Progress 2023: People & Demographics

Page 1

Man breaking down barriers for a.l.’s KAREN

Albert Lean Sa Taw has found a passion in helping other people.

Whether it’s interacting with Karen students and their families as a success coach at Albert Lea High School, serving the community on the Albert Lea Police Reserves or strengthening families in his role as assistant pastor at Zion Karen Baptist Church, Taw loves to be involved in the community.

“When you’re involved with the community, you know what is going on and you get to know all of the people,” he said. “I feel the joy when I help people, and I just want to be someone who the younger generation can look up to and follow

— see what I am and just be a good example for our younger kids.”

Taw, 32, and his family moved to the United States in 2008 from a refugee camp in Thailand. He said when they first arrived in the country, they lived in St. Paul but in 2011 moved to Albert Lea. He lived in Albert Lea off and on in the years that followed, attending Riverland Community College for law enforcement but then ultimately changing course one semester before completing that degree to take on a degree in Christian ministry at Judson University in Elgin, Illinois.

Progress People & Demographics WhAt’S inSide? Communicating in and out of the classroom Albert Lea district employing efforts to keep lines of communication with multilingual students. Page 4 A part of who she is Glenville woman’s community involvement begins with a love of sports from her youth. Page 3
Albert leA tribune SAturdAy, FebruAry 25, 2023
Among the many efforts Albert Lean Sa Taw is a part of, he is an assistant pastor at Zion Karen Baptist Church. Sarah Stultz/albert lea tribune
“I just want to be someone who the younger generation can look up to and follow.”
— Sa Taw by SArAh StultZ sarah.stultz@albertleatribune.com
YOUTH
taw works in numerous roles, including with the albert lea school district, the Police reserves and at his church See tAW, Page 2 Tribune Albert Lea Postmaster: Send address changes changes to Albert Lea Tribune, 808 W. Front St., Albert Lea, MN 56007. Meet the management team: Crystal Miller: Publisher 379-3420 | crystal.miller@albertleatribune.com Sarah Stultz: Editor 379-3433 | sarah.stultz@albertleatribune.com lisa Foley: Business Manager 379-4324 | lisa.foley@albertleatribune.com terry thissen: Pressroom Manager 379-9854 | terry.thissen@albertleatribune.com Offices: 808 W. Front St. Albert Lea, MN 56007 Phone: 507-373-1411 Fax: 507-373-0333 Website: albertleatribune.com Want to subscribe or moving? Call 507-379-3421 or send email to circulation@ albertleatribune.com.
Sa Taw works with a student in his role as a success coach at Albert Lea High School. Provided

Taw

Continued from Front Page

after completing that degree he moved back to albert Lea to be closer to his family, including his mother, father and siblings. He is the third of nine children and is now married and has two young children.

He said he likes that albert Lea is more affordable to live in than the Twin Cities and that it has less crime. He also likes that a person can get involved in many activities in small towns.

“I prefer to live in a small town,” he said.

Taw has worked off and on with the albert Lea school district, starting in 2013, first as an interpreter.

when he came back to the district in 2018, he worked initially as a success coach, then as an English language teacher, and now again is a success coach.

He said his role in the position is to help Karen families through communication, to help Karen students with their education and to sometimes translate paperwork.

He has a daily schedule and works at albert Lea High School.

Mary Jo Dorman, executive director of teaching and learning for albert Lea area Schools, said Taw is loved at the high school.

“Because of all of his connections, Taw has a great presence at the high school and a majority of the kids know him,” Dorman said. “He really garners a lot of respect from the youth at the high school. The high school staff love him.”

Dorman said the role of

success coaches primarily is to support students — closing any language barriers — and to communicate with families. She said teachers can’t call home for a Karen student if the parents don’t speak English, so teachers ask success coaches to make calls home for them. w hen school is canceled for weather or the district makes other mass messages

to parents to let them know about things that are happening, it is often the success coaches who make those messages to distribute to the Karen families. They also communicate about parent-teacher conferences and attend conferences to translate.

