The long march
through the institutions has ended for the Bilingual /Multicultural faculty and
students at CSU Sacramento. On
Sat, May 19, the Bilingual/Multicultural Education Department at CSU-Sacramento
graduated its final class. A
movement that began in the Mexican
American Education Project of 1969-1974 came to a close. See history here:
I retired in
2008 and had little role to play in the decision to abandon this civil rights project. In the 15 year history of the
department we graduated thousands of new bilingual teachers and educational
leaders who, under the prior hegemonic system, would have been sorted out. These graduates have gone into teaching
and schools and influenced thousands of students. Under the new
system, they will again often be discarded. The drop out rate for Chicano
students remains near 50%.
The students are still there. The students of California still need bilingual and multicultural
teachers. Students who are
descendents of Mexican and Chicano families now make up almost 48% of public
school students.
There were budget cuts, but a united faculty could have
retained the department if they so chose.
Instead, a new generation of faculty chose to abandon this institutional
base that had been created by their predecessors.
For more history see; https://sites.google.com/site/democracyandeducationorg/chicano-mexican-american-digital-history-project/history-of-bilingual-education-dept-at-sac-state
An injury to one is an injury to all.
This post dedicated to the memory of Hugo Chacon and Dr. Tom
Carter.
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