国产视频, Old America, and Holding the Ground for Multilingual Learners
The new America is a diverse America. A tide of younger, browner citizens are replacing older, whiter ones. Millennials, who are multiethnic than past generations, will transition the U.S. into a 鈥溾 nation by 2044. The demographic shift largely stems from heightened immigration and by white Americans. Since 1990, children of immigrants constitute all of U.S. population from ages 0-8.
As demographer William H. Frey has , the evolving diversity 鈥渟hould be greeted with optimism鈥 given its potential for 鈥渞evitalizing our country, energizing our labor force and providing greater connectivity to the global economy.鈥 And yet, many Americans鈥攑articularly a whiter, older voting bloc comprised of baby boomers鈥.
Last week鈥檚 presidential election put this fault line between old and new America on full display. Although Clinton received a lower share of votes from the youngest bracket of voters (ages 18-29) than Obama did in both his elections, she 55 percent of their votes compared to 国产视频 37 percent. If only millennial votes counted, Clinton would have won in a .
But a nostalgic vision for a bygone America resonated with the older generation, voters ages 45 and above Trump to Clinton, 53 to 45 percent. To many Trump supporters, a U-turn to an , more glorious version of America was preferable to green lighting a globalizing future.
For advocates and educators who care deeply about young, multilingual students, however, 聽国产视频 election 鈥斅爌ropelled by this 鈥溾濃攚as a bewildering shock to the system.
The results present several sobering implications for multicultural, multilingual children, the faces of a new America. This is especially true for the education of dual language learners (DLLs), students who speak one language at home and learn English at school. These learners are the subgroup population in U.S. schools, and the majority are native-born, U.S. citizens from Latino immigrant families. Beyond a moral and legal responsibility to do right by these kids, it鈥檚 in our nation鈥檚 best interest to invest seriously in them. They are our future taxpayers, workers, and public servants, a valuable we can鈥檛 afford to squander.
However, a Trump administration seems likely to neglect 鈥斅爄f not actively harm 鈥 progress for these already learners. As my colleague Conor Williams recently wrote, the bulk of 国产视频 rhetoric and policy positions were 鈥減lainly hostile to DLLs, immigrant families, and cultural pluralism.鈥 His plans on immigration would tear millions of mixed-status families apart by deporting many DLLs鈥 parents and family members. And across the nation, schools are already reporting 鈥,鈥 in the words of Mitt Romney, an uptick in bigoted violence and hate speech emboldened by 国产视频 election.
Within the U.S. Department of Education (ED), Trump to cut the Office of Civil Rights that compliance violations for DLLs and their at the local level. While he is unlikely to give any targeted attention to DLLs, his views would most likely stress English-only assimilation versus the integration of students鈥 home languages as an asset. Long gone will be the days of ED鈥檚 symposiums and policy on the value of multiliteracy under the Obama administration. Remember: this is a man backed by a base where of supporters feel uncomfortable encountering immigrants with limited English.
And yet, even if 国产视频 exclusionary tenor towards newcomers prevailed nationally, there was one notable victory for multilingualism when the dust settled last Tuesday. In the Golden State, California voters passed , pulling back the state鈥檚 longstanding English-only mandate for its 1.5 million DLLs who comprise nearly a of the entire U.S. DLL population. The change gives districts important flexibility to decide how they want to serve these children, such as through bilingual models. Research consistently suggests can boost DLL鈥檚 , cognitive, and socioemotional skills, including proficiency in English. Support for the new measure was definitive with 73 percent of the vote.
California鈥檚 example provides something of a foil to 国产视频 triumph in national headlines. Originally passed in 1998, California鈥檚 English-only mandate had been sponsored by Ron Unz, another white, wealthy business entrepreneur. 聽But a lot changed over the past two decades. Beyond the growing research base in support of bilingual learning, the in political will mirrors the state鈥檚 diversifying population: Latinos as the largest racial group in 2014, a harbinger for the rest of the nation. In this context, the lion鈥檚 share of California voters supported nurturing the assets of their multilingual communities.
In addition to California, other diversifying states are also taking a proactive stance to reform policies to better serve their dual language learners. As my team details in two new reports, and Minnesota both comprehensively revamped their state policies to better serve DLLs in recent years. There are similarities in both states鈥 strategies: foster DLLs鈥 bilingualism, better engage DLLs鈥 families, improve DLL data tracking, and strengthen teacher and administrators abilities to work with DLLs. Implementation of these reforms is still very much underway, but the research-based policy redesign for DLLs in both states is encouraging.
So, even in a dispiriting season for many DLL educators and advocates, there are flickers of hope. And these state examples are crucial, since now, more than ever, the torch for multilingual students will be each state鈥檚 to carry. In part, this is because the election comes at a time when the window for K鈥12 federal education reforms has largely closed; a new federal education law, the Every Student Succeeds Act, just passed in December 2015. The law substantially the federal government鈥檚 role in evaluating and intervening in low-performing schools. A Trump administration will likely exacerbate this increase in state autonomy by scaling back several aspects of the proposed recently under Obama鈥檚 administration.
To be sure, this decentralization presents real concerns. While increased state flexibility presents opportunities for local innovation, it also creates much greater risk for our most vulnerable students by gutting federal oversight that has prompted reform, in places such as New York and . In this next era, state advocates 鈥 particularly community organizers and civil rights groups 鈥 will play a critical role as watchdogs, guarding the vision of equitable education systems for multilingual children in red and blue contexts.
It will be hard work in the immediate years ahead. But the diverse people who make up our new America will be going nowhere. A groundswell for inclusivity is poised to build for future elections, especially as demographics overturn and Americans of color gain critical mass. In the meantime, education leaders outside of Washington must hold the ground for vulnerable children in their communities, including multilingual learners, as this new, national identity takes shape.