Mo Hock Ke Lok Po v. Stainback (1944): Parents have the right to have their children taught in a foreign language. Several years ago, a group of Latino parents in Hilario's neighborhood sued the New York City public schools over bilingual education. Such sentiments have fueled opposition to bilingual education in a number of states. The first Bilingual Education Act was passed in 1968 and renewed in 1974. Under the new measure, if at least 20-30 parents ⦠The annual cost of the program grew from $7.5 million in its first year to $150 million in 1979. But it'll be up to school districts to decide locally whether they want to offer bilingual education or not, based on parents' demand for it. By the mid to late 1970s, serious concerns arose about the effectiveness of bilingual education, especially for Spanish-speaking students. 1st major educational policy . In Omaha, as in many U.S. communities, some parents and conservative activists insist that any school-based sex education emphasize sexual abstinence as the wisest course. Bilingual education also defeats efforts to assimilate children into U.S. society and is against the wish of most parents. ... Parents, too, are on board. All parents have the right to participate in parent councils and committees, and the right to join the schoolâs parent-teacher association or organization . Bilingual education is a program where the media of instruction in the class uses two languages (Liddicoat, 1991) and involve the teaching using two languages as a ⦠Between 1995 and 2001, opponents of bilingual education in a few communities filed lawsuits against their school districts (e.g., Bushwick Parents Organization v. Mills [1995] in New York). Lau v. Nichols. Granted financial assistance to the public. 31 . NORMAL â Three parents of Cedar Ridge Elementary students spoke to the McLean County Unit 5 school board last Wednesday night, addressing recent changes to the bilingual program that district 1954: Brown v. Board of Education: desegregation of public schools. Despite the ban on bilingual education in the state, biliteracy is on the rise there and, for years, educators have used loopholes to teach students in languages other than English. The basic goal has remained the same: access to bilingual programs for children of limited means. âThe teachersâ unions should have come out against bilingual education, but theyâre afraid of the politics of immigration,â Dr. Porter said. Parents can also appeal to their school districtâs school board, which has regular meetings where ⦠Civil Rights Act of 1964: was the chief drive for bilingual education in the United States . They argued that administrators had too much leeway to keep students in bilingual classes well past the standard three years. The solution, Unz and others insist, is one year of sheltered English immersion, then into regular classrooms.