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CARLA MAIN
Welcome to the CARLA-MAIN web pages, an online resource created
by and for immersion educators and researchers. The Immersion Projects
at the Center for Advanced Research on Language Acquisition (CARLA)
at the University of Minnesota has been collaborating with the Minnesota
Advocates for Immersion Network (MAIN), a body representing immersion
teachers, administrators, and researchers since 1997. This joint
project, created to address some of the concerns frequently voiced
by educators, parents, and community members about language immersion
programs, was made possible by a grant from the University of Minnesota’s
Office for Public Engagement.
The web pages are organized in a question-response format. Responses
come from two sources: first, an overview of the research and literature
available for any given topic and, second, the experiences of practitioners
in the field who are currently administrators in immersion schools
in Minnesota and who have also, by and large, been classroom teachers.
To generate the questions, we invited administrators to brainstorm
and then rank order topics or hot-button issues that had consistently
come up during monthly meetings of MAIN. Following input from this
group of experienced immersion practitioners, which included write-in
comments, we developed detailed questions that were posed to four
focus groups, three for administrators and one for parents. The
participants in the focus groups are listed in our acknowledgements
section. The focus group discussions were transcribed and a synthesis
of the answers was created for each question. The questions and
responses appear here and can be accessed using the menu at left.
When possible and relevant, we have included links to articles from
the archives of CARLA’s American Council on Immersion Education
(ACIE) Newsletter.
The supporting research and literature review that precedes practitioner
responses was developed and written by Tara Fortune, Immersion Projects
Coordinator at CARLA. While this section will provide readers with
useful research-based information about each topic, it is important
to recognize that many day-to-day issues of practitioner concern
have little or no research base. Moreover, whatever literature does
exist must be carefully assessed for its relevancy to your particular
circumstances and program model.
As you read through the questions and responses on these web pages
please bear in mind that our focus group participants primarily
work in one-way foreign language immersion settings although we
did include one group of two-way immersion practitioners. The schools
represented range from newly opened elementary immersion schools
to K-12 programs that have been educating in the immersion/partner
language for a decade or more. Older programs not surprisingly offered
different responses to our queries than newer schools just as student
demographics, district size, community setting, language of instruction
and a myriad other factors influence the daily decisions administrators
must make. It is crucial, therefore, to note that the views and
recommendations expressed by our focus group participants may not
be relevant or appropriate to your specific situation. We suggest
that you carefully assess the applicability of what you read here
to the context of your school.
Kimerly Miller and Tara Fortune
CARLA-MAIN Website Co-authors
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