The Denver Post

Non-English-speaking parents at a loss for schoolwork help

- By Regina Garcia Cano And Carolyn Thompson Roger Nomer, The Joplin Globe via AP

Since her daughters’ school closed for the coronaviru­s outbreak, Mariana Luna has been thrust into the role of their primary educator, like millions of parents across the U.S. But each day, before she can go over their schoolwork, her 9-year-old first has to help her understand what the assignment­ssay.

A Spanish speaker originally from Mexico, Luna uses

Google Translate on her phone and, when she gets stuck, asks her daughter to translate instructio­ns and emails from teachers.

“To be honest with you, it has been difficult for me because of the language more than anything,” said Luna, whose daughters attend a school in North Las Vegas, Nevada. “My husband does speak the language a little more, and when he comes home from work, he is the one who gives me the most support with the girls, but since I have not worked and have only been at home, I do not speak the language as well.”

The shift to distance learning has created unique challenges for English language learners and their parents, who are tasked with keeping them on track despite their own struggles and lack of familiarit­y with the educationa­l system.

There were more than 4.8 million English language learner students in public schools in 2016, nearly a tenth of total enrollment, according to the most recent U.S. Department of Education statistics. While some teachers are taking extra measures to help them, there is concern these students will be left behind the longer schools are closed during the pandemic.

Obed Acosta, a 10th grade student in Baltimore, has only lived in the U.S. for a year and is now trying to figure out assignment­s on his own since his high school closed. An afterschoo­l program organized by an advocacy group for Latinos and immigrants provides some assistance, but his parents are not in a position to help.

“They would like to help us with our studies, but it is very difficult for them because of the language,” Obed said. “They can maybe understand it speaking it, but if they have to read something, they don’t understand it perfectly well.”

At home, he watches movies with Spanish subtitles to improve his English. And despite his own limited skills with English, he helps his younger brother and sister understand their assignment­s.

Compared to teachers of mainstream students, more teachers of English language learners had already cited students’ lack of home internet access as a barrier to using technology, according to a

2019 U.S. Education Department report. And in some cases, programs designed for English language learners are not even available through online instructio­n.

Still, teachers have devised some strategies to overcome language barriers.

Sofia Halpin, a language arts teacher at a Denver school serving a large immigrant student population, joined a new program this year that pairs English-speaking teachers with co-teachers who ensure lessons are available in Spanish. As the school prepares to launch online learning on

April 7, Halpin and her coteacher are planning assignment­s in both languages — for her students, and for their parents.

“A lot of my students are totally fluent in English, but their parents aren’t and their parents might be the people that they want to go to for help with assignment­s,” Halpin said. “So they need to be able to understand what that work is, too.”

But Halpin knows the challenges won’t end there for families learning their way around the school system, especially those whose time at home is limited by work in service-area jobs considered essential.

“I imagine that communicat­ion between teachers is going to be rough for some of these families,” she said. “They may not feel comfortabl­e reaching out to teachers who haven’t made themselves available already in a language that they’re more comfortabl­e with or teachers who they aren’t already familiar with.”

The school closures threaten to worsen the phenomenon known as “summer slide,” in which students lose academic ground while away from school. Research shows language acquisitio­n also can slip if English language learners spend the summer speaking a language other than English at home, said Joshua Lawrence, an educationa­l researcher who studied the trajectori­es while at the University of California, Irvine in 2012. He said the findings are concerning for students now facing extended time away from school.

 ??  ?? Many parents are trying to guide their children through assignment­s, but many face the challenge of English comprehens­ion.
Many parents are trying to guide their children through assignment­s, but many face the challenge of English comprehens­ion.

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