Why Language Should Feel Human
SPEAKER_01
0:00
I've
been
thinking
a
lot
about
language
lately.
Not
just
words,
but
what
language
actually
opens
up
inside
of
us.
Because
if
I'm
being
honest,
my
experience
learning
Spanish
in
high
school
was
not
exactly
inspiring.
It
was
worksheets,
vocabulary
quizzes,
memorizing
verb
conjugations
the
night
before
a
test,
and
forgetting
half
of
them
by
the
next
marking
period.
Donde
está
la
biblioteca
remains
one
of
the
great
unanswered
questions
of
my
childhood.
We
learned
the
mechanics
of
language,
but
we
didn't
really
learn
people.
I
don't
remember
meaningful
conversations
about
Latin
or
Spanish
culture.
I
don't
remember
learning
why
traditions
mattered,
how
families
gathered,
how
music
shaped
identity,
how
food
tells
stories,
or
how
language
carries
history,
struggle,
humor,
resilience,
and
pride.
The
idea
that
learning
another
language
could
actually
enrich
your
humanity,
that
wasn't
really
on
the
table.
It
felt
more
like
a
requirement
than
an
invitation.
And
honestly,
I
think
that's
a
missed
opportunity.
Because
when
children
are
taught
language
through
curiosity,
art,
storytelling,
music,
food,
and
human
connection,
something
entirely
different
happens.
It
stops
being
about
passing
a
test
and
it
starts
becoming
about
understanding
people.
Today's
guest
has
spent
more
than
two
decades
reimagining
what
language
education
can
look
Meet Donna Guzo And The Mission
SPEAKER_01
1:33
like
for
children
through
language
exploration
enrichment.
Students
are
not
only
exposed
to
Spanish
vocabulary
and
conversation,
but
also
culture,
kindness,
creativity,
and
global
citizenship?
Their
mission
is
simple
and
ambiguous
all
at
once.
Learn
a
language,
share
a
culture,
and
change
the
world.
So
what
happens
when
we
stop
teaching
language
as
memorization
and
start
teaching
it
as
a
connection?
And
in
a
world
becoming
more
divided,
isolated,
and
suspicious
of
a
difference,
could
cultural
immersion
at
a
young
age
actually
help
raise
more
empathetic
human
beings?
And
that's
what
we're
going
to
tackle
today.
Hi,
I'm
Suze
bringing
you
a
dose
of
culture,
values,
and
global
citizenship
with
a
side
of
Hutzbah,
just
enough
to
ask
the
questions
others
might
not
be
introducing.
Today's
guest
is
Donna
Guzo,
the
president
and
CEO
of
Language
Exploration
Enrichment,
also
known
as
Lee
Spanish.
Donna
is
an
educator,
nonprofit
leader,
and
United
Nations
Teach
SDG's
ambassador
who
has
spent
more
than
20
years
helping
children
explore
world
languages
and
cultures
through
immersive
creative
programming
here
in
Northeast
Florida.
Under
her
leadership,
Lee
has
grown
into
a
nationally
minded,
community-rooted
organization
focused
not
only
on
language
acquisition,
but
on
tolerance,
literacy,
art,
and
global
citizenship.
The
organization's
mission
is
to
encourage
students
to
explore
world
language
and
culture
while
using
art
and
literacy
to
promote
compassion
and
understanding.
Donna
and
her
team
have
also
received
statewide
recognition,
including
induction
into
the
teacher
hall
of
fame
for
the
state
of
Florida.
Hi,
Donna,
welcome
to
Schmooz
with
Seuss.
Hi,
thank
you
for
having
me.
It's
a
privilege.
So
take
me
back
to
the
beginning.
What
first
Building An After-School Language Program
SPEAKER_01
3:25
made
you
believe
that
language
education
could
actually
change
the
trajectory
of
a
child's
life?
SPEAKER_00
3:30
Well,
when
I
moved
here
in
2003,
that's
when
the
school
district,
St.
Jones
County,
was
taking
away
Spanish
from
elementary
schools.
And
I
thought,
whoa,
my
daughter
is
just
entering
elementary
school
and
I
want
her
to
be
bilingual,
if
not
to
know
even
more
languages.
I
grew
up
knowing
six
languages
by
the
age
of
10.
English
was
my
last.
And
so
I
immediately
contacted
the
school
district
and
the
superintendent
at
the
time,
who
was
new,
who
was
very
supportive,
and
language
exploration
enrichment
thanks
to
a
former
principal,
Dr.
Filaney,
and
Dr.
Joyner,
the
superintendent,
got
started.
So
we
started
teaching
in
the
classroom.
They
paired
me
up
with
a
mom
who
was
already
teaching
culture,
only
culture,
world
world
compass.
That's
what
it
was.
Wow.
And
she
was
teaching
about
different
cultures
around
the
world.
So
they
paired
me
up
with
Janet
Robles.
She's
my
co-administrator
for
23
years.
And
we
both
got
together
and
said,
you
know
what?
Let's
bring
in
the
program
fully
for
learning,
you
know,
the
targeted
language.
At
that
time,
we
were
teaching
Spanish,
French,
American
Sign
Language.
Oh,
wow.
Eventually,
people
just
wanted
Spanish.
So
that's
the
you
know,
that's
where
the
community
went.
Teaching Through Stories And Thematic Units
SPEAKER_00
4:45
And
doing
the
the
Spanish
program,
she
said,
Well,
let's
incorporate
the
culture
piece.
And
I
absolutely
loved
it
because
we
teach
via
thematic
units.
So
that
keeps
a
child
more
entertained
and
more
um
in
conjunction
with
how
they're
learning
during
the
day.
