Los Angeles Times

Prop. 58 speaks to old debate

Measure would restore bilingual education, a topic that chafed voters in ’90s with Prop. 227.

- By Jazmine Ulloa

SACRAMENTO — Ricardo Lara was in college when California voters approved a law that required public school students to speak and learn only in English. It was a debate, the state senator remembers, that was tainted with racial undertones.

“There was a lot of shame cast on us,” said Lara (D-Bell Gardens). “There was a clear sentiment that we were somehow different and un-American because we were Spanish speakers.”

For the children of Mexican immigrants such as him, who had gone through bilingual education programs and valued their immersion in two languages and cultures, Lara said, it was upsetting.

Now on the Nov. 8 ballot, almost two decades later, is a measure that seeks to overhaul that law. Propositio­n 58, the product of 2014 legislatio­n written by Lara, would repeal Englishonl­y instructio­n in public schools, giving local parents and teachers the control to develop their own multilingu­al programs.

Opponents of the measure, most notably Silicon Valley multimilli­onaire Ron Unz, who wrote the original English-only Propositio­n

227 in 1998, contend that there is nothing to fix with the current system, saying the debate over bilingual education has long been “dead and forgotten.”

But supporters argue that the bureaucrat­ic red tape on bilingual and multilingu­al education is harmful to students in a global economy, where the most soughtafte­r employees speak more than one language.

“Prop. 58 is long overdue,” said Eric Heins, president of the California Teachers Assn. “We are really a diverse state now, and we are participat­ing in a worldwide economy. For our students to only know one language puts them at a disadvanta­ge, and the research bears that out.”

Researcher­s say interest in multilingu­al education is reemerging across the country. The issue is no longer as racially or politicall­y charged, they said, and among the upper middle class is a growing recognitio­n that knowing multiple languages is an asset.

But in California, teachers and school officials said the developmen­t of new programs has been hampered by the 1998 edict, which requires all children to learn in English unless parents request otherwise. Less than 5% of California public schools now offer multilingu­al programs, even as there are now 1.4 million English learners — about 80% of whom speak only Spanish.

Propositio­n 58 has received the endorsemen­t of more than 20 school districts, nearly 100 elected officials, including Gov. Jerry Brown, and more than 55 diverse community and education organizati­ons, including the California Chamber of Commerce and the California School Boards Assn.

The support has gradually translated into some campaign cash, about $2 million this year, largely from the California Teachers Assn./Issues PAC. Its opposition has raised none.

But the latest survey in September, conducted by the Field Poll and the Institute of Government­al Studies at UC Berkeley, has so far found starkly different levels of support for Propositio­n 58 among 1,800 registered voters statewide.

When provided with the official ballot language, 69% of respondent­s said they would back the measure, 14% were opposed and 17% undecided. The results sharply declined when voters were told the measure would repeal part of Propositio­n 227, with 51% opposing, 30% supporting and 19% undecided.

It’s still a shift in conversati­on from 20 years ago, when debate over bilingual education raged in California. Bilingual programs had long been the accepted response to the “sink or swim” mentality schools had previously taken toward English learners, causing many students to fall behind.

But by the late 1990s, many Latino parents had grown frustrated with schools that forced children into Spanish-only classes and failed to teach them English.

Those concerns helped Unz rally support for Propositio­n 227, which required that all children be taught in English unless parents signed a waiver to place their children in bilingual education.

Propositio­n 227 passed with more than 60% of the vote in 1998, despite broad opposition from bilingual associatio­ns and Latino civil rights organizati­ons, and a $2.7-million TV advertisin­g budget against the measure.

Research on whether the law worked and how success should be measured has been mixed.

The propositio­n was lauded as successful after standardiz­ed test scores improved among students learning English months after the vote.

But further studies have shown bilingual and multilingu­al programs also can achieve results with more and better trained teachers and accountabi­lity measures in place. And they help students not only learn English, educators said, but also retain their native language.

Ilana Umansky, an assistant professor at the University of Oregon, found that while it takes most students slightly longer to reach English proficienc­y in multilingu­al programs, more students overall reach the goal.

Using 12 years of data from a large school district in California, the results suggested that bilingual education may be able to reach and effectivel­y serve more students than English-only programs, Umansky said. But whether taking slightly longer to learn English is harmful in the long term “depends on what children have access to as English learners,” she said.

“If an English-learner program prevents students from enrolling in honors classes or a full course load, then the longer you remain an English learner, the more you miss out on,” she said. “But if you are in a school where English learners have access to the full range of educationa­l opportunit­ies, then it really doesn’t matter if it takes slightly longer to acquire English.”

Unz, who fiercely defends Propositio­n 227, says its outcomes have been positive. He argues that politician­s have been “hoodwinked” by a few stubborn activists and the parents of white, upperclass families who want Latinos to enroll in bilingual education.

“A very negative interpreta­tion of the programs is they want to make sure there is a sufficient supply of Latino children to act as unpaid tutors to help their children learn Spanish,” Unz said. “The programs are not necessaril­y that popular with the Latino families.”

But Propositio­n 58 supporters remember what they called the racial undertones of the 1998 law. Propositio­n 227 came just four years after Propositio­n 187, which sought to bar immigrants who were illegally in the country from access to public benefits. (The measure passed but was ultimately deemed unconstitu­tional.) In between the two contentiou­s campaigns was the 1996 passage of Propositio­n 209, which outlawed affirmativ­e action programs.

Public opinion on legislatio­n affecting immigrant families and their children was likely influenced by fear, as the state’s population was undergoing a vast transforma­tion, bilingual teachers and multilingu­al program researcher­s said.

As chairman of the Latino Legislativ­e Caucus, Lara has worked with other lawmakers to reverse that legislatio­n. He said his bill to rescind English-only education comes as more parents are pushing for waivers to enroll their children in popular language-immersion programs and the waiting lists at multilingu­al academies and programs have grown.

“Attitudes are changing,” Lara said. “We have a much more diverse electorate, we have really turned away from our divisive policies … and we are in a much better place as a state.”

To Heins, it’s more than an overhaul of the old law.

“In essence, it is more about our future than it is about the past,” he said.

 ?? Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press ?? STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara, left, drafted legislatio­n to repeal English-only learning in public schools.
Rich Pedroncell­i Associated Press STATE SEN. Ricardo Lara, left, drafted legislatio­n to repeal English-only learning in public schools.

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