They speak the language
Lindsay Sandham
With the cultural melting pot that is Southern California comes a
multitude of languages and dialects, and some foreign-language
speakers find it difficult to function in the English-speaking
community.
Newport Beach residents Daryl Wilson and Michele Raffoni became
volunteers in the Newport Beach Public Library literacy program to
help ease the burden.
Established in 1986, the literacy program reaches out to residents
and workers throughout Orange County with one-on-one tutoring in the
areas of reading, writing, communication and basic computer skills.
“I’ve been a member of the Newport Beach Library since I was a
child,” Wilson said. “I am a former teacher of languages -- Spanish,
French and English -- so it was kind of natural when I retired to
take on volunteer work.”
Wilson, who taught languages to adults at colleges throughout
Orange County, has been volunteering as a literacy program tutor for
six years.
“Communication is a terrible problem in California these days,”
she said. “You can’t understand what people say to you, even if they
do speak some English, because they’re not speaking correctly, or
they don’t have the right accent. I thought if I was having trouble,
then probably a lot of people are, so there was a need for some way
to facilitate communi- cation in English.”
Raffoni, who was a teacher in Los Alamitos before she retired two
years ago, knew Wilson from the gym and heard about the library
program through her.
Because the literacy program attempts to reach so many people in a
one-on-one setting, both Raffoni and Wilson said they felt the need
for a similar program that could accommodate even more individuals.
So they, along with four other volunteer tutors, started a Monday
night literacy program at Back Bay and Monte Vista high schools,
where prospective students can show up anytime in a three-hour window
to receive tutoring assistance with English reading, writing and
communi- cations skills.
The program is free because of funding from the Newport Beach
Sunrise Rotary Club.
Raffoni said they can help students with pretty much anything,
such as resumes or GED tests. Since there are six teachers available,
students rotate among them so they can experience different tutoring
styles, she said.
Wilson has also taught conversation classes of eight to 12
students through the library literacy program and said that small
groups are necessary when teaching in-depth English skills.
“What they’re learning is to go in-depth into the language and
repeat and repeat and repeat and get a kind of automatic reflex, and
that takes working with individuals, and it takes working with a
small group and letting people work with each other,” she said.
Raffoni said many of their students have children in school and
are eager to learn English in order to communicate with them.
“There’s two kinds of people,” she said. “Some that really and
truly want to learn for their children’s sake and only speak English
as much as they can, and there are others that come to class, learn
only a little bit of English and then go back home and speak only
Spanish or another language.”
However, the second type are few and far between in their classes,
she said.
Students say they are grateful for the assistance they receive at
the tutoring sessions, Wilson said, but it does have its benefits for
the volunteers as well.
“It keeps us off the street,” she said.
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