How one small town is teaching English to kids of immigrants

Lety Vargas, a newly hired English Language teacher at Russellville Elementary School, in Russellville, Ala., coaches small groups of students on her first day of school, Aug. 9, 2022. For years, rural Russellville's Central American population has grown, with immigrants moving to town to work at the local chicken processing plant. Now, some Spanish-speaking adults who graduated from that same school system are returning to teach students, hoping to give today's English learners a better experience. (Rebecca Griesbach/AL.com via AP)

RUSSELLVILLE, Ala. (AP) — As part of an exercise to help the class learn English, a third grader pulled a block from a Jenga tower and read aloud a question written on one side. “Where,†the boy read, then slowly sounded out the other words: “Where would you like to visit?â€

“Disneyland,†one student said. “Space,†another classmate chimed in. “Guatemala,†said a girl with a bright blue bow.

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