Dual language education is one step closer to becoming a WA law

Aidé Villalobos starts her mornings by greeting third graders in Spanish as they walk into her classroom.

Posters on the walls are in Spanish and English, helping students practice multiplication tables, read poems, sing songs and do science experiments in both languages.

Dual language programslike the one Villalobos teaches in rural Mason County, provide Washington’s K-5 students the opportunity to learn core subjects in English and a second language, with many students becoming fluent in both by the time they leave elementary school.

Read more on The Seattle Times.

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