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Agreement Is Reached for Students From Somalia

ISSUE 215
Front Page
Index

This Week's Somaliland News

Headlines

New Oil Concession Secretly‎ Signed With An Indian Businessman‎

Unknown Flying Object‎ Witnessed In Somaliland Night Sky   

The Baidoa Rendezvous‎‎‎‎

Wales Strikes Out On Its‎ Own In Its Recognition Of Somaliland

American UN Employee Kidnapped In Somalia‎‎

AU Mission To‎ Somaliland Says Recognition Overdue

Regional Affairs

Breakaway State Has Achieved ‎Peace, Stability, Democracy

Range Teams Start Hunting In Somalia‎

The Speaker Of The Parliament Of Somaliland ‎Has Been A Guest Of The Queen In Cardiff And ‎Now Addresses Somaliland Diaspora In The UK

Militia Attack On Puntland's Mps‎

Somali Warlords Reject Call To Lift ‎UN Arms Embargo‎‎

Denmark Asks EU To Stop Djibouti Boycott

Forecast Shows Africa To Face River Crisis

Somali Parliament's Peace Bid Bad For Gun Business‎

Editorial
Special Report

International News

Battle For Hearts In Bandit Country‎‎‎‎‎‎‎

Yemen: Government Calls For Help ‎Curtailing Human Smuggling‎‎

Agreement Is Reached for Students From Somalia

UK Government Invests US$1 Million In ‎Initiative To Fight Pirate Fishing‎

FEATURES & COMMENTARY

Somali Book Launch

Book Reviews: Desert Children‎‎

US Will Be Launching Predator Strikes In The Horn‎‎

Viva World Cup

Bossaso Port In Somalia Unlikely El ‎Dorado For The Displaced

Case Study Report

The Ticking Bomb:‎ The Educational Underachievement of Somali Children in the British Schools

Opinions

Well Done Mohamed‎‎ ‎‎

Finance Minister Should Not Be ‎Involved In Budget Preparation‎‎‎‎

Who Shelved The Role Of Attorney General’s Office In The Case Of Joint Needs Assessment Program?

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By Somalilandtimes network

By JONATHAN D. GLATER

Springfield, Mass. March 2, 2006 – An agreement intended to improve educational opportunities for Somali children enrolled in schools in Springfield, Mass., was reached by the federal Education Department and Springfield Public Schools late last month, representatives of both entities said.

Under the agreement, the school district said it would hire more tutors who speak both English and Somali and provide after-school programs to help Somali high school students improve their English, among other things.

It comes in response to a civil rights complaint filed last fall with the Education Department which charged that the schools had illegally discriminated against the Somalis on the basis of their national origin by failing to provide necessary educational services.

"The Somali children were not getting an effective education," said Jean Caldwell, who helped file the complaint and who, along with other Springfield residents, has spoken out on behalf of the Somalis.

Ms. Caldwell called the recent agreement "a tremendous victory."

Mary Beach, assistant to the superintendent of the Springfield schools, said the system had had difficulty helping the Somali children largely because officials could not find enough Somali speakers to be translators or tutors.

"We keep posting for translators," but finding people who can do the job is difficult, Dr. Beach said. The schools hope that additional outreach efforts will lead to more bilingual tutors.

The school district has also agreed to allow any student who is the only Somali enrolled in a school to transfer.

The district is also to offer a summer program in English language and other subjects, and by next fall is to ensure that the Somali students have been assigned to a smaller number of schools. Currently, 84 students are spread across 21 schools.

Dr. Beach defended how the district had placed the students.

"Students in the city go to schools where they live," she said. "That's our design. If they ended up being sent to other schools, they'd be treated differently, which wouldn't be appropriate either."

Both Ms. Caldwell and Roger Rice, a lawyer at Multicultural Education Training and Advocacy, an organization that monitors educational access for immigrant students that helped file the complaint with the Education Department, disputed that contention.

"It's discrimination to put them in one place because they're Somalis," Ms. Caldwell said. "It's not discrimination to put them in one place because they speak Somali and don't know English."

Several Somali refugee families have settled in Massachusetts in recent years, sponsored by local charities. The Office of Civil Rights at the Education Department conducted an investigation into accusations about the Somali children's treatment in response to the complaint against the school district and found "concerns," said a department spokesman, David Thomas.

Mr. Thomas said the department would continue to monitor the district's progress in carrying out the agreement.

According to a letter on Friday to a lawyer involved in filing the complaint, Education Department investigators interviewed 30 teachers at eight district schools, 32 Somali students and a Somali translator, among others.

Many middle and high school teachers did not hold bilingual education certifications, the department found, and teachers also said they could not communicate with Somali students to check whether they understood class materials

Source: New York Times


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