She said many of the families — because they cannot communicate with English-speaking staff

By the numbers

at the school — will call Taw and the other success coaches if they have questions. She said Taw is a collaborative person who understands that to help bring down the barriers for Karen families, he needs to work with school district personnel and let them know when there are barriers. He and the other coaches have also taught district staff much about the Karen culture.

“His voice is just so incredible in helping guide us …” Dorman said. “He just has great perspective and knows what families need through all of his work and all of his positions.”

Taw, who has had two other siblings also work as success coaches, said

it makes him happy when he sees students work hard and find success.

Outside of his job with the school district, Taw works as an assistant coach for the junior varsity and C-squad soccer teams, as well as the track and field team.

Taw joined the albert Lea Police Reserves in 2019, a role in which he said he assists the fulltime officers at community events and crashes and with things such as traffic control as needed.

a lbert Lea Police Department Sgt. Jay Crabtree, who oversees the Police Reserves program, said Taw has been called upon to translate on numerous calls with Karen individuals where police are having

trouble understanding the individuals.

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Sa Taw is an assistant pastor at Zion Karen Baptist Church on Clark Street and in that role helps youth and families and assists the senior pastor as needed. Provided Taw was named Albert Lea Police Reserves Officer of the Year in 2022. Provided
2008
2011
2019
Year Taw and his family moved to the United States from Thailand. Year Taw and his family first moved to Albert Lea. Year Taw started with the Albert Lea Police Reserves. see TaW, Page 7

Woman’s community involvement started with love of sports

Margie Barber is the treasurer of the Albert Lea Pickleball Club, where she also serves on the board of directors. She is also involved with her church, does private tutoring and teaches classes at Riverland Community College. Her involvement in the community started with her passion for sports.

“I grew up on a farm

with four brothers, so I did what they did — played football or baseball or any sport there was,” she said.

So when she saw pickleball was starting up in Albert Lea, she called a friend who was part of the pickleball group. He invited her to a meeting and asked her to join the board of directors.

“Now I teach pickleball, have been for several years,” she said.

She called it an addicting

sport, and said it was a more fun way to get exercise than riding a stationary bike or walking on a treadmill. She plays at least four or five times per week.

Prior to joining the group, Barber had never heard of the game, but described the game as “wonderful.” And after playing a couple times, members asked her to serve.

“I think that’s because I had computer experience,

and they wanted me to be able to do the minutes and put together things for the

tournaments that we were having,” she said. Her favorite aspect of

the game was the people, and noted the satisfaction in helping others. She also teaches the game on Thursday evenings through Albert Lea Community Education classes. In addition to her roles in pickleball, Barber serves as financial secretary at United Methodist in Northwood. Her work involves spreadsheets.

Prior to joining United

see BarBer page 6

saturday, February 25, 2023 | people and demographics | Progress 2023 | albertleatribune.com | page 3
Margie Barber took up pickleball in 2015 and has been involved in the pickleball club ever since. alex guerrero/albert lea tribune
“I grew up on a farm with four brothers, so I did what they did — played football or baseball or any sport there was.”
— Margie Barber

Communicating in and out of the classroom

WITH 2 DOZEN LANGUAGES SPOKEN BY FAMILIES IN ALBERT LEA AREA SCHOOLS, DISTRICT EMPLOYS EFFORTS TO KEEP LINES OF COMMUNICATION OPEN

Albert Lea Area Schools is implementing a variety of tools in the district’s attempt to support multicultural learners who, between them, speak two dozen different languages at home.

According to data compiled by the Minnesota Department of Education in 2022, 10.5% of the district’s students are English language learners. However, many more students report to the district that a different language is spoken in their homes: 10.1% of students speak Spanish at home, 9.7% speak Karen and 1% speak the Nuer language, which is spoken in South Sudan. The remaining 20 languages have even fewer speakers per language.