It's
no
longer
let's
let
me
step
in
the
front
of
the
classroom
and
let's
teach
numbers
today
or
let's
let's
teach
colors
today.
It's
more
of
let's
choose
a
book
that
might
be
familiar
to
them
in
English,
like
for
example,
uh
Little
Red
Riding
Hood,
Caperucita
Roja,
and
let's
talk
about
the
book.
Well,
in
the
book,
what
do
you
have?
You
have
the
family,
because
you
have
the
uh
the
mama,
the
abuela,
la
niña,
you
have
frutas
in
the
basket.
Uh,
what
are
the
colors
of
the
fruit?
How
many
fruits
are
in
the
basket?
Uh,
there's
a
wolf
out
in
the
forest,
there's
a
forest
out
there
that
she's
gonna
walk
through.
So
there
are
a
lot
of
components
that
we
get
to
incorporate
into
the
vocabulary,
drawing
the
vocabulary
from
the
book,
and
the
children
can
actually
now
be
entertained
with
the
story
and
learn
Spanish
in
a
fun
way.
Um,
but
along
with
that,
Janet,
who
writes
the
curriculum,
I
run
more
the
business
side.
Um,
Janet
incorporates
in
that
curriculum
culture
heavily.
There's
always
a
country
that
they're
learning.
Um,
if
we're
teaching,
you
know,
whatever
book
storyline
is,
she
might
say,
Okay,
we're
gonna
learn
about
Puerto
Rico
today,
we're
gonna
learn
about
Mexico
next
semester,
we're
gonna
talk
about
Argentina,
so
it's
all
over
the
world.
The
21
Hispanic
speaking
countries
we
incorporate
into
the
lessons
throughout
the
years.
SPEAKER_01
6:22
That
sounds
fascinating,
mostly
because
I
don't
think
I
learnt
about
a
single
Latin
or
Spanish-speaking
country
in
four
years
of
Spanish
while
I
was
an
academic
student.
But
let
me
ask
you
this
question:
how
many
languages
do
you
currently
speak?
Six.
Six.
And
you
learned
all
of
them
as
a
young
child.
SPEAKER_00
6:42
Yes,
except
one
as
an
adult.
Yes.
Um,
and
I
was
Mandarin
Taiwanese,
which
is
not
easy.
I
can
imagine.
SPEAKER_01
6:49
So
I
also
was
raised
by
immigrants,
and
my
family
is
not
originally
from
this
country.
I'm
the
first
person
in
my
family
born
in
the
United
States.
So
English
was
not
a
language
that
was
spoken
at
home.
Same.
There
was
every
other
language
that
was
spoken.
How
did
you
learn
English?
SPEAKER_00
7:05
Well,
I
learned
English
two
ways.
One
is
uh
one,
I
was
in
school
at
age
10,
so
I
was
maybe
fifth
grade.
And
where
did
you
move
from?
And
I
had
moved
from
Spain
because
I
was
not
born
here
either.
So
I'm
half
Cuban
and
half
Spanish.
And
when
we
moved
to
Miami,
I
went
to
school,
so
I
learned
there,
but
I
also
learned
on
lab
Sesame
Street.
SPEAKER_01
7:26
I'm
not
laughing.
I
I
mentioned
this
to
a
lot
of
people.
I
learned
English
on
General
Hospital
and
Sesame
Street.
I
can
tell
you
when
Luke
and
Laura
got
married,
and
I
understand
what
Mr.
Snaphalophagus
and
Brigbird
have
going
on
over
there.
So
it
was
true.
For
a
lot
of
people
who
come
from
other
countries,
they
want
to
maintain
that
heritage,
that
culture,
that
tradition,
and
language
is
one
of
the
first
ways
that
they
think,
okay,
we're
gonna
preserve
this
in
the
home.
So
do
you
find
that
you
have
first,
second
generation
students
whose
parents
already
are
familiar
with
Spanish,
but
they
left
that
language
behind
and
they
Americanized
and
now
they're
kind
of
kicking
themselves?
SPEAKER_00
8:07
You
know,
some
have.
Uh
surprisingly,
there
are
Hispanic
parents
that
want
their
kids
to
enroll
in
the
program,
which
the
program
is
really
90%
for
Anglos.
Uh,
we
don't
have
that
many
Hispanic
kids
in
the
program.
But
when
we
do,
it's
exactly
that.
They
don't
speak
Spanish
at
home.
They
kind
of
went
Americanized
all
the
way,
and
now
they're
like,
oh,
now
my
kid
is
gonna
enter
middle
school.
Uh
so
it
is
usually
happening
later
in
elementary
school
that
they
think
about,
oh,
let's
do
this.
And
you
know,
my
advice
to
to
anyone
in
learning
a
language
is
you
can
learn
a
language
at
any
age,
but
if
you
can
learn
it
before
age
10,
11,
you
can
learn
many
languages.
SPEAKER_01
8:45
Right.
I
always
see
when
we
look
at
little
kids
from
other
countries,
it
seems
so
impressive
that
they
can
speak
multiple
languages
outside
of
the
United
States.
SPEAKER_00
8:54
Yes,
they
can
switch
from
one
language
to
another,
and
it's
so
easy
for
them.
Um
they're
not
afraid
of
pronunciation,
which
you
know,
we
we
don't
correct
per
se
um
pronunciation
unless
it's
something
totally
off
the
chores.
We're
gonna
yes,
we're
gonna
correct
the
child,
but
we
want
that
child
to
speak.
We
want
that
child
to
not
be
afraid
of
pronouncing
a
word,
to
just
be
free
with
their
speech
and
and
talk.
And
that's
why
we
use
several
methods,
you
know,
like
sim
talk.
They
can
form
sentences
with
card
pictures.
