My nephew has done the same work for the past 2 years on top of doing it a third year at a previous school. Not very educational.
I also have noticed the majority (60-70%) of families are Spanish speaking. I wonder how white people feel about being a minority. Welcome to the club.
My brother told me when the kids present little shows, the school does English and Spanish. I have nothing against immigration, but this is America. Let's stick to English.
Don't get me wrong. Some of our ancestors were brought here by boats. I'd rather be here than Africa.
Even in around Detroit, Michigan, we didn't see French signs (or Old English - colour) for the Canadians.
@Dinah Aleman- Look, I have Hispanic/Latin friends that say they were born in Mexico and don't speak Spanish. I'm not saying it's all about immigration. I once thought about moving to Japan, so I took Japanese courses at a college for reading, writing, speaking, and cultural norms. I prepared myself to move and live there.
How special do you have to be to just jump into another country (especially one that caters to laziness) without preparing some English and some cultural norms? That's right, like I all ready said, 60-70% of the people are of the same culture. So why bother to learn new stuff when you're moving in with family and friends?
I kept asking people why they laugh and call El Mirage "Lil' Mexico" as I found it offensive. But look around. It makes some sense. No wonder the rest of the world knows Americans as uneducated, lazy and not worth the trouble. We let people move in and not expect them to conform. Yes this is the "melting pot" country, but thats because you can bring your customs, but be respectful enough to learn ours first.
I have friends all over the world, of every race, color, creed, and faith. You have no right to judge me. I only speak only of truth and what I know. I love learning and love language, but I only know some much in Japanese, American Sign Language, Spanish, and French. I'm still looking into Italian, German, Russian, and Chinese (Mandarin). But even if the school did English/Japanese, I'd still be voicing myself.
You clearly missed the point: people in America along the Canadian border don't post everything (or even half of everthing) in English and French (mostly for Quebec's sake). Why must we do it here in Arizona? Hawaii has an official language of Hawaiian, and the City of Glendale adopted English as their offical language. Stop protecting lazy people. I will also state this for clear understanding, I'm not putting everyone in the same box, just the ones that fit. And from where I'm seeing the view, Sister, it's a majority of people. If the shoe fits, get to steppin' ok?