Search Posts
Recent Posts
- We Cook! Cheesy Polenta – Chef Alison Mountford January 22, 2026
- Ocean State Media (RI public radio) to Acquire WEEI, leaving Sports Fans Asking – What About the Red Sox? January 22, 2026
- Rhode Island Weather for January 22, 2026 January 22, 2026
- $1.2M for: Johnston Flood Mitigation, Block Island Dunes Restoration, and Pawtuxet River Fish Passage January 22, 2026
- RI Veterans: Did you know? 22.01.26 (Desert Shield/Desert Storm, Local Events, Resources) – John A. Cianci January 22, 2026
Categories
Subscribe!
Thanks for subscribing! Please check your email for further instructions.
Rhode Island is a ‘YES’ to De La Comunidad Bilingual School and a ‘NO’ to New England Technical Academy
RI Council on Elementary and Secondary Education Votes to Approve De La Comunidad Bilingual School and Reject New England Technical Academy
The Rhode Island Council on Elementary and Secondary Education voted yesterday to approve De La Comunidad Bilingual School (DLC-B), the state’s first K–12 dual-language, full-service charter public school, which will serve students from Providence, Pawtucket, and Cranston.
The Council also voted to reject New England Technical Academy (NETA), a proposed early-college charter public high school integrating rigorous academics with high-quality career and technical education (CTE) that was sponsored by the New England Institute of Technology (NEIT),
The approval of De La Comunidad Bilingual School (DLC-B) marks a major milestone for families seeking culturally responsive, bilingual public school options.
“Today’s decision is a win for families who have long advocated for an inclusive, bilingual, public education option,” said Victor Capellan, founder and CEO of Rhode Island Education Collective, which helped develop the proposals for both schools. “De La Comunidad Bilingual will empower students with the language skills, cultural confidence, and academic foundation they need to succeed in college, career, and community life.”
DLC-B will provide rigorous academics combined with comprehensive support for students and families, including after-school enrichment, physical and mental health services, financial literacy programs, housing assistance, and adult education. Students will graduate biliterate, college-ready, and community-minded, filling a long-standing gap in Rhode Island’s educational landscape.
“Research shows that dual-language instruction boosts academic achievement, biliteracy, and cognitive development, while also supporting long-term college and career success for both multilingual learners and English-dominant students,” said Carol Aguasvivas, president of Community Angels and board chair of De La Comunidad Bilingual. “By delivering high-quality dual-language instruction from kindergarten through grade 12, De La Comunidad Bilingual will maximize student growth and prepare students to thrive after graduation.”
As the state’s first CTE public school without admissions requirements, the proposed New England Technical Academy (NETA) would have expanded equitable access for special education and multilingual learner students as early as fall 2026; its rejection, despite offering pathways to college credit and industry-recognized credentials, is a loss for families and Rhode Island’s workforce.
“Last night’s vote was profoundly disappointing, not only for the hundreds of families seeking CTE opportunities, but because no rationale was offered and the process appeared influenced by forces outside the public record,” said Capellan. “Decisions about children’s futures should be made in the open, based on need and quality, not politics.”
“This decision represents a significant missed opportunity for both our students and our state,” said Amy Grzybowski, vice president of workforce development and community relations at New England Institute of Technology and board chair of New England Technical Academy. “At a time when the state faces growing workforce shortages and businesses are struggling to find skilled talent, New England Technical Academy was designed to meet that need by expanding access to high-demand, high-wage career pathways and directly supporting Rhode Island’s goal of building a skilled workforce.”
About Rhode Island Education Collective
Launched in 2024, Rhode Island Education Collective is a nonprofit working to ensure that every child in our state—regardless of their race, economic situation or where they live—can go to a great public school. The Collective empowers the people who are part of our schools and neighborhoods, especially those historically marginalized by the public education system, to help create the change our students need. Learn more at RIEducationCollective.org
English(ESL) as a Second Language has always worked with students ….. technical skills are essential currently and what is to come ….. try and stay on course … too many new-wants-to-be try and reinvent the working, doable wheel!
ri should support ne tech’ proposal
People have gone nuts.
Rhode Island going in the wrong direction, once again – send in the clowns!