Um
we
use
TPRS,
which
is
the
total
physical
response
storytelling.
Wow.
Where
that
is
that's
super,
super
interesting
because
it's
very
psychological
for
them
to
start
speaking.
I
mean,
if
you
think
about
it
in
English,
in
in
their
regular
schools,
they're
not
even
learning
about
grammar
until
second,
third
grade.
So
when
we
get
the
kindergartens
of
first
graders,
we
just
want
them
to
speak.
When
you're
talking
to
a
baby,
when
a
baby's
born,
you
just
speak
to
the
baby
and
the
baby
responds.
You're
not
saying,
let's
conjugate
this,
let's
conjugate
Culture As The Key To Fluency
SPEAKER_00
9:55
that.
It
just
comes
naturally.
SPEAKER_01
9:56
I
noticed
that
Lee
doesn't
teach
just
grammar
and
vocabulary.
You
intentionally
incorporate
kindness,
tolerance,
art,
and
cultural
understanding
into
the
curriculum.
Why
was
that
so
important
to
you
that
you're
not
just
correcting
their
pronunciation
or
their
grammar
and
focusing
first
and
foremost
on
that,
like
most
traditional
language
programs?
SPEAKER_00
10:17
Right.
Um,
you
know,
getting
the
child
to
speak
it's
number
one,
because
then
fear
is
gone.
So
confidence
is
already
built
into
the
program.
Right.
And
then
knowing
about
kindness
and
tolerance
and
culture
is
super
important
because
there
are
so
many
people
out
there
that
think
that
because
you're
Hispanic
or
Latina,
that
you're
all
the
same,
that
you
speak
the
same
language,
that
you
you
eat
the
same
food,
that
you
dress
the
same
way,
and
it's
not
true.
So
we
teach
our
kids
hey,
if
you're
gonna
go
to
Argentina,
you
better
not
be
asking
for
tacos.
If
you
go
to
Mexico,
okay,
go
have
your
taco.
But
if
you
go
to
Puerto
Rico,
you
know,
you
can
have
mofongo.
You
you
know,
you
go
to
Spain,
again,
you're
not
gonna
be
asking
for
tacos
in
Spain,
they
might
serve
it,
but
you're
gonna
ask
for
paella,
you're
gonna
ask
for,
you
know,
authentic
things
in
their
uh
culture.
And
same
with
that.
Same
with
greetings,
and
you'll
be
amazed,
you
know,
with
kids
that,
you
know,
being
kids,
they're
like,
they
think
taco
is
the
main
meal.
And
it's
like,
no,
I
love
tacos,
but
that's
not
my
main
meal.
Um,
so
it's
it's
funny
because
they
go
to,
you
know,
greetings
is
a
is
another
one.
They
go
to
Spain,
for
example,
and
they
come
back
uh,
you
know,
after
their
summer
trip
and
they're
like,
oh
yeah,
there
were
two
kisses
on
the
cheek,
you
know,
mwah
mwah.
Right.
You
and
it's
cultural
in
Europe.
It's
cultural,
yeah.
But
then
you
go
someplace
in
South
America,
there's
gonna
be
only
one
kiss.
Right.
You
know,
so
they
need
to
know
what's
you
know.
SPEAKER_01
11:46
By
the
way,
Belgium
is
three
kisses.
SPEAKER_00
11:48
Yes.
SPEAKER_01
11:49
I
learned
that
in
Belgium,
yes.
SPEAKER_00
11:51
So
Taiwan,
you
don't
guess,
you
know.
SPEAKER_01
11:54
And
you
don't
know
how
low
to
bow
or
what
to
bow.
So
you're
introducing
to
these
students
a
few
components.
One
is
the
language,
which
is
very
rudimentary
when
you
think
about
what
your
goal
is,
but
more
importantly,
you're
teaching
them
curiosity,
that
the
understanding
that
Latin
America,
Central
America,
South
America
are
very
different
from
each
other
individually
and
independently,
as
opposed
to
European
Spanish
countries,
which
have
their
own
flavor,
no
pun
intended,
now
that
we've
talked
about
food.
So
your
slogan
is
learn
a
language,
share
a
culture,
change
the
world.
That
is
a
very
big
vision
for
children's
programming.
Can
you
please
expand
a
little
bit
about
what
propelled
you
to
shape
this
as
your
vision?
SPEAKER_00
12:39
Well,
this
particular
what
we
call
lemma,
the
the
theme,
uh,
is
really
for
teachers
to
focus
on
how
a
kid
learns
a
language.
Not
every
child
learns
the
same
way.
So
we're
no
longer
just
standing
in
front
of
the
classroom
teaching,
giving
a
lecture.
Now
we're
looking
for
is
this
child
more
of
a
nature
child?
Is
this
child
uh
you
know
more
of
a
technology
uh
person?
Is
this
child
more
mathematic?
So
we
look
at
all
the
nine
methods
of
teaching
and
learning,
and
we
incorporate
that.
Then
share
a
culture
is
super
important
to
go
along
with
a
targeted
language
so
that
they
can
understand.
We
believe
that
you
cannot
learn
a
language
without
understanding
the
culture.
And
in
a
world
that's
so
divided
today,
and
it's
been
divided
for
a
while,
but
specifically
today,
they
need
to
learn
about
tolerance,
they
need
to
learn
about
how
to
interact
with
each
other.
They
need
not
to
be
afraid
because
somebody
speaks
more
languages
than
you,
that
they're
better
than
you
per
se.
You
know,
they
may
have
better
opportunities.
I'm
gonna
agree
with
that,
but
you
don't
have
to
be
afraid
of
the
unknown,
and
I
think
that's
what's
happening
nowadays.
