Search

English-only dumbs down grad speeches

Font Size:
Default font size
Larger font size

By Ruben Navarrette | Sunday, July 20, 2008 |

SAN DIEGO — The language wars flare up whenever insecure Americans worry that English is becoming passe.

Twenty-three years ago, on the night I graduated from high school, one of my co-valedictorians wrote into his speech a single sentence welcoming his grandparents, who had traveled to the United States to attend the ceremony. The sentence was in his grandparents’ native language.

The night before, at the eighth-grade graduation across town, a young girl, another valedictorian, did something similar. She included a single sentence thanking her parents — in their native language — for their support.

The line in the high school speech was in German; the one in the speech for the junior high school was in Spanish.

A few days before graduation, the junior high principal tried to pressure the student to remove the line in Spanish because he was afraid that those in the audience who didn’t understand Spanish might feel uncomfortable.

The girl stood her ground. And the principal backed down.

Conversely, no one said a word about the line in German, even though it’s a safe bet that there were more people in the audience who didn’t understand German than Spanish.

Now I read about Cindy and Hue Vo, cousins and co-valedictorians at Ellender High School in Louisiana, who recently delivered part of their commencement addresses in Vietnamese. They are daughters of Vietnamese immigrants.

Cindy told The Associated Press that she wanted to thank her parents for their support, so she dedicated a sentence to them in Vietnamese. It meant you should always be true to yourself, she explained to classmates. Hue said that she wanted to express gratitude to her parents for immigrating to the United States. Her parents want her to preserve her Vietnamese culture, and so she thought it would be more heartfelt to say what she said in their native tongue.

It turned out to be controversial. Because of the Vo girls, school officials are now thinking about adopting a policy that would require all future commencement speeches to be in English.

It’s because some people are making noise. One of the noisemakers is Rickie Pitre, a school board member, who told AP that he was merely concerned about “inconsistencies” in the various graduation ceremonies in that parish in Louisiana.

I don’t like it that some American teenagers barely speak proper English and that they will eventually be outmatched in the global job market if they come up against someone from Europe, Asia or Latin America who speaks two or three languages.

I don’t like the idea that some people would try to tell two Vietnamese-American girls, who through hard work and discipline earned the privilege of addressing classmates as co-valedictorians, the circumstances under which they can make the address. And I don’t like it that more people don’t see the way to avoid these kinds of controversies in the future is for those monolingual American kids to study harder and get better grades so that they can be valedictorians and give their speeches in the language they know: English only.


Contact Ruben Navarrette at ruben.navarrette@uniontrib.com

Next
Share
Email
Print
 

More Stories By Ruben Navarrette

Most Commented in Opinion * past 7 days

    (0) Comments Posted Today

    Technology News Articles
    Millions of Products on Sale. Read User Reviews & Store Ratings.
    www.NexTag.com
    2008 Diet Of The Year:
    Finally, A Diet That Really Works! Seen On CNN, NBC, CBS & Fox News.
    www.Wu-YiSource.com
    online health articles
    Visit Our Top Sites About online health articles Here.
    AllHealthCarePlace.com
    Ads by Yahoo!

    Weather

    Quad Cities Weather
    23°F View Forecast
    sponsored by:
    River Levels | Closings | Flight Information
    What did you do on Black Friday?
    Out shopping as soon as the stores opened.
    Waited until the early rush crowds thinned out and then went shopping.
    Took my time and went shopping later in the day.
    Did all my shopping online.
    Spent the day doing anything BUT shopping.
    View Results

    Marketplace

    Free Time