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Immigrant Community Organizes Nov. 9 Action For Language Access

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Where: Annunciation Church Basement (1511 S. 10th St.)
When: 9:30 AM - 11:00 AM Sunday, November 9th 2008
Why: To Ask School District to support language access in public schools



FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE:
11/03/08



Press contacts:
Zach Steele (English):267-320-0804, noneuclid@hotmail.com
Irma Zamora (Espanol): 215-755-0959

 
Immigrant Community Organizes Nov. 9 Action For Language Access
Parents and community members working with JUNTOS/Casa de Los Soles will ask School District deputies to pledge their support to community requests for language access in a Public Action to be held on Sunday, November 9 at Annunciation Church, at the corner of 10th and Dickinson St. from 9:30 to 11:00 AM.

Where: Annunciation Church Basement (1511 S. 10th St.)
When: 9:30 AM - 11:00 AM Sunday, November 9th 2008

Why: To Ask School District to support language access in public schools

 
It took an entire school year for Ingrid to get the School District of Philadelphia to move her autistic son into a special program. Ingrid, who does not speak English, struggled to understand School District special education policies and the reports of her son's progress in a foreign school culture and language.

Martha and Irma are concerned about their children's application to magnet schools as they have been unable to read the application materials in English.  Angelica has been waiting weeks to schedule an IEP meeting with an interpreter to evaluate her son's progress in special education classes.

These are just some of the concerns of Latino parents in South Philadelphia who have organized themselves with the help of the community organizations JUNTOS/Casa de los Soles and SEAMAAC (Southeast Asian Mutual Assistance Associations Coalition) to petition the School District to increase funding and professional development programs for bi-lingual, bi-cultural staff to serve as liaisons between immigrant families and the schools.

Eight schools in South Philadelphia, nearly one fourth of all regional schools, are now more than 10% Latino, after experiencing a substantial influx of immigrant children in the last five years. Equal access to educational services on language-based issues is mandated within the Philadelphia public school system by a ruling known as the YS stipulation that set a mandate for language services.

Parents and community members will ask School District deputies Tomas Hanna, Linda Chen, and Claudia Averette to pledge their support to community requests in a Public Action to be held at Annunciation Church, at the corner of 10th and Dickinson St. from 9:30 to 11:00 AM on Sunday, November 9. This action will lay the foundation for increased services to the Latino immigrant community, and the wider South Philadelphia immigrant community as a whole.
 

LISTEN TO RECENT WPEB (88.1 FM) LABOR JUSTICE RADIO PROGRAM ON LANGUAGE ACCESS HERE

Comments

How absurd

Learn the fucking language or get the fuck out. This is an English speaking nation.

They did. The bulletin is in

They did. The bulletin is in English. That means there's more to this. YOU get the fuck out.

Parents United for Public

Parents United for Public Education and the Philadelphia Home & School Council called upon the SRC to terminate the contracts of all the EMO providers. Parents said the District must give ample notice for any school management contract changes.

"We're not going to be in

"We're not going to be in the same position we were last year -- holding onto these failing EMOs and floating the bill just because we missed a deadline," said parent Gerald Wright.

Oh yeah !

Thanks for sharing, very interesting post Dude !!!

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