People
are
so
afraid
of
the
unknown,
they're
so
afraid
of
who
they
are
and
who
the
people
coming
into
this
country
are.
So
it's
important
for
the
kids
to
understand
that
tolerance
and
acceptance
and
understand
each
other
and
have
dialogue.
If
you
have
questions
about
a
certain
culture
or
a
certain
family,
you
know,
a
friend
of
your
friend's
family
uh
gathers
every
Sunday
and
has
music
and
food,
and
they
need
to
understand
that's
part
of
our
culture.
That's
what
we
do.
That's
not
there's
nothing
wrong
with
that,
but
there's
nothing
wrong
with
them
not
doing
it
either
at
home
if
they're
not
used
to
it.
So
they,
you
know,
in
speaking,
it
when
children
when
children
get
invited
to
each
other's
home,
they
notice
the
differences.
And
we're
trying
to
teach
them
it's
okay
if
they
have
music
on
that
is
not
in
your
language.
It's
okay
if
they
have
How Kids Pull Parents Toward Openness
SPEAKER_00
14:50
food
that
you're
not
used
to.
Try
it.
You
may
like
it.
SPEAKER_01
14:53
So
I
love
how
you
brought
that
up.
We're
living
in
a
moment
where
many
adults
seem
more
polarized
and
disconnected
than
ever.
And
in
your
experience,
have
you
noticed
that
learning
languages
can
counteract
some
of
that
division
for
the
parents
by
way
of
those
children?
Absolutely.
SPEAKER_00
15:10
Yes.
Tell
me
a
little
more
about
that.
The
parents
see
it
in
23
years.
We've
had
parents
come
up
to
us
and
be
like,
My
child
has
made
our
pet,
our
mascota
bilingual.
They
speak
to
the
dog,
you
know,
bang,
siéntate.
It's
so
interesting.
And
now,
and
and
the
parents
are
like,
so
now
we're
doing
it.
Or
they'll
say,
um,
the
Puerto
Rico
Mofongo
is
an
interesting
story
because
we
really
grounded
on
that
during
years
that
everybody
thought
we
all
spoke
the
same
Spanish,
dressed
the
same
way,
and
ate
the
same
food.
And
so
we
we
you
know
really
ingrind
in
them
in
Puerto
Rico
Mofongo,
try
it.
If
you
go
to
Miami,
there
will
be
Puerto
Rican
restaurants,
you
can
try
mofongo.
And
it's
plantains
and
beef
or
or
shrimp,
but
anyways,
it's
a
good
mixture.
And
um
the
kids
wanted
to
try
it.
So
we
did
partner
with
some
one
inventor
that
brought
little
pieces.
And
the
kids
loved
it.
So
the
mom
called
and
she
says,
What
is
this
thing
my
kid
is
talking
about?
He
can't
pronounce
the
word,
but
it's
something
with
mo,
mo.
And
we're
like,
Mo.
Mofo,
mofo.
Yeah,
I
would
get
in
trouble.
I
would
have
gotten
in
trouble
right
away
if
you
would
have
said
that
to
me.
And
so
they
started,
you
know,
they
they'll
be
like,
We're
gonna
try
it.
We're
gonna
go
to
a
Puerto
Rican
restaurant
and
order
this
and
and
try
something
different.
So,
and
we've
heard
parents
say,
and
now
we're
curious
to
go
travel,
you
know,
to
Central
America
or
South
America.
And
so,
you
know,
those
kind
of
stories
are
always
um
very
encouraging
to
us
because
it
tells
us
we're
doing
something
right.
We're
opening
eyes,
we're
opening
minds,
and
we're
having
people
talk,
dialogue,
dialect,
you
know,
talk
to
each
other,
whether,
you
know,
the
Spanish
are
so
many
dialects,
we
don't
all
speak
the
same
way
either.
So
they
they
need
to
understand
that
maybe
the
way
they're
learning
this
word
here
has,
you
know,
another
meaning
over
here
or
another
way
of
saying
it
over
there.
And
it's
okay,
it's
not
wrong.
SPEAKER_01
17:06
So
I
I
love
how
you've
become
so
What Changed In Schools Over 20 Years
SPEAKER_01
17:10
open
about
sharing
what
the
parents
and
the
students
have
brought
to
your
attention
and
to
your
experience.
You've
been
doing
this
since
2003.
What
changes
have
you
seen
in
children,
parents,
and
education
over
the
last
two
decades?
SPEAKER_00
17:24
Oh
gosh.
Wow,
in
yeah,
in
two
decades,
a
lot
has
changed
for
sure.
A
lot
has
been
taken
out
of
the
classroom.
Um,
you
know,
as
you
probably
know,
being
an
arts
person,
usually
when
there
are
funding
cuts,
one
of
the
first
things
to
go
is
art,
the
second
thing
is
language.
Um
so
in
a
lot
of
schools
in
Florida,
um,
except
probably
for
Miami
Date
and
maybe,
you
know,
a
few
here
or
there,
um
there's
just
no
Spanish
in
elementary
school
during
the
regular
curriculum.
So
we're
very
blessed
to
be
an
after-school
uh
enrichment
program
for
Spanish
with
a
uh
you
know
successful
track
record.
All
our
teachers
down
and
90%
of
our
teachers
have
some
have
been
awarded
by
the
Florida
Foreign
Language
Association
as
either
a
teacher
of
promise
or
most
valued
teacher.
And
then
Jonathan
and
I
were
inducted
in
the
Teacher
Hall
of
Fame.
So
we're
very
blessed
to
have
had
this
career
and
and
this
achievement
in
23
years,
because
it's
important
for
the
kids
to
know
that
to
compete
globally.
