JEFFERSONVILLE —
Southern Indiana educators are reaching out to Hispanic parents.
The Hispanic Connection of Southern Indiana hosted an educational forum Thursday afternoon at Community Action of Southern Indiana. The event, conducted mostly in Spanish, was directed at helping parents with children in Head Start prepare for kindergarten.
Jackie Love, director of multicultural affairs and adult education at Greater Clark County Schools Corp., said this is the second Spanish-language forum they have had this year. At the beginning of the school year, they had an informational session which covered topics from drug and gang prevention to the education process.
“I think it’s important for us to participate in the community and to list the needs of our community and to provide the educational resources to help with those needs,” Love said.
Luis Arredondo, a sophomore at Jeffersonville High School, said these programs are helpful for his parents as they teach his younger brother. Arredondo said he spoke some English when he started school, but classes were challenging at first.
“The first day, it was terrible,” he said. “It was easier after a couple days, and I started meeting people. They helped me.”
Six percent of Greater Clark students speak English as a second language.
Angelica Perez, family services adviser for Head Start, said it is important for children to learn English at a young age. She has seen the Hispanic population in Clark County grow and said there is an increased need for English Second Language programs.
Perez said she works with many children who do not speak any English when they begin at Head Start. The children are taught the basics of the language, and within less than a month, teachers see results.
“When they first come in, [the children] don’t participate. Within three weeks, they feel more confident,” Perez said.
Perez said they have monthly meetings with the parents, and family involvement is an important part of the process.
Gio Guerra Perez, a social-cultural specialist for the New Neighbors Project at Indiana University Southeast, was the featured speaker at the forum. She talked to the parents about easy ways they can work with their children at home to help them in school and cultural differences in the United States.
“Parents should be able to participate in the education of their children,” she said. “It’s important for them to join in the activities at school.”
Recent Local News
Forum helps Hispanic parents stay involved with education
ESL students adapt quickly at a young age
- Recent Local News
-
-
SWEET TREAT: Volunteers see the attraction of annual Starlight Strawberry Festival
-
Board chair: Parks district best solution for New Albany and Floyd County
Mayor Jeff Gahan’s veto of a new parks deal between the city and county was upheld earlier this month by the New Albany City Council. While the Floyd County Council agreed to still pay an additional $100,000 toward the parks department for the remainder of the year, the city and county remain under a prior agreement that led to funding discrepancies in the past.
-
THE 'V' WORD: SUB: Prosser Career Education Center moves away from stigma of ‘vocational’ school
- TARC sets Memorial Day and Kennedy Bridge route changes
- Indiana man releases hostages, fatally shoots self
-
Vietnam veteran receives medals 46 years after active duty ends
- More travelers to hit the road this Memorial Day weekend
-
Pence talks bridges, jobs during Southern Indiana swing
“I think everyone senses with the recent bridges agreement, the potential for extraordinary growth,” said Mike Pence, a U.S. House member who is seeking to replace Gov. Mitch Daniels and retain the gubernatorial seat for the Republican Party.
- Police: Gunman has hostages in Indiana realty office
-
Delaware woman dies in I-65 crash
-
Collingsworth Family to perform at Silver Heights Retreat Center in New Albany
The Collingsworth Family will be making a return trip to the Silver Heights Retreat and Camp Center in New Albany on Thursday, June 7.
-
Clark County approves self-insurance plan
Clark County Insurance Agent-of-Record Diane Swank presented health insurance renewal options at the council meeting Monday, but the county’s fiscal body decided to recess its meeting in order to review a proposal to move the county to a self-insured plan.
-
New theater directors at NAHS and FCHS ready for their programs
As the curtain falls on the careers of the teachers who put the theater programs of Floyd Central and New Albany high schools on the map, the new blood coming in have big hopes for the programs they’re taking over.
-
Jeff to start enforcing insurance ordinances
A 2004 ordinance that dictates how much city retirees pay for health insurance – ignored for years by Jeffersonville officials – looks like it will now be enforced.
-
Top Gun showing Saturday at the New Albany riverfront
In honor of Memorial Day, the city of New Albany will show the movie “Top Gun” on its new 40-foot screen at the Riverfront Amphitheater Saturday.
- More Recent Local News Headlines
-


