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Author Topic: over 120 different languages spoken in Tenn Schools  (Read 515 times)

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Offline Binechi

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over 120 different languages spoken in Tenn Schools
« on: May 11, 2016, 11:35:50 AM »
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  • http://eagnews.org/over-120-languages-spoken-in-nashville-schools/

    NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Recently released data from the Metropolitan Nashville Public Schools shows about a third of the district’s 85,000 student population does not speak English as a first language.

    Of those 25,300 students, more than 12,300 require special services, primarily in elementary schools, The Tennessean reports.

    The majority of Nashville students learning English speak Spanish at home, and Arabic speakers comprise the second largest group.

    According to statistics provided to the Tennessean by the district, a total of 120 different languages are spoken in Metro schools, with the most popular being Spanish, Arabic, Kurdish, Somali, Vietnamese, Burmese, Napali, Amharic, Chinese and Karen.

    Spanish speaking students are by far the largest group with 16,896 students, while Arabic and Kurdish round out the top three at 3,435 and 1,181, respectively.

    Data shows the number of Metro students requiring special services to learn English has been on the rise, from 8,751 in the 2011-12 school year to 12,329 in 2015-16.

    The highest concentration of Arabic students is found at Antioch High School, where about 264 students speak the language.

    The situation, for some reason, prompted district officials to launch a new Arabic language program last year, and they apparently targeted Antioch and several other schools with high Arabic student populations to pilot the program.

    “The schools – Antioch High School, Margaret Allen Middle Prep, Cane Ridge High School, Antioch Middle Prep, Overton High School and McMurray Middle Prep – were selected based on a survey of students’ home languages,” Chalkbeat reported this spring.

    “Because all of the schools have several Arabic-speaking students – in some cases, hundreds – two different courses will be offered: beginning Arabic and heritage Arabic, for native speakers to deepen their knowledge of the language and learn to read and write in Arabic,” according to the site.


    Offline Binechi

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    over 120 different languages spoken in Tenn Schools
    « Reply #1 on: May 11, 2016, 01:24:14 PM »
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  • A nation going screwy... Instead of opening classes for these people to learn English,,, the American Culture, They open classes to better teach them more about their foreign languages.  Is this insane .  or what ?

      Nobody opened Italian classes , when I was growing up, to better my parents languages.  


    Offline Last Tradhican

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    over 120 different languages spoken in Tenn Schools
    « Reply #2 on: May 11, 2016, 07:56:57 PM »
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  • Quote
    According to statistics provided to the Tennessean by the district, a total of 120 different languages are spoken in Metro schools


    Yeah, 120 languages, if they consider Mexican, Brazilian, Jamaican, Bahamian, Cuban, Venezuelan, Colombian, Argentinan....... as languages
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    Offline AlligatorDicax

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    over 120 different languages spoken in Tenn Schools
    « Reply #3 on: May 12, 2016, 10:24:43 PM »
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  • Quote from: Last Tradhican (May 11, 2016, 8:56 pm)
    Quote
    According to statistics provided to the [Nashville] Tennessean by the district, a total of 120 different languages are spoken in Metro schools

    Yeah, 120 languages, if they consider Mexican, Brazilian, Jamaican, Bahamian, Cuban, Venezuelan, Colombian, Argentinan....... as languages

    Really, now?  Do you have a Web address that you could provide that lists the "120 different languages"?  (Following the most readily available links didn't reach any such list.)

    Absent further information, I'm not inclined to trust a sarcastic response from someone who fails to recognize that the vernacular language of Jamaica (U.K. Commonwealth, indep. 1962), formally Jamaican Creole, commonly but inexplicably identified by the French word "patois", thus "Jamaican Patois" is a distinct language (ISO 639-3 jam).  It really doesn't matter whether--or not--a reader considers its typical, um, infusion of Niger-Congo vocabulary in the vernacular of this former British-colonial island to be a simple-minded corruption of the Queen's English: It's the distinctive language that they speak.

    This is not simply a matter of haggling over linguistic taxonomy.  Imagine facing the U.S. "civil rights" bureaucracy about whether your state or county is legally required to provide its election-day & sample ballots in "Jamaican Creole".  Never mind that only U.S. citizens are legally allowed to vote in U.S. elections.