GayandRight

My name is Fred and I am a gay conservative living in Ottawa. This blog supports limited government, the right of the State of Israel to live in peace and security, and tries to expose the threat to us all from cultural relativism, post-modernism, and radical Islam. I am also the founder of the Free Thinking Film Society in Ottawa (www.freethinkingfilms.com)

Wednesday, September 02, 2009

Arabic study for every student...

This is actually happening at a school in Memphis...
As school buses roll back to their stops Monday morning, consider the challenge of educators in the global economy.

On Friday, Mary Antone -- an Egyptian-born and -raised language teacher at Whitehaven High -- draped and pinned the gentle folds of a traditional garment called a galabeya on the classroom bulletin board and tacked up hand-lettered signs in Arabic script.

Whitehaven High School Arabic teacher Mary Antone readies her classroom for the school year with an Arabic bulletin board display and the flag of Lebanon to hang next to the American flag. Whitehaven is the first high school in the state to offer Arabic.

Besides being the first teacher in the state to teach high school Arabic -- starting Monday -- her job is to demystify a culture most Americans know only from the news.

"When I tell people I grew up in Egypt, they want to know if I lived in a pyramid. 'Did you ride to school on a camel; did you have electricity?' " she says, smiling at the learning curve her students face.

With a $1.3 million federal grant, Memphis City Schools is rolling out four languages considered critical to global commerce, building each one -- elementary through high school -- in a pocket of the city.

Mandarin is coming, Russian is expanding to Peabody Elementary this year, and Japanese is new at Richland Elementary.

Eighteen students were enrolled in Arabic 1 as of Friday, including Quinterion Mitchell, 16, who has completed the two years of foreign language the state requires for graduation. He's taking Arabic "because you never know when you'll need to be a translator," he says, only half joking.

At Whitehaven, where the senior class earned $15.7 million in scholarships this year, up $5 million from 2008, word's out that grades mean money, says principal Vincent Hunter, the former Whitehaven football star who runs the school.

"The opportunity in Arabic is earning potential," Hunter said. "That's the name of the game. When you get up to the starting line now, you're not just competing with children from across Memphis. You're up against students from Indonesia, China, India, Asia."

Next year, Whitehaven High -- where 98 percent of the student body is African-American and where almost no one lives next door to an Arabic speaker -- will offer Arabic 2; nearby Whitehaven Elementary and Havenview Middle will join with 30 minutes of daily Arabic instruction for every student.

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