Aspiring bilingual teachers cross the border to gain insight

mmigration is a hot-button issue these days, but people studying to become bilingual teachers at one California university are making an effort to lower the temperature.

San Diego State University’s bilingual credential program sends prospective teachers on a four-day trip to impoverished schools in Tijuana, to help them understand the conditions many of their future students experience.

Erika Sandoval from Santa Clarita is a teacher-in-training in her first year of the program. She migrated to the U.S. herself from Mexico at age nine.

“Going back and hearing their stories,” said Sandoval, “some of them having families in the United States, some of them attempting to cross the border – took me back to when my parents had made the decision to come to this country as well. It was very emotional, to be honest.”

The teachers visit a school in a migrant shelter, one that has a program for students who are blind, and a third that is in one of the city’s lowest-income neighborhoods.

El Observador

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