Internationals Approach

“What I appreciate about Internationals is the holistic approach to the student. We don’t place instruction in one box and a student’s personal issues in another box. We take care of students as one whole person. Similarly, at Internationals, there is no division of responsibility of teaching a student English and teaching him or her subject content. We use the whole language approach and everyone is responsible for teaching language as well as content.”
-Lee Pan,
 Principal of International High School
 at LaGuardia Community College

At International high schools, a badge of prestige replaces the “stigma” of immigrant status for students, families, and faculty. It is understood that near native fluency in English and proficiency in a second language are valuable resources when it comes to achieving professional and social success in the United States and the global economy and participating fully in democratic society. Within our network, every teacher is a language teacher as well as a teacher of academic content and skills. The educational process takes place in a heterogeneous, learner-centered, collaborative, and activity-based environment. Students are organized in diverse clusters that work with the same team of teachers over 1-2 years. Classes are mixed according to age, grade, academic ability, prior schooling, native language, and linguistic proficiency. They are interdisciplinary and rigorous, and the curriculum includes literature, social studies, math, science, the arts, technology, and physical education

An evolving, innovative academic program combined with a holistic approach to education is key to the Internationals’ core philosophy. Our schools are close-knit, nurturing communities that support students who may be feeling displaced as newcomers to our country. Differences among students and faculty are cherished, and students are continually encouraged to celebrate their cultural and linguistic individuality while embracing their new home.

The Internationals’ pedagogical approach to educating English language learners is based upon five major tenets:

Increasing opportunities for language acquisition – Common Language Model:

The increasingly segregated communities, where immigrants are living, have created the need to adapt our existing model to serve a homogeneous population. Latinos are the fastest growing and most segregated linguistic community in the United States. Internationals’ common language pilot adapts our successful multilingual model to effectively educate a more homogeneous language population. There are currently two schools (Pan American International High School and Pan American International High School at Monroe) that are piloting this common language model.