I
mean,
just
go
to
Europe
and
just
go
on
one
trip
and
and
and
hear
with
kids
your
age,
you
know,
the
children
of
these
parents,
what
how
many
languages
are
they
speaking?
How
confident
are
they?
And
that's
what
we
want
the
kids
here
to
be
in
our
program.
We
just
want
them
to
be
confident
and
and
to
be
willing
to
learn
and
and
have
fun
while
they're
doing
it.
That's
the
main
thing.
You
you
know,
you
don't
want
a
a
strict
classroom
of
just
let's
learn
verbs
today
and
you
know
conjugate
tomorrow.
No,
it's
it's
life,
you
know,
live
life.
And
that's
with
our
learner
language,
share
culture,
change
the
world,
that's
how
we're
changing
the
world.
Now
that
we've
been
around
for
23
years,
we
see
kids
that
have
graduated.
First,
we
saw
kids
going
to
high
school
that
were
able
to
skip
the
first
year
or
two,
in
some
cases
the
Spanish
one
and
two,
and
went
straight
to
Spanish
three.
What
did
they
test
out
in
the
world?
They
test,
yep.
They
test
them,
and
because
they
took
it
from
kindergarten
through
fifth
grade,
and
then
some
through
middle
school,
they
are
able
to
do
that.
Uh,
we've
had
kids
graduate
college
that
we
follow
now,
we
know
where
they're
working,
they
have
successful
careers.
A
lot
of
them
have
gone
international.
So
it's
really
exciting
to
see
that.
I
just
had
a
uh
former
student,
I
taught
this
student
from
kindergarten
to
third
grade
at
RB
Hunt
Elementary
in
St.
John's.
He
just
visited
from
Marcel,
France.
I
just
saw
him
last
week.
He's
18
years
old.
I'm
like,
wow,
this
is
a
little
kid.
And
he
speaks
six
languages.
SPEAKER_01
20:05
Wow.
Was
he
a
native
English
speaker
who
then
learned
other
languages?
Or
his
parents
other
languages?
SPEAKER_00
20:11
He
was
French,
so
English
was
his
second,
Spanish
was
his
third,
and
he
just
got
German,
you
know,
when
you're
talking
about.
He
was
picking
up
in
European
languages
as
he
probably
travels.
Using UN Goals With Young Kids
SPEAKER_01
20:20
Right.
Speaking
of
international,
you
yourself
are
United
Nations
teach
SDG's
ambassador.
Yes.
I
would
love
for
you
to
tell
me
a
little
bit
more
about
that,
and
also
how
and
why
you've
aligned
parts
of
your
programming
with
the
United
Nations
Sustainable
Development
Goals.
How
do
you
explain
concepts
like
global
responsibility,
poverty,
environmental
stewardship
to
young
children
in
ways
they
can
actually
absorb?
Right.
SPEAKER_00
20:46
Um,
yes,
I've
been
with
them
since
2015.
In
fact,
I'm
flying
out
to
New
York
next
week
to
do
a
training.
And
um,
the
United
Nations
Sustainable
Development
Goals
are
just
great
eye-openers
for
anybody.
But
you'll
be
amazed
how
much
children
really
uh
can
relate.
When
we
have
taught
them
uh
several
goals,
some
that
come
to
mind
right
now
is
Stop
Hunger,
where
the
kids
were
able
to
prepare
meals
for
the
poor.
Yeah.
Uh
we
partner
with
someone
from
Orlando
and
we
tied
that
in
into
Stop
Hunger.
We've
done
it
with
peace
when
I
spoke
at
the
Vatican
and
back
in
2018.
Um
I
took
a
painting
of
the
kids
from
Leh
and
from
the
Cultural
Center,
where
they
had
uh
drawn
um
uh
a
pineapple
because
that's
what
the
Pope
liked
to
eat,
but
also
a
dove
as
part
of
the
piece.
Yeah,
so
we
spoke
about
peace
and
what
does
that
mean
for
children?
You
know,
what
are
they
seeing?
And
you'll
be
amazed
the
stories
that
we
hear
just
between
their
friends
or
neighbors
or
things
they're
seeing.
Um,
and
by
incorporating
these
goals,
it
becomes
a
reality
that
okay,
this
is
happening
in
the
world,
not
just
here.
Clean
water,
you
know,
we
teach
them
about
animals.
Why
are
animals
dying
in
the
ocean?
Um,
climate,
you
name
it,
you
know,
any
of
those
goals
um
the
kids
really
want
to
talk
about.
And
one
that
surprised
me
the
most
was
uh
a
fifth
grader,
because
I
we
always
have
the
chart
of
the
17
goals
that
have
to
be
met
by
year
2030.
And
one
of
one
child
in
fifth
grade
said,
Well,
what
about
equality
gender?
You
know,
and
that's
about
gender
equality.
Yes.
And
so,
and
I
was
like,
wow,
I
was
not
planning
on
teaching
this
because
we're
focusing
on
the
easier
stuff,
right?
Right.
And
she
wanted
to
know
why
don't
women
get
paid
the
same
as
men
and
where's
the
discrepancy
there?
And
so
it
was
an
interesting
conversation
for
fifth
graders
to
have,
that
young,
to
understand
about
you
know
gender
equality.
SPEAKER_01
22:50
I
think
that's
a
very
fascinating
topic,
especially
in
today's
geopolitical
landscape.
Not
that
I
talk
politics
often,
but
understanding
that
women
here
have
a
lot
more
opportunity,
but
we
still
have
a
lot
more
to
go
to
be
equal
in
certain
areas.
But
that
conversation,
that
respectful
dialogue,
that
curiosity
is
broached
early
enough
where
asking
those
questions,
like
you
said,
are
inspiring
not
just
for
the
students,
but
for
you
as
a
teacher.
