Translation (written) and interpretation (oral) both have a very prevalent place within our country’s education system. The way teachers and administrators share school-related information with students and parents is crucial to ensuring that important and critical information is communicated meaningfully and adequately.
Recognizing and protecting the need for adequate communication to Limited English Proficient (LEP) individuals are various school-related federal laws and legislation that address the topic.
Professional interpretation services have an important place in our country’s education system. To ensure clear communication with all students and parents, teachers and other school employees should offer a professional interpreter if needed in any parent-teacher conferences, school meetings, meetings about special education, or any other conversations regarding a child’s education. If the presence of a live, skilled interpreter is not possible, telephonic interpretation is an option. Regardless of whether or not the interpreter is in person, they should be neutral and should communicate everything said during the conversation while not omitting or adding any information. Maintaining neutrality and confidentiality is of the utmost importance. Students should not be expected or required to interpret for their parents – content may not be appropriate depending on the age of the student or the nature of the meeting.
In our public school system, students and parents have the right to communicate within the language they understand. As such, it is the school district’s responsibility to have certain documents translated that are distributed to students. This can include the following:
Other translation projects for school districts could include student handbooks, written parent communications, forms (food cards, bus routing, and permission slips), websites, and videos with narration. It is also important to note that documents should be translated into all languages that are represented in a school district and not just the most prevalent languages.