Breakout session: Are you bilingual-bicultural? Wanna become a bilingual teacher?
Posted on July 1, 2023

Mishelle Jurado of PDK International began her Saturday breakout session with history because, she said, it is imperative that teachers and students know the history of the many languages in the U.S. Because if we do not know the linguistic atrocities that have happened to multiple communities in our country, Jurado said, we cannot change the future for these communities. No student should ever have to lose the language of their home to assimilate the dominant language of U.S. culture.

The U.S. not an English-speaking country. Multilingualism existed here before colonial settlers stepped onto our shores. When Jurado explained that Spanish was the first European language to reach the U.S., there was some surprise among the participants and looks of reflection among others.

Bilingual education began in the U.S. with German speakers in Ohio, but the 1968 Bilingual Education Act made the “decriminalization” of the use of other languages in classrooms federal law. Today, we need bilingual teachers across the country to serve and support multilingual-bilingual students.

Jurado, a 20-year veteran of bilingual education from New Mexico, said that bilingual education is “about my children and their grandmothers. Spanish is just as important as English for them.” Having bilingual education affirms their linguistic identity. “This is what I want for all children,” she said. She shared about efforts in New Mexico to grow our own Indigenous and Spanish-English Bilingual educators to meet the linguistic, cultural, and social-emotional needs of students.

Hearing this message of support for linguistic diversity was meaningful to the students who attended. After the session, a young woman, with tears rolling down her face, came to Jurado and said, gracias. “For the first time ever, someone has made me feel like my language deserves a place to be in.”

Another participant, an immigrant from Ukraine who attended with her daughter, said she felt pressure to speak English to her daughter. The daughter whispered to her mom, “I think I need keep up with my Ukrainian.” The mother was overjoyed that her daughter finally understood.

Rising Voices: Calvin Plainte

Calvin Plante & Finding his purpose

Calvin Plante wanted to make a difference. EdRising showed him how he could achieve that goal as a teacher.  It was the fall of 2020.  Calvin Plante was starting his freshman year of high school amid the COVID-19 pandemic. His cross-country season had just...
Classroom Environments & Spring Cleaning

Student Perspectives on Classroom Environments

Rapid Response Survey March 2026: Spring Cleaning One of the joys for some during the spring season is the opportunity to roll up your sleeves and pull out the gloves and supplies to “spring clean” your home. The ritual we call spring cleaning became the topic for our...
Rapid Responders

Next-Generation Educators Share What Will Shape Their Decision to Teach

At a time when schools across the country are struggling to recruit and retain teachers, a new RapidResponse poll from Educators Rising offers something rare and powerful: direct insight from the next generation of educators. Respect and support will determine whether...

Honoring all our competitors

Congratulations to all the students, teacher leaders, and others who attended our conference this year. We hope your experience at this year’s conference in Orlando was one of connection, inspiration, learning, and laughter! If you missed the awards ceremony, check...

Around the conference on Sunday

The final day of the conference featured lots of breakout sessions, tired student and teacher leaders packing up, and networking lunches for students and teachers. The traditional human bingo game gave students one last chance to meet and interact with others as they...

Breakout session: Writing for publication

Current and future educators have important perspectives to share about our schools, and the Educators Rising conference showed them how to bring their thoughts to a wider audience. At the Writing for Publication breakout session on Sunday, Teresa Preston, PDK...

Breakout session: Managing small group work

Some of us love to share our ideas in small groups and, without prompting, naturally assume a leadership role. Others participate through listening, notetaking, or researching and collecting materials. Miriam Morgenstern’s Saturday breakout session was on teaching a...

Breakout session: Kappan discussion guides

Rising educators and teacher leaders joined PDK Director of Programs, Anne Morris, at a Sunday breakout session to learn about discussion strategies for the Kappan Monthly Discussion guides. These guides are available as a resource for Educators Rising members. Each...

Breakout session: Grow your own summits

One of the first Sunday morning breakout sessions was titled “Grow Your Own Models: Preliminary Results from the Spring Grow Your Own Summit.” PDK Director of Programs Anne Morris discussed with participants how Educators Rising is working to bring together different...

Breakout session: Getting started with the Educators Rising curriculum

As the Saturday breakout session led by Lisa Rollins of PDK International began, participants discussed the challenges of the educator shortage as well as the lack of representation of educators who reflect their communities. Rollins asked attendees to stand up and...