Right.
So,
what
have
children
taught
you
over
the
years
about
culture,
curiosity,
and
human
connection?
SPEAKER_00
23:27
We
always
learn
from
them.
We
we
think
we're
teaching
them,
we
are
learning
from
them.
And
I
think
back,
especially
once
they
make
it
uh,
you
know,
past
college,
and
you're
like,
yeah,
that
person
was
my
student.
That
person
is
doing,
you
know,
this
or
that
now.
It's
an
engineer,
it's
a
working
for
NASA,
or
you
know,
whatever.
And
what
those
kids
have
taught
me
is
perseverance.
You
don't
give
up.
That's
really
what
they
have
taught
me.
Um,
and
I
I
have
gone
to
many,
many
conferences
and
trainings
where
I
purposely
walk
into
a
non-Hispanic,
non-English,
non-Hispanic
training.
Um
might
be
Russian,
might
be
Arabic,
might
be
Chinese,
because
I
want
to
feel
what
they're
feeling
in
the
classroom.
And
I
think
until
a
teacher
does
that,
you
really
don't
know
what
is
going
on
in
their
minds.
They
they
might
be,
hey,
yeah,
let's
learn
today.
Um,
or
they
might
be
like,
this
is
not
for
me,
my
mom
put
me
here.
Or,
you
know,
I
mean
you
get
all
kinds
of
scenarios,
right?
But
when
you
do
that,
when
you
put
yourself
in
their
shoes,
you
learn
so
much
from
them
because
now
you
know
they're
not
giving
up.
Now
you
know
they're
giving
it
their
all.
Now
you
know
that
they
they
are
really
trying
to
speak
to
you
in
the
targeted
language.
And
it's
not
easy
when
you
are
Anglo
and
when
you
have
never
heard,
you
know,
a
word
in
Spanish
or
in
the
targeted
language.
So
to
me,
that's
been
the
biggest
um
one
of
the
biggest
things
I've
learned
from
children
is
don't
give
up,
keep
going.
You
know,
I
remember
a
story.
This
is
so
true.
This
child
is
now
in
college.
Um,
the
superintendent
was
coming
to
my
classroom
to
read
a
story
to
the
kids.
He
doesn't
speak
Spanish.
I
you
know,
we
practiced
before.
And
there
was
a
word
that
he
couldn't
pronounce,
and
he
knew
he
was
gonna
get
stuck
because
he
was
so
worried
about
it.
Sure
enough,
he
gets
stuck
on
the
award,
and
I
I
think
the
it
was
with
an
ña,
I
can't
remember
correctly.
Maybe
it
was
campaign,
camp,
and
you
couldn't
say
the
ña.
And
I
taught
the
kids
always
to
do
the
nya
sound.
You
you
hold
your
word,
you
know
the
ñ,
so
here's
a
first
grader.
He
wasn't,
yeah,
he
was
a
first
grader.
And
one
of
my
active
boys
in
the
classroom,
and
he
sees
a
superintendent
get
stuck,
and
he
says,
I
can't
pronounce
this
word,
so
I'm
gonna
skip
over
it.
And
this
kid
said
to
him,
No,
no,
no,
that's
why
we're
here
to
help
you.
A
first
grader.
SPEAKER_01
26:00
Oh,
modeling
the
behavior
of
that
teacher.
SPEAKER_00
26:04
And
I
froze,
and
I
thought,
oh
my
god,
you're
speaking
to
the
superintendent.
And
he
says,
You
hold
your
nose.
What's
the
word?
And
then
campana,
and
he's
like,
No,
campa,
yeah.
It
was
so
cute,
but
you
know
that
he's
paying
attention.
Yeah,
they're
always
little
ears
or
big
lessons.
He's
not
afraid
to
help
somebody,
so
I
loved,
I
love
seeing
that.
SPEAKER_01
26:28
Um,
so
it's
resilience,
tenacity,
confidence,
confidence,
and
communication.
They're
learning
how
to
communicate
on
a
whole
different
level,
not
just
uh
semantics,
the
language
itself,
but
being
okay
with
saying
this
is
a
partnership.
You
help
me
sometimes,
and
I
help
you
sometimes.
That's
unbelievable.
You've
received
remarkable
recognition
statewide,
including
teacher
Hall
of
Fame
honors
and
student
achievement
awards.
What
moments
make
you
feel
the
most
proud
when
you
look
back
at
this
two-decade
plus
history
of
something
that
wasn't
here
but
you
created?
SPEAKER_00
27:09
Wow,
it's
it's
just
been
a
wild
uh
two
decades
of
meeting
all
kinds
of
parents
and
kids
and
principals
and
teachers.
Um,
you
know,
we
Jonathan
and
I
started
this
program
and
we're
the
co-founders,
but
it's
really
our
instructors
that
are
the
in
the
front,
you
know,
they're
on
the
front
line.
And
it's
our
instructors
that
pass
on
that
passion
to
the
kids.
So
we
are
just
blown
away
by
Love Them First Then Teach Them
SPEAKER_00
27:40
all
the
instructors
that
have
come
through
us
in
23
years,
and
and
some
that
are
still
with
us,
that
they
just
they
love
to
teach
children
and
they
love
to
pass
that
passion
of
their
culture
to
them.
And
Janet
and
I
I
had
a
mentor,
um,
Dr.
Garriki
in
elementary
school,
that
always
said,
Donna,
remember,
first
you
love
them,
meaning
the
children,
then
you
teach
them.
And
I
told
Janet
that
at
that
time,
and
I
said,
This
really
touched
my
heart
because
we're
we're
so
focused
on
we
gotta
teach,
teach,
teach.
