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Kids Culture - 05.05.11

Kids Culture - 05.05.11

Art for Japan

    Tomorrow afternoon from 2 to 7 p.m., the students of the Ross School on Goodfriend Drive will hold an art sale. They plan to donate 100 percent of their proceeds to the Japanese Red Cross Society, to aid Japan in rebuilding the disaster-affected prefectures.

Peconic Family Fun

    Kids 5 to 10 can learn about water management, agricultural sustainability, recycling, and environmental stewardship during a Peconic Family Fun Day at the Children’s Museum of the East End in Bridgehampton on Saturday.

    The free event, which runs from 10 a.m. to noon, rain or shine, is co-sponsored by the Group for the East End, the Peconic Land Trust, and the South Fork Natural History Society, which has a museum across the street from CMEE.

    There will be games, a live touch tank, arts and crafts and seed-planting stations, and food. Nature walks will be offered at the South Fork Natural History Museum.

    Also at the SoFo museum, at 1 p.m. that day, Barbara Blaisdell will show kids how to use binoculars. Reservations are required for this program.

Audience Choice

    Improv 4 Kids, the educational and outreach arm of the improvisational comedy troupe Eight Is Never Enough, will entertain children at the Bay Street Theatre in Sag Harbor on Saturday at 3 p.m.

    Kids should put their thinking caps on now: The group will perform on-the-spot sketch and musical comedy scenes based on suggestions from the audience. Justin Bieber at the royal wedding? Sponge Bob meets the first lady? It’s your call.

    The show is geared toward children 4 and older. Tickets cost $15 for those under 14, $20 for adults. There will also be V.I.P tickets offered at $35 each. They come with choice seats and an after-party featuring sliders and chips from Bay Burger.

How E.S.L. Works in Springs

How E.S.L. Works in Springs

Kate Maier
By
Kate Maier

   In Margaret Garsetti’s English as a second language classroom at the Springs School, a group of seven junior high school girls from four different countries sat down to discuss their experiences making the transition into not just a new school, but a new culture and language.

    With varying degrees of skill in English, some, like Melissa Castro, from Colombia, are graduates of the program, having “tested out,” by passing the New York State English as a Second Language Achievement Test, years ago.

    Others, like Madeline and Melissa Lopez, sisters who moved here this year, are new to the program, and still adjusting to what can be an overwhelming environment at times.

    Although the sisters attended school regularly in the Dominican Republic, they are what educators would call “students with interrupted formal education,” or SIFE kids. In their home country, they spent about an hour a day in school. Students of varying backgrounds fall into that category. Some have had little or no education at all, while others have moved around so much that they haven’t been to school in years.

    For Melissa, who came to Springs as a third-grade student and has since moved into Regents-level honors classes, the experience was quite different. “In Colombia, I remember the subjects were much, much harder. I completely love the teachers [in Springs]; they really explain everything well. They’re fun, not strict,” she said, offering a glimpse into what her former education was like, and a stark contrast to the experiences of some of her peers.

    As each girl told her story, they intertwined like fibers in a giant tapestry. Most were separated from family members for extended periods of time. One girl has not seen her mother in six years. The older girls don’t offer information about crossing borders, but the trials some children have gone through show up in other areas, like their art.

    Ms. Garsetti, who has been teaching E.S.L. at Springs for more than a decade, used one child’s picture book autobiography as an example. “When I was 5, I started kindergarten,” it read, with a child’s self-portrait drawn in crayon, the letters of a new language written tenuously between parallel lines.

    “Then next year, I crossed the desert.” That page was accompanied by an ominous drawing of fences and gun-wielding soldiers. (This kid actually “crossed the desert” twice, Ms. Garsetti said. The first time, he was held in prison before being deported, only to try again.)

    “When I was 7, I got my first dog,” the story continued on a more lighthearted note. “When I was 8, I met my first girlfriend.”

    “The one thing I don’t think people realize is the extra steps that parents take to get their kids over here,” said Ms. Garsetti. During her time teaching, she has heard some tales of travel so horrific she would not feel comfortable seeing them in print. “We get kids who cry very day,” while for others, it’s easier to adjust, she said.

    Ms. Garsetti started her career at Springs 13 years ago, and has seen the E.S.L. program evolve along with the student population.

    About 50 percent of the kids at Springs are demographically considered Latino — but there are not enough E.S.L. students to meet the criteria for a bilingual program, like the one at John Marshall that was the subject of a previous article in The Star.

    “If we had five classes per grade we probably would,” said Ms. Garsetti. “What we are here is a freestanding E.S.L. program. We have two teachers, one kindergarten through two, and the other three through eight.”

    As one might expect, running an E.S.L. program “is a scheduling nightmare” that teachers and administrators try to make the best of. “The only thing by law the students cannot miss is gym — and we don’t pull them out during math time, we try to do it during reading and writing class time,” when students would most likely be confused, Ms. Garsetti said.

    For her, “It’s easier to teach the older ones, because when a child has literacy in their fist language, it’s easier. The difficult part is actually learning the mechanics of the language. English is impossible — adverbs, prepositions, two, to, and too.” It can be maddening for a teacher to explain.

    But being an E.S.L. teacher isn’t all about drilling vocabulary words. “It’s a big part of our job even to teach boundaries,” like the appropriate distance to stand while talking to someone. “There’s a clash of the cultures,” she said, offering anecdotes like one about Russian student who was standoffish to the young Latino boys in her class.

