COMMUNITY WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 2019 HERMISTONHERALD.COM • A7 Umatilla’s new bilingual program aims to elevate both language and lengua sion classes, which will be under a different format than native language liter- acy courses. Next year, Garcia Quezeda will share her class with a co-teacher. She will lead a Spanish-only sec- tion of the class during one-half of the day while her co-teacher will handle English for the other half. She said the dual lan- guage courses won’t just be benefi cial for students like her who came to school knowing little English, but also native English speak- ers with little exposure to Spanish. By ANTONIO SIERRA STAFF WRITER At least three languages were being spoken at McNary Heights Elemen- tary School on Thursday, and Umatilla School Dis- trict offi cials were encour- aging it. A Japanese language pro- gram was visiting the school and the children seemed to be picking it up quickly. McNary Heights Principal Rick Cotterell said he had just greeted a student who proceeded to spout off sev- eral words in Japanese. “I think it’s legit,” he said, laughing. But school offi cials are more interested in better integrating a language far more prevalent in Umatilla: Spanish. With the exception of a charter school in Ontario, Umatilla will become the fi rst district in Eastern Oregon to offer dual lan- guage immersion courses in English and Spanish when it starts the program at the beginning of the next school year, according to Superin- tendent Heidi Sipe. Sipe, who’s worked for the district since 2000 and been its superintendent since 2007, said such a program has been a longtime goal for her and her staff, but the dis- trict has only recently been able to gather the resources and staffi ng capacity to get it started. David Lougee, the bilin- gual program director for the district, said staff was inspired to pursue it further when they attended a 2015 conference that showed the benefi ts of a dual language program. Sipe, Cotterell, and the Umatilla School Board all became ardent support- ers, and with nine bilingual teachers on staff this year, the district felt ready to take the plunge. “It takes a long time to build capacity,” she said. Teaching in two tongues Teaching is the act of juggling a rotating assort- ment of competing inter- ests, but McNary Heights kindergarten teacher Jessica Garcia Quezada throws in a few more balls by toggling between languages. “On your bottom,” she says to her students as she tries to settle them on a car- District presses ahead Staff photo by E.J. Harris Kindergarten teacher Jessica Garcia Quezada works with student Yadiel Coria on his spelling in Spanish on Thursday in a native language literacy class at McNary Heights Elementary School in Umatilla. Staf photo by E.J. Harris Kindergarten teacher Jessica Garcia Quezada goes over vowel sounds with her native language literacy class on Thursday at McNary Heights Elementary School in Umatilla. pet. “Abajo.” She leads them through a song where they chant all the months in English before asking them if they were ready for “Español.” “Enero, Febrero, Marzo, Abril, Mayo, Junio y Julio tambien,” a cluster of 11 voices chime together. “Agosto, Septembre, Octo- bre, Novembre, y Diciem- bre tambien.” This is one of the dis- trict’s native language liter- acy classes, a class specifi - cally designed for 48% of the school that’s classifi ed as an “ever English learner,” a stat that includes English Thank you to the following businesses for supporting Newspapers in Education Their generous support of the Hermiston Herald NIE program helps provide copies of the newspaper and unlimited access to HermistonHerald.com and the e-Edition to to schools schools throughout throughout the the community. community. learners and those that will be reclassifi ed as fl uent. While most school dis- tricts in the area use an English language learner model where students learn in an English-only class- room while being pulled from the class throughout the day to work on literacy with a bilingual teacher or assistant, Umatilla’s native language literacy program begins the year mostly focused on Spanish literacy while introducing more and more English as the year goes along. Sipe said it often brings tears to her eyes whenever she sees Garcia Quezada teaching. Garcia Quezada is a homegrown teacher, hav- ing returned as a teacher four years ago after going through the Umatilla school system as a student. She was a native lan- guage literacy student her- self, and Lougee taught her as a student when he still worked in the classroom. Although she had gone through the program her- self, Garcia Quezada said she was initially worried in her fi rst year of teach- ing that she would set her kids behind by focusing on Spanish. But Garcia Quezada said she was assuaged when she saw her students’ growth, and Sipe and Lougee said the district’s data backs it up: fi rst-graders who were in the native language literacy pro- gram generally performed better in English literacy than their peers who were in English-only classes. Garcia Quezada cred- ited the program for sharp- ening her literacy in both languages enough that she could eventually use those skills as a teacher in her home community. “I see these kids and I see myself,” she said. Garcia Quezada said she’s excited to start teach- ing dual language immer- There’s no shortage of bilingual education critics. Some feel like such a pro- gram forces a foreign lan- guage on a family with no interest in learning it, while others think incorporating Spanish in English lessons inhibits students from learn- ing the country’s predomi- nant language faster. But Sipe said Umatilla’s dual language program is an opt-in program and students will still have the option of attending an English only-class. And Cotterell, the McNary Heights princi- pal, said people only have to look at the data if they’re worried that a dual language course is an impediment to English profi ciency. The district plans to restrict dual language classes to kindergarten in 2019-20 with plans to expand it to K-5 in the years to come. Eventually, Sipe said, staff would like to offer dual lan- guage courses to middle and high school students as an elective course. Any early concerns about the program hasn’t damp- ened early enthusiasm: Of the students that have reg- istered for kindergarten so far, 40 have opted in, eight have opted out, and another 10 are undecided. EVERYONE CAN GET 50% OFF Hurry in now for our latest smartphones. 1090 W. Hermiston Ave. Hermiston, OR 541-567-8229 JeremyJLarsonDMD.com 1739 N. 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