Neil, I have a book on colloquialisms and slang that I sit on the coffee table. It is a funny conversation starter. There are many Americans that have no idea about the origins of many of the things they say. Amusing and informative.
As far as Katie goes, her English is ok for be because I have been speaking Chinglish for 14 years. I think here English is also ok in most situations but ther are portions of the literacy test that she did not do well in. So instead of paying for another ESL teacher or time sharing the one they have, they opt to pay for a school bus and driver to bus her elsewhere in the school district. It doesn't make sense to me. And in the end I don't think it is the best thing for Katie.
I know how the English instructions for immigrants works here and it is completely geared toward the Mexican immigrants. The biggest problem I see with the school district's program is that the instructors are bi lingual (English-Spanish) When a student needs more information or better directions he is given it in SPANISH. I Dont see how a Spanish speaking instructor is going to help Katie and in fact will slow here down making her learn yet another language in order to understand the instructors. According to the education legislation this is illegal. It discriminates against all foreign languages immigrants(French, German, Vietnamese, Indian, Chinese et all) and favors those that speak Spanish. Further it is illegal to provide bi-lingual instructor to only the Spanish kids. Paraphrasing , It is discrimination to provide any service available in the program to any recipient in a manner that is different than provided to any other recipient. Meaning that if you provide bi-lingual Spanish-English instructors then you must provide bi-lingual Chinese-English instructors as well.
I have already retained a lawyer. Katie will not be bused out of her home school district without a fight.