There are a growing number of language immersion schools in the
US. including one that was founded in Columbia called La Petite Ecole,
which teaches children French as a second language at an age when
children’s brains are the most compliant. Statistics, however, show that
language instruction in regular schools is actually decreasing, and
relatively few Americans know the second language. Scholars have spent 【M1】_________
years studying why Americans seem to regard the importance of learning 【M2】_________
languages. While they have developed theories and posit potential 【M3】_________
solutions, the future of language learning in the US remains hazy.
Since 1997, the percentage of elementary and middle schools that
offer foreign language courses has dropped significantly, from 31
percent to 25 percent at the elementary level and from 75 percent to 58
percent at the middle school level.
However, the decline in elementary schools appeared primarily in
public schools, as private elementary schools teaching foreign language 【M4】_________
remained roughly same at 51 percent. The percentage of high schools 【M5】_________
teaching foreign language have remained at about 91 percent. This 【M6】_________
information comes from a nationwide survey of public and private
schools conducting in 2008 by the Center for Applied Linguistics in 【M7】_________
Washington, D.C.
Meanwhile, the number of language immersion schools designed to
teach a second language to English-speaking children and young adults
has actually increased. Since 1962, 367 two-way immersion programs—
schools that pair native English speakers with these who speak another 【M8】_________
native language—developed rapidly in 28 states, including Washington, 【M9】_________
D.C. And, as in 2007, 263 total and partial immersion schools have 【M10】________
seen established.
【M10】
in—of