    With such a high population of Spanish-speaking immigrants here, it is easy to forget that E.S.L. programs were designed to help students from all sorts of backgrounds. A teacher need not speak the native language to teach a student English.

    “I had all four of the Islami girls. They’re so resilient,” said Ms. Garsetti.

    “There was a war going on between the Serbs and Albania, so we had to get out,” said Hana Islami, an articulate eighth grader who is the youngest of her sisters. It was harder for them, she said, because they remember more. Today, Cinthia Lopez, who hails from Ecuador, is one of Hana’s best friends. They sat side by side in elementary school E.S.L. classes, learning English together.

    Still, for the most part, E.S.L. students at Springs, of which there are about 60 (out of 712 students), are overwhelmingly Latino. “It’s changed tremendously since 13 years ago. Maybe about 16 to 18 percent of the students were Latino. Now it’s half” students of Latino descent, she said. The number of kids she and Alexandra McCourt, the other E.S.L. teacher, are charged with has more than doubled.

    Ms. Garsetti is not sure how she would feel about a bilingual program, in which an entire classroom of students is isolated and taught in English and Spanish. In the evolution of the program at Springs, already, she has noticed it takes kids longer to achieve proficiency.

    “I think what’s happening with us is, 10 years ago the students didn’t have anyone to rely on. They were absolutely learning English much faster . . . because we’re now becoming so proficient in Spanish, our students are taking much longer.”

    “For many reasons I’d like them to be more immersed in the English language,” she said. “Yes, it is wonderful to be bilingual, and that’s definitely the goal of any E.S.L. program, but it takes so much work to be academically proficient.”

    Alongside students who have crossed borders to come here, there is a new, growing population of E.S.L. students who were born in the United States but speak Spanish at home — that is, until they get to kindergarten.

    “Even if you had a bilingual kindergarten,” the grade most likely to qualify for such a program, because of the population, “the state still mandates they have E.S.L. services. You really would need to have a very hearty budget to start something like that.” Springs does not.

     In the meantime, the Springs School Board, in response to repeated requests by parents, has started a new elementary Spanish program, aimed at American students, that may result in bilingual literacy.

    At a recent board meeting, parents and administrators applauded the success of the weekly Spanish electives.

    When a new E.S.L. student starts at Springs, they are paired with a buddy — another native Spanish speaker who helps them to adjust to their new environment and often acts as a translator in class.

    In elementary Spanish classes, students like those are now helping American kids to become bilingual. “I’m doing my best to pair them up with someone” in early Spanish classes, said Michael Kelley, who runs the program. “All of a sudden, they have this Spanish-speaking friend they’re starting to converse with, in Spanish.”

    Despite tensions over immigration and its resultant impact on school taxes, administrators, teachers, and parents at the Springs School have taken strides to make the best of the cultural diversity the population has to offer. With a tighter budget than neighboring districts, Thomas Talmage, a board member, once said the school’s motto is: “We do more with less.”

    “Maybe there are a lot of things we could hope for,” said Ms. Garsetti. But with a supportive principal, Eric Casale, and a warm school community, “I just feel so lucky to be here.”

Student Leads Coat Drive

Student Leads Coat Drive

By
Kate Maier

    An East Hampton High School sophomore has organized a coat drive to provide for needy visitors to the Amagansett Food Pantry. Michael Mata has asked donors to stop by the Amagansett Firehouse at any point this winter and drop off gently used outerwear in a box marked for the coat drive. He has been distributing the coats at the food pantry, where he has volunteered for the past two years. Coats can also be dropped off at the Amagansett satellite of the East Hampton Food Pantry at Scoville Hall, 17 Meeting House Lane, on Tuesdays from 2 to 4 p.m.

    In the past three weeks, Michael said, he has collected hundreds of coats, with no plans of stopping. He has been advertising the drive on Facebook and by word of mouth.

    The 15-year-old is carrying on a family tradition in community service — an older brother, Nicholas, has worked with Habitat for Humanity, and his father is a member of the Amagansett Fire Department who also volunteers at the pantry.

    On May 1, Michael was in a dirt bike accident that severely injured his left foot. He spent nearly a month in the hospital and has undergone a number of surgeries since then, with another scheduled for tomorrow. Throughout the ordeal, he was surprised that strangers and classmates from high school had reached out to write letters and wish him well.

    The experience, he said, made him want to help others more than ever. At the food pantry, “when people came in, I could see they needed coats. A lot of people were showing up in short sleeves.” 

 

A Correction for John Victor Wolge

A Correction for John Victor Wolge

An obituary for John Victor Wolge that appeared in the Nov. 10 issue of the paper contained several errors. Mr. Wolge 's daughter is Sandra Ellen Wolge. His father is John Peter Wolge, not Peter Wolge, and Francessa Bass, identified as his sister, is actually his sister-in-law. In addition, the name of the town where his son, John Richard Wolge, lives was misspelled. It is Deltona, Fla.

Paul Craig Jones

Paul Craig Jones

Paul Craig Jones, a retired Southampton Town police officer who lived on Banks Court in East Hampton, died on Nov. 9 at the Northport Veterans Administration Hospital after a prolonged illness. He was 63.