27 Matching Annotations
  1. Apr 2019
    1. e trust.) For my part, I felt that by learning English I had somehow committed a s

      This is where he realizes he lost his sense of his identity in learning english instead of speaking his true language.

    2. August. He took great interest in me after he realized that I couldn't answer his questions in Spanish. He would grab me, as I started to leave the kitchen. He would ask me something. Usually he wouldn't bother to wait for my mumbled response. Knowingly, he'd murmur, "¿Ay pocho, pocho, donde vas?*' And he would press his thumbs into the upper part of my arms, making m

      He was bullied by other spanish speakers

    3. do it. Then they would call me Pocho. Sometimes playfully, teasing, using the tender diminutive - mi pochito. Sometimes not so playfully but mockingly, pocho. (A Spanish dictionary defines that word as an adjective meaning "colorl

      They are getting hurt even though they learned what they wanted to learn

    4. . I'd know the words I wanted to say, but I couldn't say them. I would try to speak, but everything I said seemed to me horribly angli- cized. My mouth wouldn't form the sounds right. My jaw would tremble. After a phrase or two, I'd stutter, cough up a warm, silvery sound,

      This is another issue they lost their identity by conforming to what the society wanted

    5. the

      With using English at home instead of Spanish you start to forget where you started talking.

    6. The silence at home, however, was not simply the result of fewer words passing between parents and children. More profound for me was the silence created by my inattention to

      This seems important.

    7. m less. My mother grew restless, seemed troubled and anxious at the scarceness of words exchanged in the house. She would question me about my day when I came home from school. She smiled at my sma

      It is hard seeing your kids learn all this new stuff and you aren't.

    8. silence

      The kids are learning English and using it more than the parents.

    9. been. An eight-year-old boy, I finally came to ac- cept what had been technically true since my birth: I w

      This is the sad truth that even tho many who speak foreign languages are citizens they still feel secluded from society.

    10. At first, it seemed a kind of game. After dinner each night, the family gathered together to practice "our" Eng

      Everyone in the family worked together to try and learn.

    11. Three months passed. Five. A half year. Unsmiling, ever watchful, my teachers noted my silence. They began to connect my behavior with the slow progress my brother and sisters were making. Until, one Satur- day morning, three nuns arrived at the house to talk to our parents. Stiffly they sat on the blue living-room

      It wasn't just him that was struggling. His siblings were also having a hard time.

    12. What they understood was that I needed to speak public English. So their voices would search me out, asking me questions. Each time I heard them I'd look up in surprise to see a nun's fac

      Classrooms are not accommodating to the needs of those whose English is not their first language.

    13. Without question, it would have pleased me to have heard my teachers address me in Spanish when I entered

      He likes the idea of a bilingual classroom.

    14. of bilingual education imply today that students like me miss a great deal by not being taught in their

      This is a clear definition.

    15. I grew u

      pt.3

    16. Supporters

      start of pt. 2

    17. In public, my father and mother spoke a hesitant, accented, and not always grammatical En

      They are worried about judgement from those who don't speak a different language.

    18. public

      They still feel like outcasts even though they are living and working in America

    19. victims

      Even with all the hate towards immigration his family still finds it in them to move forward with their lives.

    20. no: It is not possible for a child, any child, ever to use his family's language in s

      Those who are speaking in a different language can get judged for speaking in their home language

    21. I was fated to be the "problem student" in clas

      Because of race?

    22. , when I first entered a classroom - able to un- derstand about fifty stray English words. The third of four children, I had been preceded by my older brother and sister to a neighborhood Roman Catholic sc

      This must have been hard to have to go through not knowing very much English.

  2. Jan 2019
    1. rescued

      Mady and Jack; the author is using parallel structure between work and play in this paragraph. Not only is he using the word rescue talking about 9/11 but, he is also using rescued to relate to the game and how his teammates saved the game. It's interesting how he related two different topics (work and play) by using the same word. This shows that there could be some middle ground between the two topics.

    2. One thing about firemen, they don't let each other fightbattles alone.

      Knowing your job is to put the safety of others first I'm sure can get quite lonely. However, knowing you have someone like your fellow firefighters to support you and be with you understanding how you feel is comforting. Not fighting your battles alone allows for a closer relationship to be made.

    3. But how? Forget about replacing the players. How do you replacethe men? How does starting cornerback Danny Foley replace thestarting cornerback on the other side--his brother, Tommy?

      The teammates positions can be covered by any new player. However, you can't replace the men who were originally there. They were family and close friends, no new person could fill that spot in your life.

    4. Most of the guys on the team have a nasty case of the WTC coug

      These men are dedicated to finding those who are lost. He talks about the guy named Danny looking for his brother and being fortunate enough to find him. Not only are they brothers, they are teammates. You don't give up on family or teammates.

    5. Hell, yes, they're playing.

      From the very beginning the author uses his positive language to show his point of view on this story. The author has to be positive with something so sad. These men are brothers they are dedicated.