And
yeah,
we
care
for
the
kids,
but
first
we
love
them
and
then
we
teach
them.
And
that
just
stuck
with
me
for
all
these
years.
And
Janet
said,
we're
gonna
make
that
part
of
our
curriculum.
So
now
every
teacher
is
trained.
They
know
what
we
expect
at
the
interview
when
we
interview
them
is
first
you're
gonna
love
them,
then
you're
gonna
teach
them
and
share
your
passion.
And
they're
doing
that.
So
um,
you
know,
it's
a
successful
program,
yes,
but
a
lot
of
it
is
owed
to
our
instructors
and
their
dedication
and
really
to
the
parents
that
support
their
children
learning
a
world
language.
SPEAKER_01
28:59
It's
incredible
to
hear
about
this
holistic
wraparound
program
that
you've
created.
It's
not
just
Camps That Blend Food Games And Language
SPEAKER_01
29:05
an
after-school
program,
you
also
have
camps.
So
let's
talk
a
little
bit
about
the
camps
because
they
blend
language
with
cooking,
games,
crafts,
water
days,
and
experiential
learning.
Why
is
immersive
play
such
an
important
part
of
language
retention
and
learning
in
general?
SPEAKER_00
29:23
Well,
again,
because
learning
a
language
and
the
culture
of
the
language
brings
in
the
food,
brings
in
the
fun
games
that
they
may
not
know
about.
There
are
a
lot
of
games
that
we
played
growing
up
that
the
kids
here
don't
know.
So
we
want
to
incorporate
that.
And
we
want
to
incorporate
things
that
they're
familiar
with,
like
water
days.
Um,
but
for
example,
the
first
week
of
June
and
the
last
week
of
June
are
our
cooking
camps.
So
the
first
week,
we're
gonna
focus
on
the
Caribbean.
I'm
part
Cuban,
so
we're
gonna
be
cooking
Cuban
food,
we're
gonna
be
uh
cooking
from
the
Dominican
Republic,
from
Puerto
Rico,
we're
gonna
incorporate
all
that.
The
last
week
of
June,
we're
gonna
incorporate
more
South
America.
So
we're
gonna
start
with
Colombia,
Venezuela,
Argentina,
Paraguay.
We're
gonna
incorporate
everything.
And
so
it's
gonna
be
great
because
the
first
week
the
main
teacher
is
gonna
be
me,
which
I'm
half
Cuban,
and
the
last
week
of
June,
the
teacher
is
from
Colombia.
So
they're
gonna
learn
from
authentic
people
that
know
how
to
cook
this
food
and
play
the
music
and
incorporate,
you
know,
when
you're
cooking,
you're
incorporating
writing,
reading
recipes,
you're
writing
out
your
recipes,
you're
incorporating
science
for
your
measurements,
you're
incorporating
math.
So
it's
gonna
be
a
lot
of
fun.
Are
you
gonna
be
using
the
metric
system?
Yes.
SPEAKER_01
30:40
So
there's
a
whole
decades
we
have
to.
That
is
such
a
layer
that
you're
adding
to
all
of
this.
And
so
when
you
do
these
individual
countries
and
cultures,
are
if
you're
cooking
Cuban
food,
are
you
also
playing
Cuban
music?
Are
you
learning
a
Cuban
dance?
Or
an
instrument.
Or
an
instrument
or
a
game.
It
can
be
an
example.
SPEAKER_00
30:58
For
the
Cuban
game,
we're
gonna
do
dominoes.
So,
you
know,
we're
gonna
have
a
table
with
a
domino,
and
we're
gonna
teach
them
how
the
Cubans
play
dominoes
with
nine
nine
features.
So,
so
yeah,
Colombia,
you
know,
they're
gonna
learn
from
her
the
Colombian
heritage
and
the
music
from
Colombia.
Um,
and
you
know,
the
arepas
or
whatever
she's
planning
to
cook,
but
yeah,
incorporating
always
those
other
cultural
components.
And
for
middle
of
June,
I
think
it's
the
week
of
June
22nd,
um,
we're
gonna
have
one
camp
at
Redeemer
Church
in
Panavedra
with
Patricia.
Patricia's
from
Paraguay,
and
she's
doing
Spanish
is
fun.
So
she's
gonna
focus
on
a
lot
of
crafts.
So
it's
not
necessarily
cooking
for
that
one,
but
it's
gonna
be
crafting,
it's
gonna
be
drawing,
it's
gonna
be
a
lot
of
art
and
incorporating
the
language
and
the
culture
of
her
country,
which
is
Paraguay.
So,
which
is
very
different.
How
many
people
know
about
Paraguay?
Not
many.
SPEAKER_01
31:55
So
after
the
Super
Bowl
halftime
show,
you
would
think
more
people
knew
about
Paraguay.
Or
at
least
now
they're
familiar
with
there
being
more
than
Puerto
Rico
in
the
Dominican
Republic.
I'm
from
New
York
City,
and
so
we
had
a
parade
for
every
one
of
them.
Yes,
and
I
attended
all
of
them,
which
is
very
unusual
because
that
wouldn't
take
place
in
most
of
the
country.
Right.
So
you're
bringing
to
a
whole
group
of
community
members
something
that
has
never
been
here
before.
Right.
SPEAKER_00
32:21
And
you
And
they're
having
fun
with
it.
They
they're
going
to
have
fun
with
it.
So
the
first
and
last
week
of
June,
the
camps
for
cooking,
uh,
those
are
gonna
be
at
the
First
Coast
Cultural
Center
in
Punamiga,
because
we
have
a
partnership
with
them.
SPEAKER_01
32:35
Beautiful.
