- LOS ANGELES TIMES
Saturday, September 12, 1998
- State Board Denies Requests to Continue
Bilingual Ed
By NICK ANDERSON, Times Staff Writer
The State Board of Education refused Friday to consider several school district requests
for permission to continue bilingual education despite an Alameda County judge's ruling
last month that such applications must be heard.
Instead, board members meeting in Sacramento voted to appeal the Aug. 27 ruling by
Superior Court Judge Henry Needham Jr.
Silvina Rubinstein, executive director of the California Assn. for Bilingual Education,
denounced the board's refusal to consider requests to waive the requirements of
Proposition 227, the anti-bilingual initiative approved by voters in June.
"It's a lack of commitment to provide leadership to the schools," Rubinstein said.
But there was good news Friday for some schools seeking to continue teaching in two
languages as the board approved 11 applications for so-called charter schools, a
spokesman said. Such schools are exempt from most state education laws--including,
state officials say, Proposition 227.
Among the 11 are Gates Elementary School in Orange County and an elementary school in
the Santa Monica-Malibu Unified School District, both of which plan to teach children
through a bilingual technique known as "dual immersion," said board spokesman Gregory
McGinity.
Dual immersion has been less controversial than other forms of bilingual education
because its goal, usually, is to teach English-speakers Spanish and Spanish-speakers
English at the same time.
The board's actions Friday underscored the tangled situation these days with respect to
bilingual education "waivers" in the wake of Proposition 227.
The initiative allows parents to apply for waivers if they feel that English immersion is
not suited for their children.
In addition, 40 school districts have applied to the state board for waivers to the law, and
22 have applied to Supt. of Public Instruction Delaine Eastin for still another form of
exemption as "alternative" schools. Gates Elementary is one of two Orange County schools
to win that form of reprieve from Eastin.
- Copyright 1998 Los Angeles Times. All Rights Reserved