“It’s like a couple families here and a couple families there,” Executive Director of Teaching and Learning Mary Jo Dorman said.

The district has 16 success coaches it employs to support these students, and also heavily utilizes these employees to communicate with families. Success coaches can translate from the three most common home languages, and also provide valuable knowledge and insight about different cultures.

“I have to say that I’m so grateful for them,” English language teacher and district English Language Coordinator Beth Faber said. “... I think without them, we’d still have a huge gap in communication with families.”

Which languages are spoken and how common they are among families in the district changes over time. For instance, Dorman said, as recently as 2010 Albert Lea Area Schools had no Karen families. These past few years have brought an influx of families from Puerto Rico following the devastating 2017 hurricane. And Nuer was a much more commonly spoken language among families in the area, in the mid-1990s, when refugees from war in South Sudan were newly moving to the area. While these refugees established a strong and

stable community, fewer families continued to move to Albert Lea, so the number of district families speaking the language dwindled.

For families whose home language is not English, Spanish, Karen or the Nuer language, the district tries to use its biggest resource: its people.

“Principals are pretty aware of how to support families,” Dorman said.

“And so it’s challenging, but … we just try and figure out who knows what (and) how do we make it work,” Dorman said.

For instance, recently one family from Ukraine needed support in communicating with the school, Faber said. In that instance, someone involved in sponsoring the family could speak Russian and Ukrainian and helped bridge that communication gap.

Albert Lea Area Schools also makes use of a service called LanguageLine — a contracted service that provides translators via telephone.

The district uses another phone system that allows it to send out recorded messages in the home languages families have registered with the district; for instance, if the district knows that a family speaks Spanish at home, it can send that family recorded phone messages in Spanish only.

But a big part of the district’s push toward connecting with families is about in-person community work, which Dorman and Faber both said Albert Lea Area Schools is working to reimplement following cessation due to the pandemic. This looks like attending community meetings or church services heavily attended by some of the district’s different language groups.

Since she started with the district in 2012, Dorman has seen the employment and utilization of success coaches grow dramatically, she said.

“I think we’re better at … figuring out what are the barriers,” Dorman said of the district’s progress over time. One such barrier

“I always tell students and families, ‘You being able to communicate with your family is the most important thing, so you need to speak your language with your family, and when you can use English, that’s great, too. Because there’s nothing worse than when you have a child that can’t communicate with their family.”

success coaches have been working on is access to transportation for families to get to school for meetings, Faber said. Many of their multilingual learners belong to families without access to a car.

“Sometimes our success coaches will actually be their form of transportation,” Faber said.

She has also seen changes in practices implemented to further support English language learners in the classroom. The district is currently focused on having its English language teachers co-teach with students’ classroom instructors, Dorman said, citing research that showed pulling students out of class for English language work was less effective than co-teaching. Staying in the traditional classroom can help English language learners pick up

— English Language Coordinator Beth Faber

more language from their context and peers, she said.

Another way multicultural learners are supported in class is through language partners, Faber said. These are fellow students who speak the student’s home language and can help that student when another adult isn’t there. Faber said they try not to rely heavily on language partners, because it’s not that student’s job, but that these language partners can be another layer of support when a student needs to use their home language in the classroom.

Dorman said statistics show that English language learners talk very little during the school day, and an important part of teachers’ work is encouraging them to talk during class. Faber said the attitude in education has also shifted toward students speaking

Home languages spoken by Albert Lea Area Schools families

Amharic Arabic

Assyrian Neo-Aramaic

Bengali Burmese

Chinese Mandarin

their home language in the classroom. She said teacher training has hugely improved in spreading the message that it’s OK to speak one’s home language in the classroom.

“I always tell students and families, ‘You being able to communicate with your family is the most important thing, so you need to speak your language with your family, and when you can use English, that’s great too,” Faber said. “Because there’s nothing worse than when you have a child that can’t communicate with their family.”

