
-
Use Cases
-
Resources
-
Pricing
Bilingual education in America has changed immensely over time. As the student population has changed, so has the need for different bilingual programs.
1839
% complete
Ohio passes the first law to officially allow Bilingual Education.
The law permitted German-English instruction upon the request of the parent.Cincinnati's first bilingual school was founded to aid the large German population.
1847
% complete
Louisiana passes a law allowing French-English instruction.
1864
% complete
Congress passes a law that prohibits Native Americans from being taught in their own languages
1870
% complete
New Mexico passes a law recognizing and permitting Spanish instruction in public elementary schools.
1879
% complete
Federal policy begins separating many Native American students from their families.Native American students are sent to boarding schools and punished when caught speaking in their native language.
1889
% complete
Bennett Act (Wisconsin) and Edwards Act (Illinois)Children ages eight to fourteen in both public and private schools must be instructed in English in the "three 'R's" (reading, writing, and arithmetic) and American History.
1906
% complete
Nationality Act
Congress' first federal language law requiring that all immigrants seeking naturalization speak English. The law theoretically should have solved the Bilingual Education issue
1920
% complete
By 1923, 34 states had laws mandating English-only instruction.
1934
% complete
The Bureau of Indian Affairs rescinds its federal policy of repressing the use of Native American languages.
This repression, however, continues illegally into the 1940s and 1950s.
1958
% complete
National Defense Education Act
This act provided aid to both public and private schools at all levels to advance the areas of science, math, and modern foreign languages.
The act also provided aid to English as a Second Language programs.
1965
% complete
Elementary and Secondary Education Act (ESEA)
This act was passed by President Johnson.
The act outlined and provided funds for educational programs that were considered essential for children and public education. Bilingual Education was one such program that received funding
1967
% complete
ESEA, Title VII
The Bilingual Education Act became a federal statute under Title VII of the Elementary and Secondary Education Amendment of 1967.
It provided federal funding for the Bilingual Education Act of 1968.
1968
% complete
Bilingual Education Act
The act mandated that schools provide Bilingual Education programs.
The act was passed during an era of growing immigration and an energized Civil Rights movement.
The act provided federal funding to encourage local school districts to try approaches incorporating native-language instruction. This was the first time U.S. Congress had endorsed funding for Bilingual Education.
Most states followed the lead of the federal government, enacting Bilingual Education Laws of their own or at least decriminalizing the use of other language in the classroom (Cohen, 29-31).
In its first year, the act provided funding for 76 Bilingual Education programs and served students who spoke 14 different languages.
1982
% complete
Amendment to the Bilingual Education Act of 1968
Terrence Bell, Secretary of Education, saw the guidelines in the Bilingual Education Act as too inflexible.
Lawmakers amended the act, offering Title VII programs the option of using English-only instruction.
1994
% complete
Proposition 187 (California)
Proposition 187 is introduced to deny illegal immigrants (or those suspected of being so) health care, social services, and public education.
In November of 1994, the issue was brought to the voters, where it received 59% of the votes in its favor, and became a law.
Its constitutionality was immediately challenged and three days after Election Day, a temporary restraining was placed on the new law.
In March of 1998, U.S. District Court confirmed that the federal government has exclusive authority of immigration policies and thus, the law was unconstitutional. This court ruling effectively killed the law.
1998
% complete
Proposition 227 says that all California students must be taught in English as rapidly as possible.
The proposition places non-English speaking students in a short-term English immersion program. Students generally do not spend more than one year in the program, however, one year after the English-only program was implemented, and only 7% of students who had participated in the program were considered fluent in the English language.
The proposition requires that all public education must be conducted in English and severely restricts the use of their native language for the instruction of English learners.
The proposition was marketed as the "English for the Children" movement.
The 2004 test results for CA public schools showed that the achievement gap was widening for English learners in CA.
In 2004, the test scores of English learners were declining in a majority of the grade levels.
Proposition 227 does not provide solutions to the challenges of cultural integration of language minorities.
2001
% complete
No Child Left Behind Act
The act was originally the Bilingual Education/Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1964-5.
The act mandates that each state must measure every public school student's progress in reading and math from the third grade through the eighth grade. Further progress must be measured at least once between the tenth and twelfth grades.
By the 2007-2008 school year, assessments (or testing) in science will be underway.
The act requires that all teachers teaching in Bilingual Education programs be fluent in English and any other language used in the classroom.
The act gives parents the choice to enroll their children in a Bilingual Education program, but puts a three year "time-limit" on Bilingual programs. After a student has been in school for three consecutive years, English-only instruction must commence, regardless of the student's English speaking ability.