In 1998, Silicon Valley millionaire Ron Unz spearheaded the passage of California\u27s Proposition 227, designed to ban bilingual education as an instructional method. Two years later, Arizona approved similar legislation, and Unz has recently brought his campaign to Massachusetts and Colorado. This Note analyzes Proposition 227 and its offSpring in Arizona and argues this legislation is violative of federal statutes, politically unsound, culturally biased, and pedagogically inaccurate. In particular, the Note contends that bilingual education involving instruction in a student\u27s native language with the goal of either transition to English proficiency or complete bilingual fluency is an effective educational method and efforts to elim...
The Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act requires grade-level attainment in literacy ...
Volume 110, Issue 26https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9242/thumbnail.jp
This paper was written as a response to the political debate in California regarding the proper role...
In 1998, Silicon Valley millionaire Ron Unz spearheaded the passage of California\u27s Proposition 2...
This Note addresses Proposition 227, California\u27s recently enacted voter initiative banning bilin...
When Proposition 227 passed in 1998, it essentially ended a thirty-year program of bilingual educati...
was approved by Californians in June of 1998. This proposition amended the state constitution to out...
A public hearing was held before the Joint Committee on Education, Arts and Humanities on May 13, 19...
People of California have decided to eliminate public school bilingual education. This decision was ...
Most of the studies conducted on bilingual education emphasize current educational problems. Instruc...
This unsigned note argues that the Supreme Court should reexamine the rights of language minority st...
California's Proposition 227 requires that all children be taught English by being taught in En...
On November 5, 2002, Colorado voters gave Ron Unz and his anti-bilingual, English-immersion amendmen...
An anti-bilingual education referendum was offered to citizens of Massachusetts in November of 2002....
The Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act requires grade-level attainment in literacy ...
The Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act requires grade-level attainment in literacy ...
Volume 110, Issue 26https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9242/thumbnail.jp
This paper was written as a response to the political debate in California regarding the proper role...
In 1998, Silicon Valley millionaire Ron Unz spearheaded the passage of California\u27s Proposition 2...
This Note addresses Proposition 227, California\u27s recently enacted voter initiative banning bilin...
When Proposition 227 passed in 1998, it essentially ended a thirty-year program of bilingual educati...
was approved by Californians in June of 1998. This proposition amended the state constitution to out...
A public hearing was held before the Joint Committee on Education, Arts and Humanities on May 13, 19...
People of California have decided to eliminate public school bilingual education. This decision was ...
Most of the studies conducted on bilingual education emphasize current educational problems. Instruc...
This unsigned note argues that the Supreme Court should reexamine the rights of language minority st...
California's Proposition 227 requires that all children be taught English by being taught in En...
On November 5, 2002, Colorado voters gave Ron Unz and his anti-bilingual, English-immersion amendmen...
An anti-bilingual education referendum was offered to citizens of Massachusetts in November of 2002....
The Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act requires grade-level attainment in literacy ...
The Colorado Reading to Ensure Academic Development Act requires grade-level attainment in literacy ...
Volume 110, Issue 26https://scholarworks.sjsu.edu/spartandaily/9242/thumbnail.jp
This paper was written as a response to the political debate in California regarding the proper role...