Judge continues to push failed bilingual program

Houston Chronicle:

Federal Judge William Wayne Justice has ordered Texas officials to take immediate steps to improve bilingual education programs — even as the state fights to postpone what they call costly measures.

The judge ruled in July that the state is failing to provide an equal education to middle and high school students struggling with English. He ordered improvements by the 2009-10 school year.

The state has appealed and wanted to put off program revisions because it has not received enough money and authority from the Legislature. But Justice, in an order released Friday, said requests for additional resources, if needed, could be presented to the Legislature when it convenes in January.

The legal battle involves about 145,000 students in middle and high school grades who are considered deficient in English. Evidence from state-mandated tests showed large achievement gaps for those students in core subjects.

After first ruling in 2007 that Texas was meeting its legal obligations to students with limited English proficiency, Justice reconsidered the evidence and ruled this year that it is out of compliance with federal laws that require students to get equal education opportunities.

Texas Education Agency general counsel David Anderson said the agency must now meet a Jan. 31 deadline to submit a plan to the court.

"We are doing our best to meet the court's order within our existing resources," he said.

Lawyers who brought the class-action case on behalf of Mexican-American students applauded the judge's latest ruling.

...

This is a misguided effort that will do great harm to Hispanic students who need to learn English. It has been clearly demonstrated that English immersion is vastly superior to the failed approach of using bilingual education.

Perhaps the state plan should provide access to Rosetta Stone software for students who need to learn English. I think it would be much more effective and much less costly. Judge Justice is making a huge mistake by pushing this failed program and its costs on the state of Texas.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Should Republicans go ahead and add Supreme Court Justices to head off Democrats

Is the F-35 obsolete?

Apple's huge investment in US including Texas facility