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FIRN, Howard Public Schools Partner on ESOL Program
Thursday, September 1, 2005
(The Business Monthly) --
By Mark R. Smith
Two years ago,
Foreign-born
Information and Referral Network (FIRN)
Executive Director Roy
Appletree and his volunteers had a simple idea:
to offer free
assistance to some of the 1,600 students in
Howard County's public
schools who did not speak fluent English in
learning the language and
getting acclimated to American
culture.
Its beginnings were humble, as the fledgling
English as a second
language (ESOL) after-school program started
out of Phelp's Luck
Elementary School with a mere six
children.
But today, it is offered in 10 county schools
and hosted about 70
children during the last school year, and with
the help of grant money
and a new partnership with the Howard County
Public School System,
Appletree is hoping the program can soar to
greater heights.
"The public schools will bring a lot to our
table, such as textbooks,
tech support, training, curriculum, access to
materials and assistance
in communication issues," he said, adding, "I
think we are probably one
of the largest volunteer academic enrichment
programs in Howard County,
if not the largest."
Spanning the Globe
FIRN has been tutoring the children in what it
calls its Learning
English After-school Program, or Club LEAP,
once or twice a week to
expedite the process of teaching English.
"We focus mostly on elementary schools to help
the kids make that leap.
That way, they can fit in with the mainstream
in the classroom and
absorb everything else going on around them,"
Appletree said.
The program was established via a Horizon
Foundation grant of $47,000
in October of 2003, which facilitated the
hiring of Volunteer
Coordinator Don Downing, to whom Appletree
offered most of the credit
in building the program.
The following school year, there were six
schools in place. "We see
kids from many countries, including El
Salvador, Pakistan, Mexico,
Korea and Vietnam, and the list goes on.
Maryland and Howard County
have a very diverse foreign-born population,"
Appletree said.
But that population is not weighted toward any
one race. "The largest
group is Asians, followed by Hispanics. But we
serve kids from all over
the world. It's a wonderful experience," he
emphasized.
One More Wish
After Horizon, the second funding source is
Volunteer Maryland, which
is akin to the Peace Corps or VISTA. It offered
FIRN an assistant to
Downing, Glyness Ryan, a former Baltimore
County elementary school
teacher who doubles as a second volunteer
coordinator in the program.
Appletree said he and Paula Blake,
instructional facilitator for
educational partnerships with the county public
schools, are looking
for a third funding source in the private
sector.
Blake got a call from Appletree several months
ago to formalize the
ongoing relationship. "When I heard that the
program was expanding, I
saw the benefit to our ESOL population," she
said, noting the 70
different cultures in Howard County. "So we met
to discuss goals for
the program last spring. Now, Roy is tweaking
it and we plan to sign
the declaration at an event in the
fall.
"We would not have had the resources for such a
program working only
with volunteers," Blake continued. "Usually,
there is no money [in the
public school system] for after-school program
coordinators."
In addition, Blake said, Ryan has established
some procedures that can
be easily implemented, such as the training of
volunteers by school
system personnel and establishing fun
activities for the kids while
serving as a liaison for FIRN at each
school.
"I don't think any other county has a FIRN,"
she said. "It is really a
godsend for people who come here with nothing
but a green card, and no
way to find jobs and social and medical
support. FIRN introduces them
to other people from their own culture who can
help."
Blake said that the school system is involved
in 600 partnerships, but
called the liaison with FIRN "a triple-A
partnership, because it
accelerates academic achievement, as opposed to
a more 'feel-good'
activity."
Culture Shock
There are some alternatives available locally.
The Howard County
Library offers its Project Literacy program and
there are some
church-related programs, said Rebecca Price,
ESOL program coordinator
at Howard Community College (HCC). She is
impressed by the partnership,
calling it a "win-win for everybody."
"These kids come from homes where they don't
get much exposure to
English because they all have their own
cultures. Most students who
start that young acquire adequate English
skills to complete their high
school degree, but it can be a challenge for
many students."
The Club LEAP program can provide a children's
version of the college's
[mostly] free community-based classes that are
funded by a $300,000
grant from the Maryland State Department of
Education, or its intensive
academic credit offerings for $105 per credit
hour. The college "offers
about 90 classes each semester and get about
3,100 registrations per
year," Price said.
Ryan said that the diversity of the Club LEAP
tutors is an important
part of the mix. "They want to help the foreign
population, since they
often understand how it feels for a child to
make the transition to a
new culture," she said.
That can be a big deal when considering that
all cultures have their
various nuances. "Something as simple as
raising one's hand and asking
the teacher for the bathroom pass can be
intimidating," Ryan said. "In
some parts of the world, it is considered
disrespectful to look
directly at your teacher without being
addressed first."
Overall, the kids "pick English up quickly as
they get accustomed to
our culture," Blake said. "But the teachers
really make a difference
and notice that the students benefit from the
reinforcement.
"These types of partnerships are something that
we have no school
system budget [for]," she said, "and these
students achieve instead of
dropping out when they get behind."