According to Faber, the Minnesota Department of Education now requires teachers to take a course about how to support multilingual learners when renewing their teaching licenses.

She also sees part of her work as encouraging other teachers and members of

Dinka

Filipino

French Gujarati

Haitian Creole

Kabardian

Karen

Krahn

Karenni, Kayah

Laotian

Norwegian

Nuer

Oromo

Russian Spanish

Sundanese

Urkranian

Vietnamese Wolof

the community to reach out to multilingual families and let them know that they’re welcome in Albert Lea Area Schools.

“They are great families, and they do need support, but they also want to support us as well,” Faber said.

PAGE 4 | ALBERTLEATRIBUNE.COM | PROGRESS 2023 | PEOPLE AND DEMOGRAPHICS | SATURDAY, FEBRUARY 25, 2023
Success coach Leslie Gutierrez helps a group of Spanish-speaking Albert Lea High School students in Samantha Dorman’s art class in mid-January. SARAH STULTZ/ALBERT LEA TRIBUNE The attitude in education has shifted toward students speaking their home language in the classroom, and teachers are now required to take a course about how to support multilingual learners.
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BarBer

Continued from Front Page

Methodist in Northwood, she was superintendent of Sunday school and did sermons at United Methodist in Glenville when the pastor was gone.

“They give you a topic and you come up with a morning sermon,” she said.

She and her husband, Jack, are also responsible for decorating the pine tree outside of Glenville, which is decorated year-round. They do it in memory of her father, who died on Christmas eve while she was a senior in high school.

“I had gotten all of mom’s decorations, so we put those decorations on the tree, and it stays up all year long,” she said. “In July every year, we take down the old decorations — which are pretty well-worn from the weather — and then we put up new decorations for the entire year.”

She admitted it was a lot of work, but called the work rewarding and said whenever a train, truck or car came by, they’d ring their horns in acknowledgment.

Barber used to be involved with Women of Today, which she described as a group of women

doing what they could to better their community.

Barber worked for an attorney for 20 years before she ran her own business for another 20 years teaching computer classes, some at riverland Community College.

She also did bookwork for her husband’s welding shop on top of her own.

“I had a lot on my plate,” she said.

She described her eagerness to get involved in so much as part of who she was, though she admitted being involved in so many organizations at once could spread a person thin, and said she needed time for her family.

“I’m a very reliable person, and I enjoy helping people,” she said.

Her best piece of advice is the age-old adage, “if you can’t say something nice, don’t say anything at all.”

“Just hold back and think about it, because you can’t take back nasty words to people,” she said.

Barber has been married to her husband for 56 years. The couple resides in Glenville and has two sons. With the exception of one year in California, she has lived in Glenville her entire life.

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Margie and Jack Barber stand in front of a tree off of U.S. Highway 65 in 2014 that they decorate with Christmas decorations each year in July. sArAh stultz/Albert leA tribune

Taw

Continued from Page 2

“He’s always been available to assist,” Crabtree said.

He said Taw always comes to meetings with a big smile on his face, is a good listener and jumps in on tasks and projects that need to be done. He was voted the Reserve Officer of the Year for the city in 2022.

“He’s always putting the citizens of albert Lea first in his world,” Crabtree said.

“He’s a great link between the Karen community, the albert Lea Police Department and the city of a lbert Lea,” Crabtree said. “It’s really invaluable with his experience and wanting to help out the city of a lbert Lea.”

Crabtree said Police Reserves officers go through much of the same training as licensed officers, including defense driving school and use of force training.

Taw also works as assistant pastor at Zion Karen Baptist Church on Clark Street, again helping youth

saturday, February 25, 2023 | people and demographics | Progress 2023 | albertleatribune.com | page 7
and families and assisting the senior pastor as needed, including providing some preaching in the senior pastor’s absence. He estimated on average about 120 people attend the church regularly. For him, being involved in the community has helped him get to know albert Lea and its people, and he hopes it will help inspire other Karen youth to do the same.
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