Betsy McCaughey

Betsy McCaughey

Opinion

The push for bilingual education will doom migrant kids to failure

New Yo꧅rk City, Denver, Ch❀icago and other cities are urgently recruiting bilingual education teachers as the children of migrants enroll in school. 

Bilinguaജl ed will doom most of these kids to failure. 

All too often it’s an educational ghetto, producing dropouts who can’t speak English and face a lifetime of poverty. 

Non-English-speaking students should be given intense instruction in English when 𒉰they first arrive at school and then mainstreamed to classrooms where students are taught only in English.

The educational establishment🍸 says stressing English competency is “xenophobic.”

But immigrant parents des𝓀erve the tr✅uth, not political indoctrination.

They need to know that nationwide, only 4% of eighth-graders and 3% of 12th-graders in bilingual classes are proficient in math and reading, according to National Assessment of Educationalꩲ Progress test scores.

A staggering 80% can’t grasp either subject.

Imagine the limited future they have.

New York City advertises a Bill of Rights for parents, telling them they can keep their children in bilingཧual education continuously “year to year.”

Truth is, bilingual education is not a “right.” It’s a wrong.ౠ 

Buffalo is one of America’s🐼 poo♈rest cities, and poverty there afflicts native-born residents and migrants alike.

Ye𒀰t students in bilingual programs are less than half as likely to graduate as students taught in Englis𒀰h.

Learning English is the civil r꧒ights issue of our time.

In a first in American history, 15.5% of people are foreign-born, more even than in the 1890s and the 1910s.

No﷽w is the time to get language instruction right, not double down on failure.

Bilingual education creates linguistic chaoღs 𓃲in the classroom. 

Here’s how fourth-grade instructor Miriam Sicherman teaches her dual-language class at the Children’s Workshop School in Manhattan, as Chalkbeat : “💦For a recent lesson on internet safety, she translated her presentation into Spanish and Russian ahead of time for her five newcomer immigrant students who speak those languages, but then used her phone 🔥to look up words like ‘password’ or ‘email address’ to respond to their questions. In an eight-hour school day, she repeats this process over and over again.”

Bott🉐om line: The English-speaking, Russian-speaking and Spanish-speaking students each get a frac꧅tion of her time and have to wait while she speaks to the rest of the class in languages that are gibberish to them.

Sicherman uses her pocket transl𒅌ꦕator an average of 25 times a day to answer questions posed in a foreign language, while most of the class has no clue what she’s saying. Crazy. 

Even crazier, New York City is trying to teach phonics to kindergartners before they know English.🅠 

One kindergarten teacher’s assistant how a girl from Venezuela in 🀅his class who has “extremely limited ꦏunderstanding of the English language” will fare.

How do you recognize 🦹a word by sounding it out if you’ve never heard the word before?

The New York Times’ Nicholas Kristof recently reported soaring test scores in Mississippi since꧑ the state adopted phonics.

But in Mississippi, only 4% of students live in homes wh𝐆ere a language other than English is spoken.

In New York City, that figure is 48%.

To make phonic♏s work here, children need to learn English first.

Other countries are investigating how best to teach migrant children and the impact of migration on native-born students, a question that is taboo in Americ꧑a.

Chile experienced a huge influx of migrants from V𓆏enezuela and Haiti.

The arrival of Haitian students who did not speak Spanish depressed the standardized test scores🍰 of native-bꦑorn Chilean students, according to in the Economics of Education Review.

The inflow of Venezuelan students had less effect because they spoke t🅘he language of instruction and did not create language chaos in the classroom.

In , a higher share of migrant children in c♎lassrooms resulted in lower scores for all students because “t𒅌he teacher’s attention and time are diverted” to help those who can’t speak the language.

Similar results have been꧒ reported for Germ💙any and Sweden.

Bilingual education is failing nearly everywhere.

In the United States, imm💝igrant parents should demand their children be taught in English only.

In this country, English is the language of success.🎶

That’s what parents want for their children.

Political correctness be damned. 

Betsy McCaughey is a former lieutenant governor of New York.

Twitter: @Betsy_McCaughey