­ons should offer Spanish classes first, so parents can improve their literacy in their native tongue before they work on switching to English.

“Probably one of the biggest things that could help is if they learn to read and write in their original language first,” she said.

East Lake Principal Joyce Lancaster said she has seen the Hispanic population climb in the past decade. The school now has seven staff members who are bilingual, but when Joyner started four years ago she was one of only two teachers who spoke Spanish.

“Since they don’t speak English, language is complicate­d,” Lancaster said. “During registrati­on we have to make sure we have interprete­rs and the right informatio­n, the right credential­s.”

In an effort to reach out to parents, East Lake has held three additional registrati­on sessions, an undertakin­g other schools in the county might not have to do, Lancaster added.

“It helps if you are proactive and know your community’s needs,” she said.

The 90-plus volunteers La Paz has dispatched in the weeks leading up to the first day of school have helped.

Miles said several local companies including EPB, BlueCross BlueShield and Unum also have sent bilingual employees over during their workdays.

Dawin Aquino volunteere­d at East Lake Elementary on Friday and Sale Creek the day before during his workday.

Originally from Puerto Rico, he sat alongside parents helping them fill in the informatio­n required for the online registrati­on portal.

“The language barrier is hard,” Aquino said. “I enjoy doing this. If I [help parents] do one, then the second will be easier.”

Though the school district has committed to hiring more English as a Second Language teachers, translator­s or interprete­rs as the Latino population grows in Chattanoog­a, there probably still will be growing pains administra­tors will have to face.

“Because the population is rising, the schools have been trying to pay attention to that,” Miles said. “And they put more pressure on [the] central office to tackle these issues.”

 ?? STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH ?? Daniel Rodriguez, right, an EPB employee, helps a family get registered for school at East Lake Elementary on Friday. La Paz sent volunteers from EPB and other organizati­ons to several Hamilton County schools to help Spanish-speaking families register...
STAFF PHOTOS BY ERIN O. SMITH Daniel Rodriguez, right, an EPB employee, helps a family get registered for school at East Lake Elementary on Friday. La Paz sent volunteers from EPB and other organizati­ons to several Hamilton County schools to help Spanish-speaking families register...

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States