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Bilingual Education and Ignorance

The Mexican gives a reader a failing grade in basic common sense.

Dear Mexican: After the great migration of Jews to this nation, a question was posed: "How long does it take a Jew to go from being a street sweeper to becoming a corporate attorney?" The answer: "One generation." Not so for Mexicans. Most Mexicans seem to recoil from education like the fictional Dracula recoils from a wooden cross. Up to high school, education is free for everyone, and millions of extra taxpayer dollars go to accommodate Mexicans in their own language. Everyone knows that Mexicans have the highest school dropout rates in the nation. Consequently, they are relegated to the most menial jobs, leading to less income and thus no health insurance and poor living standards. Thousands of Mexican children leave school as soon as they are old enough to operate a lawn mower, wash a car, hammer a nail or wash a dish. Do you think this is because of their genetic makeup, that they haven't been made aware that education is the great equalizer and the springboard to success, or could it be for some yet-to-be-discovered reason? Cuban-Americans are the most affluent of all Hispanic groups, and most are Republicans. Mexicans are the least affluent and are mostly Democrats. Is this a factor? If not, what do you think is the problem?
Go South, Young Mexicans

Dear Readers: Por favor, learn from Go South: Don't allow stupidity to get in the way of a good question. To wit:

• Don't start off with a hammy quote that proves absolutely nothing.

• Get your stats right. Mexicans do not have the country's highest school dropout rate — that dishonor falls to Central Americans, according to the Department of Education's recently released "Status and Trends in the Education of Racial and Ethnic Minorities" (and more native-born Puerto Ricans and Indians fail to finish high school than American-born Mexicans). Cubans aren't the most affluent Latino group in los Estados Unidos, and Mexicans aren't the poorest: Ecuadorians and Dominicans have the highest and lowest Latino median income levels, respectively, according to the United States Census's "The American Community — Hispanics: 2004."

• Stay away from politics in explaining income disparities among voters. Look at Tom Tancredo's supporters and you'll know what I mean.

• And never, never introduce genetics into a conversation about Mexicans and education. If it were that simple, Mexicans would do nothing else but build massive pyramids and extremely accurate calendars.

Now, on to what Go South was trying to get at before bigotry muddled his brain: Yes, there is an education problem among young Mexicans. The reasons are multifold: apathetic parents, terrible school conditions, students who follow the lead of the uneducated adults in their community and thus forsake college for a working-class job. These were also the pathologies identified in Italian-American high-schoolers in New York during the 1980s, back when 21 percent of them were dropping out. But that figure dropped to single digits within a decade due to a concerted community effort — and if the guidos can do it, Mexicans sure as hell can, too.

 
  • Bradley Hagstrom 09/28/2007 4:20:00 PM

    Dear Sir/Madam, The statistical response about Mexicans dropping about less than Central Americans is lamantable. Given the size of the Mexican American population, the writer's observation that Mexican Americans drop out at higher numbers than any other group of immigrants is likely true. Secondly, the question of genetics should not be ruled out threateningly. Let the writer be educated more reasonably and with good facts, scientific study, and examples of superior academic success at say, Mexicans in private schools in Morelia, as compared to other situations. You/we should not dismiss the genetic question with a "How dare you, you bigot" attitude. The writer raised a question, now let him be educated on the topic, not summarily dismissed as behind the times. If you wish to change the beliefs of people such as him, and I believe that there are many people like him, then you should honor him with a reposne and create dialogue. Also, your comment about Mexicans as pyramid builders and calender makers must refer to the Mayans, a group I beleive discriminated against in Mexico, and an aboriginal people whose lands were take away by Mexicans. Poor example I should think. Following your analogy Americans might be Kiva builders or cliff carvers. What would be considerably cooler is a look inside a well functioning Mexican school where students learn to be critical thinkers, creative writers, and understand something of their own and other nations histories. Maybe our persistent stupidity (Americans) in matters of race is owed to our sense of judgement being attuned to owning and obtaining things as a measurement of success and progress; our programmatic response to symbols and icons of wealth, beauty and power; our largely complete degenerate misunderstanding of just how completely blind we are in our communal greed; and without having reference to where the hell we're coming from and why. God love us. Bradley Hagstrom

  • Michelle Mobley 09/27/2007 9:04:00 PM

    Perhaps Go South should put his or her own intellect where his or her mouth is. I, too, am disturbed by the number of South of the Border immigrants who are not embracing the English language. I left Denver to live in California, not a Latin American country. But, rather than kvetch about it, which does no good, I choose to be proactive and I volunteer my time teaching ESL classes. This is a much better way to address the problems you whined about.

 
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