Dozens of young children and parents crowded outside Linden Hill Elementary School on a brisk Tuesday morning, donning masks and waving signs that read, âSave Chinese Immersion!â and âWe love this immersion program. Donât stop it!âÂ
It had been just days after families were told the schoolâs Chinese Immersion program would be canceled after the 2020-2021 academic year.
Red Clay Consolidated School District officials informed the families by email on March 19, a shock to parents who said their children will be displaced as a result of the districtâs decision.Â
âWe had no idea the program was in jeopardy,â said Fay Kennish, whose daughter Chelsea is a first grader enrolled in the program. Kennish was planning to keep Chelsea in the program until she graduates high school.Â
âOur childrenâs educational pathway has already been laid out for them, so now weâre all kind of uprooted,â she said.Â
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Unlike a typical language course, the Chinese Immersion program runs kindergarten through 12th grade, requiring students to learn and speak Mandarin for half the school day, while immersing them in Chinese culture. Courses like math and science are taught in Mandarin to program participants.Â
The program began four years ago and currently has about 100 students enrolled, according to Kennish, who created an online petition urging the district to continue the program. Within days, more than 1,000 people included their signatures.Â
âThe school announced that it can no longer sustain the program due to a number of factors,â district officials said in a statement Tuesday, citing a declining interest in the program, a âsignificantâ number of requests to leave the program early and building capacity and class size issues.Â
Per the statement, families in the program were offered a âchoice of educational optionsâ for the next academic year, ensuring students can continue attending Linden Hill regardless of whether they live in the schoolâs attendance zone. They can also return to their original school or apply to attend another Red Clay school in Fall 2021.Â
Kennish called some of the districtâs reasons for ending the program âshortsighted.â For her daughter, being able to speak a second language is important.Â
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Parents Wen Zhao and George Peart moved from Brandywine School District to Red Clay because of the Chinese Immersion program. They were going to enroll their children, who are currently two years old and seven months old, when they reached kindergarten age.
âWe just bought a house in the beginning of February and now, two months later, to hear that theyâre getting rid of the program, itâs heartbreaking,â Peart said. âIt goes against everything we were planning for.âÂ
Behind him, young children wearing puffy jackets chanted, âBuild bridges! Save Immersion!â in high-pitched voices.Â
Peart, a certified public accountant, said language skills can attract new businesses and talent to Delaware, and theyâre important in terms of trade and business, especially considering the growth of Chinaâs economy.Â
Peart learned Spanish in high school and taught himself Japanese, but he would have spoken both languages more fluently if heâd had a program similar to Chinese Immersion growing up.Â
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âIf I had really strengthened that when I was younger, I would be that much better at my current job,â Peart said. âRight now Iâm using Google Translate. How good is that? Here we had a chance to build a pipeline of students who are bilingual.âÂ
Kelli Carrubba was also planning to enroll her son Jacob, 3, when he enters the school system. Carrubba said the Chinese Immersion program was setting a better future for her daughter Eleanor, teaching her values Carrubba says she didnât get to learn in kindergarten.Â
âItâs more than just a language,â Carrubba said, as her daughters Eleanor and Amelia, 8, held a sign reading, âEmbrace Diversity.âÂ
âThey learn that everyone is valued,â she said. âI feel like if theyâre taking this away, theyâre taking away part of Eleanorâs future.âÂ
Several parents said the program helped their children build confidence and become more social.Â
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Azalea Gupta, a 7-year-old student in the program, can now speak Mandarin with her mother, Chery.Â
âShe feels awesome when she feels like she can communicate with me,â said Chery, whose first language is Mandarin. âYou know that feeling? âFinally, I can understand what my mom says when she talks to her family in China.ââÂ
Linden Hill Principal Melissa Brady informed families on March 22 that âthe school is going to take a step back to ensure that the school community has a common understanding of the challenges and complexities of sustaining a Chinese Immersion program at Linden Hill.âÂ
Linden Hill plans to hold a listening session for the families later this week, per the statement.
Many families in the program believe learning other languages and cultures is important now more than ever: The announcement to shut down the Chinese Immersion program came two days after a deadly shooting in Georgia that left eight people dead, including six women of Asian descent. The organization Stop AAPI Hate recently reported nearly 3,800 hate incidents against Asian American and Pacific Islander communities between March 2020 and February 2021.Â
Itâs one of the reasons why Linden Hill parents are eager to keep the program running.Â
âWith the climate and everything going on in this country right now, we feel like we need to be building bridges, not knocking them down,â Kennish said. âItâs not acceptable.â
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