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  • Students Ask for More Foreign Language Choices

    Los Angeles Times
    July 2, 2004

    Students Ask for More Foreign Language Choices

    By Erika Hayasaki, Times Staff Writer


    Eighteen-year-old Victor Soltero grew up speaking Spanish at home. He
    read books in Spanish by Pablo Neruda and Gabriel Garcia Marquez. But
    at school, he wanted to learn a different language, like Italian or
    French.

    But at North Hollywood High School last year, those languages weren't
    options.

    Spanish is the only foreign language offered to most teenagers at the
    5,000-student campus, where 71% of students are Latino. Only 300
    students, enrolled in the school's highly gifted magnet program, have
    the option of taking French.

    The North Hollywood campus is one of two Los Angeles Unified School
    District high schools that offer Spanish as the sole foreign language
    for most students. Franklin High School in Highland Park, where 88% of
    students are Latino, offers about 45 Spanish classes, but no other
    foreign language.

    Most L.A. Unified high schools offer French to all students. Some
    offer German, Italian, Japanese, Korean or Mandarin, in addition to
    Spanish. But principals at both North Hollywood and Franklin high
    schools said there was not enough room or interest to add more
    language programs on their campuses.

    But Soltero said the interest exists - and about 200 other North
    Hollywood students who wrote letters recently or signed a petition for
    another language class option agreed with him. Some Franklin High
    School students have also complained about the lack of options.

    "Why are they limiting our choices?" said Soltero, who wants to travel
    the world and meet people from different cultures. "I'm Mexican, and
    it's putting my race down. It's like they're saying, 'You guys aren't
    smart enough to take anything else.' "

    Many students and teachers said Latinos enrolled in Spanish classes
    more frequently than others because they wanted to learn about their
    culture or study a subject they already understand. Sometimes, they
    expected it would be easier to get a good grade.

    But other students said they wanted to challenge themselves by
    learning a language different from that which their parents speak at
    home.

    Natalie Gonzales, a native Spanish speaker and 11th-grader, wrote a
    letter to the administration that stated: "It is illogical to obligate
    students who speak Spanish to sit in a room for an hour every day to
    'learn' Spanish. Where is the challenge? The purpose of learning a
    foreign language is to enlighten and motivate and elevate the soul,
    and a large percentage of fluent Spanish speakers are robbed of this
    experience."

    Non-Latino students have also complained, asking for more options.

    North Hollywood senior Anca Giurgiulescu wrote: "How do you hope to
    improve the performance of students attending North Hollywood High
    School by limiting the availability of foreign language classes to
    just one language? ... If students are not allowed to choose from
    challenging classes, how do you hope to inspire them to strive beyond
    just the minimum requirements, or in other words, to strive beyond
    mediocrity?"

    North Hollywood Principal Randall Delling said there is no room for
    another language class on his overcrowded campus. "My God, where would
    we put it?" he said. "Every single room in this school is used every
    single hour of the day."

    A few years ago, the campus offered French classes, but the former
    principal closed the program because of a high dropout rate and
    purported problems with the instructor. But the school's Spanish
    program, Delling said, is superior. The program has talented teachers
    and Advanced Placement students who are mastering Spanish literature.

    Delling said it was absurd to claim that his campus was discriminating
    against Latinos by offering only Spanish.

    "I've always said I would be willing to look at a French program, or a
    German program or Armenian program. That's fine," he said. "But it's
    got to be a program that ... students want to stay in. Yes, there are
    students who want to take all these languages, but are they willing to
    continue with the program, or will we end up with all of these classes
    and no one in them?"

    According to state data, most California campuses offer Spanish, along
    with at least one other foreign language.

    Arleen Burns, of the California Department of Education, said: "We do
    realize there are often constraints such as resources. In the ideal
    world we would be able to offer a variety of languages to every
    student in California." But she added that the situation at North
    Hollywood and Franklin was rare.

    Bud Jacobs, director of high school programs for L.A. Unified, said
    the district encourages schools to add as many foreign language
    programs as possible. But "foreign language teachers are hard to
    find," he said. "It's an area that could probably use a lot more
    attention."

    In overcrowded schools like North Hollywood, space for core curriculum
    classes, such as math, science, social studies and English, take
    precedence over foreign language classes because they are graduation
    requirements, Jacobs said. Foreign language is not a requirement,
    though most colleges and universities require two to three years of it
    for admission.

    Any Los Angeles high school students who want to take a foreign
    language class that their campus does not offer can enroll
    concurrently in a local community college to study it, Jacobs
    said. That can be complicated, however, because it requires
    rearranging schedules and finding transportation.

    At Franklin High, Principal Sheridan Liechty said her campus had
    offered French and Mandarin in the past, but that students were not
    interested in those subjects.

    "Most of our kids' primary language is Spanish. They do beautifully on
    AP Spanish exams," she said. "If all of your students are selecting
    Spanish, you can't support hiring a French instructor."

    But at the overcrowded Belmont High School near downtown, where 89% of
    students are Latino, there is always a demand for the school's two
    Mandarin and 16 French classes, as well as Spanish, said counselor
    Lewis McCammon. French classes, he said, are packed.

    "A lot of them think it's a very strong academic subject," he said.

    Franklin High student Stephanie Vasquez, 17, said she would love to
    take French.

    "I went to Europe just this past March, and when I went to Paris," she
    said, "I wish we had a [French] class so I could have been prepared."

    The options, she said, limit students like her.

    "I don't think it's fair," she said. "Yeah, Highland Park is a
    Spanish-speaking area. But [another language] makes you prosperous in
    life. It looks better on your resume."
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