Afghan refugee children schooled in Orange County hotel rooms - Los Angeles Times
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Afghan refugee children are schooled in Orange County hotel rooms

Two men stand under a tree and watch others play soccer
Afghan evacuees and soldiers play soccer in September at a military camp at Ft. McCoy in Wisconsin.
(Barbara Davidson / Pool photo)
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Once the Taliban retook Afghanistan over the summer, Ismailkhail knew that he had to get his family out of the country.

Ismailkhail, his wife and seven children would be targets for the radical fundamentalist group because he was an Afghan soldier who worked with the United States before it ended its two-decade occupation in Afghanistan. Ismailkhail was relocated to Orange County a few months ago by the U.S. government, but three of his children were not allowed to travel with him.

The three left behind in Afghanistan — ages 10, 12 and 14 — have been moving among different provinces to avoid Taliban detection.

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“We were told to just go into the airport with the number of family members we currently have, and the remaining will be held later on to come to the U.S.,” Ismailkhail said through an interpreter during a phone interview Wednesday.

Ismailkhail asked Times Community News to identify him by only his last name to protect his family from Taliban reprisal.

People walk through an airport terminal
Evacuees who fled Afghanistan walk to a processing center at Dulles International Airport.
(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
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While Ismailkhail said he worries for his children in Afghanistan, his school-age children in California are being taught what it’s like to be in a U.S. classroom by the Orange County Department of Education.

During the last few months of 2021, hundreds of Afghan refugees who fled the Taliban takeover were relocated to Orange County. They were among about 75,000 Afghans transferred to American cities by the U.S. government.

Christine Olmstead, the Department of Education’s chief academic officer, said the agency was notified in late December that the refugee families were struggling to find educational options in the county for their children. About six weeks ago, the department started providing the services in hotels where the refugee families are staying temporarily.

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“These were all families who were working alongside our soldiers in Afghanistan,” Olmstead said. “The Taliban came through their town and terrorized them and blew up their schools and burned down their houses. They’re living with that trauma. We’ve heard stories of vans coming in the middle of the night and picking them up and putting them on C-17s to get them here.”

The Department of Education is providing these services until the families can be placed in housing by local agencies such as Uplift Charity in Anaheim and the Orange County Social Services Agency. Olmstead said about half of the 60 students have been connected with housing. Most of the families moved to homes outside Orange County because local housing is too expensive.

The remaining students may be with the department for the next few months, to the end of the school year. Olmstead said more refugees may be placed in Orange County, but it isn’t known whether that will happen or whether there will be school-age children.

“The unique situation about this one was that this is the first time this many refugees have been placed in Orange County at one time,” Olmstead said. “Normally, it’s a couple families a year … so it created a unique situation for us to kind of meet the needs of the unique demand.”

The Afghan student program is part of ACCESS, a Department of Education partnership with school districts to provide alternative educational options for students throughout Orange County, including schooling for incarcerated and at-risk youth and special education. The Afghan children are being taught a “newcomer’s curriculum,” which helps the students learn basic communication skills in English to prepare them for being a student in a U.S. classroom, Olmstead said.

People stand in line outside a bus
Evacuees who fled Afghanistan board buses at Dulles International Airport in August.
(Kent Nishimura / Los Angeles Times)
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The department hired eight Persian language interpreters in order to communicate with the students. The classes are held for two hours a day, four days a week, and typically hold about 10 kids, with ages ranging from 4 to 18.

Once the students are transferred out of the Orange County program into a new school district, the department will notify the districts about the children because they qualify under the state’s McKinney-Vento Homeless Assistance Act, which aims to support housing-insecure kids and their families.

“That’s what a newcomer program does, is just getting them to the point where they can transition into a comprehensive school and be able to communicate and understand what the teacher is saying,” Olmstead said.

Cara Pettite, who teaches in the department’s program, said she has found the work to be meaningful because the classes provide Afghan students with “tools to connect with other people.” She said students have learned the differences between U.S. classrooms and those in their home country, such as not needing to stand up every time they address a teacher.

Pettite mentioned that the students also vary in their understanding of academic settings. Some come from higher socioeconomic areas where they received a formal education, while other students have no formal education. She has taught students how to use a computer and programs that are used in U.S. classrooms.

“So getting them into Google Classroom, showing them how to click on something, showing them how to use a mouse, showing them how to send an email — these are things they’ve never done,” Pettite said.

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Meanwhile, as the Russian invasion of Ukraine intensifies, Olmstead said the department has been asked whether it will provide the same services to Ukrainian refugees if they end up in Orange County.

“Our answer is yes,” she said. “If there’s a need, we will do this for them too.”

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