Teachers, tutors try to keep up with demand for ESL classes
Teachers, tutors try to keep up with demand for ESL classes
Frank Helverson, right, a volunteer with Catholic Social Services, teaches English to Jang Wen Yu at Jang’s Hazleton home last week.
Jang “Bobby” Wen Yu and Frank Helverson sat at a table in Jang’s home on Seybert Street in Hazleton as they have regularly for two years to talk.
They discussed employment figures on pie charts, but it’s not the subject that keeps them together —the charts were from the last decade — it’s the language.
English.
Helverson speaks it.
Jang wanted to learn.
Together, after being paired through Catholic Social Services, they worked out a teacher-student relationship that has become a friendship.
Last month, Helverson and his wife attended Jang’s wedding and 12-course reception dinner in New York City’s Chinatown.
At his family’s restaurant, Golden City in Hazleton, Jang manages conversations with customers more easily because of his practice sessions with Helverson.
“My English is getting much better,” he said.
Helverson said he volunteered as a tutor to counteract anti-immigration sentiment he noticed in Hazleton two years ago when the city introduced an Illegal Immigration Relief Act that included English-only provisions.
“I wanted to do something positive. Also I was hearing the wrong notion that immigrants don’t want to learn English,” he said.
In Hazleton, people are waiting in line to learn English.
Interest growing

Comments
Tell us what you're thinking...
and oh, if you want a pic to show with your comment, go get a gravatar!