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  • School may expand its language programs

    Glendale News Press, CA
    Nov 15 2008


    School may expand its language programs

    German course is already at Franklin Elementary. Italian, Spanish
    offerings might be next.

    By Zain Shauk
    Published: Last Updated Friday, November 14, 2008 10:32 PM PST


    GLENDALE ' Twenty-five kindergartners at Franklin Elementary School
    already receive 90% of their instruction in German, and administrators
    are hoping to put more students into bilingual environments by adding
    programs for Italian and Spanish.

    More than 100 parents attended a presentation about bilingual
    education Thursday, where administrators hoped to stimulate interest
    for the likely expanded language offerings next year.

    Although the school plans to add the new languages next year, with the
    help of supplemental funding from community groups and foreign
    governments, Franklin received a grant Thursday from Italian group
    Fondazione Italia to jump-start interest in an after-school Italian
    program to begin in January, teacher specialist Ana Jones said.

    The addition of immersion classes for Italian and Spanish would
    establish Franklin as a pioneer in the dual-language programs at
    California public schools, with no other school offering three
    languages, said Linda Junge, the Glendale Unified School District's
    public information officer, who said the only other school with three
    immersion programs that officials were aware of was in Texas.

    `Italian is unheard of,' said Junge, adding that Italian and German
    would make the school's language options unique, since most similar
    programs focus on Spanish.

    The possible expansion of programs at Franklin came as both a response
    to community interest in the additional languages and as a means to
    increase enrollment figures at the school, which, at about 350
    students, is the district's smallest, officials said.

    `We want to provide an exceptional educational environment for our
    kids,' Supt. Michael Escalante said, `but it also provides us an
    opportunity of keeping some of the kids in the district from leaving,
    as well as maybe attracting some kids from outside. And maybe that'll
    help us address the issue of declining enrollment.'

    The district's enrollment, which has dropped by almost 10% since 2003,
    was a driving force behind its Foreign Language Academy of Glendale
    program, which so far includes Armenian, German, Korean and Spanish
    immersion programs for students at the elementary school level,
    Escalante said.

    Officials have credited this year's higher-than-expected district
    enrollment figures in part to the increased language options, with 358
    more students attending classes than was originally anticipated. The
    unexpected enrollment jump will bring about $2 million more in
    revenue, according to district officials.

    Adding more immersion programs, including unique languages, may help
    attract more families who want their children in challenging learning
    environments, Junge said.

    Parents from around the Los Angeles area filled Franklin's crowded
    auditorium Thursday night to hear Simona Montanari, a professor of
    child and family studies at Cal State Los Angeles, explain the
    developmental advantages of bilingual education.

    `Children who work with two languages from early on, it seems like
    they're better at creative thinking, or divergent thinking,' Montanari
    said. `It's like they're more flexible.'

    An Italian immersion program at Franklin might persuade Lorena
    Bignamini and her husband, Romeo Portillo, to move to Glendale, they
    said.

    The couple drove almost two hours from West Los Angeles to get to the
    auditorium in time for the start of the presentation at 7 p.m.

    `Raising our child with an Italian background is so important,'
    Bignamini said of her now-3-year-old son, who would enroll in the
    program in 2010.

    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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