Episcopalian ESL instructors teach more than English
Carol Penn stands in front of a classroom at St. Paulâs Episcopal Church in Tustin, a copy of the book, âEnglish The American Way,â in hand.
Her lesson that Tuesday morning involves explanations of DUI â âdriving under the influenceâ is scrawled on a white board behind her â and the ride sharing company Uber.
Penn, 72, takes a break to ask the students in her high-intermediate English as a Second Language class to go around the room and say where theyâre from.
Mexico, Korea, Japan, China, Vietnam, Iran.
âAnd Iâm from Compton,â Penn said. âStraight out of Compton!â
The students erupt with laughter.
While Pennâs international classroom bears little resemblance to the demographic makeup of St. Paulâs congregation â âWeâre white, weâre female, weâre old,â said Penn â it looks just like Orange County, which has become majority-minority in recent years.
Penn agreed.
âThis is Tustin,â she said.
As the county has changed, so has the programming at St. Paulâs, which offers a robust set of free ESL courses Tuesdays and Thursdays, at several language levels, to immigrants, refugees and asylum-seekers from all over the world.
âWe think internationally, and we say yes to tolerance,â Penn said. âWe respond to people who need our help, and they need our help now.â
Penn started St. Paulâs ESL program in 2009, after state budget cuts to education led local school districts to drop adult programming, including ESL and citizenship classes.
Penn, who had been teaching at the Tustin Unified School Districtâs adult school, was laid off at the end of the academic year.
âI went to my priest and said, âI really donât know how Iâm going to get by this,â â recalled Penn, who has taught ESL for nearly 20 years. âI explained to her how valuable I thought these classes were, and she said, without hesitation, âBring them here.â â
âI thought she was crazy when she first said that, because we didnât have any books, we didnât even have white boards, we didnât have supplies, and we didnât have teachers.â
But just a few months later, in September 2009, Penn started a new ESL and citizenship program at St. Paulâs, with many of her old students in attendance.
Now the program has about 250 students per year, led by a team of 20 volunteer teachers.
Even as local school districts regained their funding for adult education last spring â and resumed ESL and citizenship classes â the program at St. Paulâs remains strong.
âThey have a community, itâs not just a class,â said the Rev. Kay Sylvester, rector of St. Paulâs. âI walk by often and hear them talking about buying appliances or negotiating going to school with your kids, what does this report look like, what does this form look like? Itâs really helping people be empowered to be citizens and self-determining.â
Diaa Diwan, who came to the United States three years ago as a refugee from Syria, said that St. Paulâs ESL classes have been âlike the sunlightâ for her.
âCarol was not only teaching us English, she was telling us how to live here in the United States,â the 36-year-old mother of two said. âItâs not easy for us. Itâs a new language, itâs a new life. Everything is new for us.â
On top of weekly English lessons, Diwan said that Penn helped her family get driverâs licenses, jobs and, eventually, green cards.
Now Diwan is enrolled in Moreno Valley College, where she plans to study early childhood education. Her family also purchased their first home in the area.
A current student in Pennâs high-intermediate class is a 21-year-old Iranian asylum seeker who studied English literature before coming to the United States in 2015 and cites âDeath of a Salesmanâ as her favorite play.
âWhen I went to that ESL class I wasnât OK, I was totally depressed,â said the student, who asked that her name not be used because of her immigration status. âI felt it was the end of the world, I am here alone, I am far away from my family, my family is also in danger because of me. I havenât any place to go.â
âAs an asylum-seeker, life is very hard,â she went on. âIt takes a year to get your legal documents, such as Social Security number and employment authorization. Still Iâm applying for jobs. Those ESL classes are a center of hope for us.â
Sylvester said the classes enrich St. Paulâs congregation.
âEpiscopalians tend to, still, demographically be skewing towards white and economically advantaged,â she said. âOne of the things the program does is it brings people on our campus who donât look like traditional Episcopalians, in the very best sense â because we can actually see who our neighbors are.â
âThe fact that we have an ESL program has raised some awareness about what folks are facing in places like Syria, so thereâs less fear and more of a sense of we know what folks are up against, which makes us a better bridge to reaching out.â
But this year, Penn said the dynamics in many classrooms have changed.
âOur attendance at ESL of Muslim students dropped dramatically,â she said. âIf they donât feel safe here, then they donât feel safe. It is a Christian church. Thatâs never been a problem before, but it might be a problem now.â
Said Sylvester: âWhen the first executive order came down, shutting the borders, as it were, to people from several nations, I went into the class and said very clearly, âThis has no effect on our relationship with you. We want to be your friends, we want to be your allies. Thatâs who weâre called to be.â â
Barring immigrants and refugees from education â whether through fear of U.S. immigration policies or cuts to funding âharms everyone, Penn said.
âThrowing up these kinds of roadblocks I really donât think is benefiting this country,â she said. âThese people have talents, they have education, they have gifts to give, and weâre setting up obstacles for them to use their gifts. That doesnât make any sense to me.
âWhy would we lock them out?â
Caitlin Yoshiko Kandil is a contributor to Times Community News.
All the latest on Orange County from Orange County.
Get our free TimesOC newsletter.
You may occasionally receive promotional content from the Daily Pilot.