Board of Ed Revisits Plan to Teach Spanish at Elementary Schools
The proposal would add $344,000 to the operating budget.
Darien school administrators have revived a proposal to add Spanish language classes at the town's elementary schools, citing studies supporting the practice and nearby districts that are already doing the same.
Judith Pandolfo, assistant superintendent of elementary education, introduced the idea at Wednesday's Board of Education meeting. Her presentation echoed a similar plan presented a year ago and backed by many parents — one that was ultimately cut from the 2011-12 budget in the face of mounting special education costs.
Pandolfo cited the American Council on the Teaching of Foreign Language, the Center for Applied Linguistics, and other academic institutions in praising the benefits of teaching another language to young students.
“We recognize a foreign language gives students a better understanding of their own language,” Pandolfo said. “Spanish is used in our communities, and uses the same alphabet as our language.
"This is our vision: learning and the use of Spanish will be infused into the culture of the school," she added.
The proposal would add $344,000 to the operating budget and includes five additional teachers at $64,000 apiece, supplies at $23,000, and curriculum development at $1,250.
As part of the curriculum, students would also learn Spanish words in music, art, and physical education. Each class of elementary school students would receive 45 minutes of Spanish instruction per week.
“We are looking to develop a comprehensive program to provide what we think is best for our students,” Superintendent Stephen Falcone said.
"We believe it is important to have a foreign language component. It will heighten students’ interests of other cultures, and enable students to use language at an appropriate level," he added.
Board member James Plutte voiced support for the proposal but said he wished it were more ambitious.
“I like the idea of having 45 minutes in one section, because it is a significant amount of time,” Plutte said. “Our kids will hear Spanish wherever they go: at the store, and at the gas station. It gives us an opportunity."
More than 35 people attended the meeting, some of whom addressed the board directly.
Cindy Brown — a Darien mother of four who speaks French, Hungarian, and English — advocated for comprehensive foreign language classes in kindergarten through fifth grade.
“Kids remember by repeating words,” Brown said. “If it is world language, then why not introduce French rather than only Spanish?
“There is probably a ten-to-one ratio of parents who support this program versus parents who oppose this program,” said Michael Devlin, a Darien father of three. “I would hate to see a great program be scuttled because of a difficult economic time.”
Newly-appointed chairman Elizabeth Hagerty-Ross temporarily cut off discussion of the issue to allow the board to move onto the rest of its agenda but invited Darien parents to contact her at ehr1226@aol.com.
not2bdenied
5:16 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
Referendum pressure causes BOE to reconsider Foreign Language expansion. Within 72 hours of the submission of the referendum signatures we get the BOE to consider giving in to foreign language funding. While supporters of the shuffle think this will deflate the passions of the referendum team it should do just the opposite.Speak up,challange,fight,and question to get the desired result. Congratulations Referendum Team !! You have won the first two rounds of this battle. The first round was won by getting the necessary signatures. The second by forcing the BOE to consider expansion of the language program. KEEP IT GOING!!
John Davisson
5:24 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
One note from the story above: the meeting in question occurred on Wednesday of last week.
John Davisson
6:12 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
I mention it just to clarify the timeline, as our write-up was published a few days after the actual meeting.
not2bdenied
5:56 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
Ok 48 hours prior to the referendum signatures being submitted. The point remains the same.
John Boulton
10:04 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
No it doesn't. You got nabbed. But then, what do you expect from an anonymous source.
Luca Duff Cruz
6:20 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
not2 be denied
Ha
I mean are you serious? I would strongly suggest you just erase your entry. Unless you think that be disingenuous is the way to go.
you dont come up with ideas complete with cost estimates and policy changes 1 day after the election occured 4 days after the shuffle passed the rtm and 2 days before the referendum votes were received--based on the shuffle. Sorry, but you sound a little desperate to actually think that a threat for a referendum that has a very low chance of succeeding (3100 votes when lundeen got 1500??) as driving BOE policy which is pretty apolitical.
If you want to sound reasonable--Id just delete it. Its really out in left field.
John Boulton
10:19 pm on Monday, November 14, 2011
Dear School Parents,
What the article and exchange above tells you is two things:
1) that the Board of Ed and the Darien Public Schools will continue to move forward to provide your children with a top-quality education, even as the Facilities Transfer plan gets funded by the Board of Finance, and,
2) you are going to hear an awful lot of mind-bending nonsense from the Stop The Shuffle crowd in the weeks ahead. Be smart. Despite what they say, a great school system and a terrific Mather Center plan ARE compatible together.
James Palen
7:15 am on Tuesday, November 15, 2011
John Boulton makes a great point in that the proposed facilities plan has nothing to do with the Board of Education having the funds to deliver a great education to our children. The foreign language program was cut in response to increased special education program costs and increased teacher salaries and wages. It was always the desire of the Board of Education to revisit the language program (as well as other programs) this year. The timing has nothing to do with the plan known as the Shuffle.
Hear is the story:
http://www.thedailydarien.com/schools/darien-schools-axe-elementary-world-language