A
JOINT MEMORIAL
DECLARING FEBRUARY 27, 2003 AS
"BILINGUAL EDUCATION DAY" AT THE LEGISLATURE.
WHEREAS, New Mexico is
fortunate to be a multilingual, multicultural state, where multiple languages
and cultures come together to form a unique, living-and-breathing mosaic; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico is the only
state in the United States that has a commitment to the Spanish language
written into its constitution; and
WHEREAS, New Mexico has a long
and significant history of recognizing bilingualism and bilingual education;
and
WHEREAS, in 1523, the king of
Spain issued a proclamation to all priests serving in America to learn the
language of the natives of Mexico and the northern territory to facilitate the
teaching of the holy scriptures in the languages of the natives; and
WHEREAS, in 1540, Francisco Vázquez de Coronado's exploration of New
Mexico was done bilingually, in Spanish and Nahuatl, assuming the latter to be
the language of the natives in the north; and
WHEREAS, in 1848, English was
added as the ninth language in New Mexico's multilingual mix, which consisted
of Navajo, Apache, Keres, Tewa, Tiwa, Towa, Zuni and Spanish; and
WHEREAS, the 1891 Public
Education Act did not bar instruction in Spanish, alongside English, and much
of the school curriculum was in both languages; and
WHEREAS, during the constitutional
convention of 1912, Spanish and English were declared the official languages of
the state; and
WHEREAS, the first bilingual education policy
statement in the United States was issued by the state board of education in
1968, and the first bilingual education law in the United States was issued by
the New Mexico legislature in 1969; and
WHEREAS, the New Mexico
legislature authorized dual language immersion training institutes at three
universities in 1994, and pilot programs of two-way dual language immersion
were initiated in five school districts in the state in 1996; and
WHEREAS, research has shown that
students who are bilingual and biliterate are better prepared to succeed
academically than are monolingual students, and knowledge of more than one
language is advantageous for all students in the interglobal marketplace, where
bilingualism and biliteracy are assets;
NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT RESOLVED BY THE
LEGISLATURE OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO that February 27, 2003 be declared
"Bilingual Education Day" at the legislature.