So
for
parents
listening
who
may
think
my
child
is
too
young
to
learn
When Is A Child Too Young
SPEAKER_01
32:40
a
language,
or
why
does
this
even
matter?
What
would
you
want
them
to
understand
about
introducing
language
and
culture
early?
SPEAKER_00
32:48
Oh,
absolutely.
Um,
the
younger
the
better.
Uh,
you
know,
we
teach
starting
kindergarten
through
fifth
grade,
that's
our
core,
K
through
fifth.
And
our
camps
are
for
kindergarten
through
fifth
grade.
But
if
you
have
a
kindergarten,
don't
be
afraid
to
sign
them
up
because
they're
the
ones
that
have
the
most
fun.
They
are
like
sponges.
They
absorb
everything,
they're
so
into
hands-on,
and
they
have
a
lot
of
fun.
Um,
so
no,
I
I
say
age
should
not
should
not
uh
matter
when
it
comes
to
learning
a
language.
SPEAKER_01
33:20
Well,
I
have
been
so
impressed
with
the
work
that
you
do
and
the
children
that
you've
pulled
out
of
what
their
normal
everyday
routine
is
and
expose
them
to
things
that
are
new,
curious,
interesting,
and
different.
And
your
staff
that
love
the
children
first
teach
them
second.
Yes.
Because
the
more
you
love
them,
the
better
it
is
to
learn
from
and
to
teach.
So
I
want
to
do
Lightning Round Favorites And Nonprofit Reality
SPEAKER_01
33:45
a
quick
lightning
round
where
I'll
ask
you
some
questions
and
you
tell
me
the
first
thing
that
comes
to
mind.
Your
favorite
Latin
or
Spanish
word.
SPEAKER_00
33:54
The
one
that
has
five
the
five
vowels
in
it.
Murcia
lago.
That
means
a
bat.
It's
so
long
in
Spanish,
such
a
short.
Oh,
is
that
funny?
SPEAKER_01
34:06
Your
favorite
Spanish
or
Latin
food.
Mmm,
paella.
Oh.
One
food
every
child
should
try
at
least
once.
Mofongo.
Just
so
they
can
tell
their
parents
that
they
want
that
mofo
food.
Yes.
Hardest
thing
about
running
a
nonprofit.
Mmm.
Funding.
One
country
or
culture
you
still
dream
of
exploring
more
deeply.
Peru.
Finish
the
sentence.
The
world
would
be
kinder
if
more
children
learned
many
languages.
Beautiful.
Thank
you
so
much
for
speaking
with
me
today,
Donna.
It's
been
a
privilege
to
know
you,
and
I
look
forward
to
partnering
with
you
in
the
future
on
something
in
Espanol
or
in
English.
You
have
to
come
visit
one
of
our
classes.
I'm
really
excited
to
do
that.
There's
something
beautiful
Closing Reflection On Learning To Listen
SPEAKER_01
34:55
about
people
who
quietly
dedicate
their
lives
to
building
bridges
before
the
rest
of
the
world
realizes
they're
needed.
Donna
Guzo
could
have
built
a
tutoring
business,
a
franchise,
a
transactional
after
school
program.
Instead,
she
built
a
mission
around
curiosity,
kindness,
and
cultural
literacy.
And
maybe
that
matters
now
more
than
ever.
Because
children
are
not
born
fearing
differences.
They
learn
it,
which
means
they
can
also
learn
openness.
They
can
learn
wonder
and
curiosity.
They
can
learn
that
another
language
is
not
a
threat
to
identity,
but
an
invitation
into
someone
else's
humanity.
I
keep
thinking
about
that
phrase:
learn
a
language,
share
a
culture,
change
the
world.
It
sounds
idealistic
until
you
realize
every
conflict
in
history
might
have
looked
different
if
more
people
had
actually
learned
how
to
listen
to
one
another.
So
maybe
changing
the
world
starts
smaller
than
we
think.
Maybe
it
starts
with
a
child
learning
how
to
say
hello
in
another
language.
Hola,
shalom.
Maybe
it
starts
with
cooking
a
meal
from
another
culture.
Maybe
it
starts
with
realizing
that
different
does
not
mean
dangerous
or
weird.
And
maybe
that's
the
kind
of
education
we
should
all
be
investing
in.
Honorable Mention Reese The Poet
SPEAKER_01
36:07
And
now
it's
time
for
our
honorable
mention.
A
mensch
is
someone
who
shows
up
with
integrity,
responsibility,
and
heart.
Today's
honorable
mensch
is
Fenton
Reese,
also
known
to
many
as
Reese
the
Poet.
He'll
kill
me
if
I
ever
use
the
F-word
again.
Now,
technically,
Reese
is
my
sound
engineer
at
the
Performers
Academy,
but
that
title
barely
scratches
the
surface
because
some
people
work
with
sound
equipment.
Reese
speaks
the
language
of
sound.
He
understands
rhythm,
pacing,
silence,
emotion,
vulnerability,
and
storytelling.
He
knows
when
to
let
a
moment
breathe
and
when
to
lean
into
it.
And
honestly,
that's
an
art
form
all
its
own.
Marine
Corps
veteran,
slam
poet,
inspirational
speaker,
music
producer,
and
mentor,
Reese
has
dedicated
his
work
to
helping
people
find
strength,
truth,
and
connection
through
storytelling
and
music.
What
I
admire
most
is
that
he
doesn't
just
create
art
to
entertain
people,
he
creates
art
to
move
people.
And
in
a
world
where
everyone
is
shouting,
there's
something
profoundly
powerful
about
someone
who
still
understands
how
to
make
people
actually
listen
and
control
what
they
hear.
You
can
feel
it
in
the
room
when
he's
working.
There's
intention,
there's
care,
there's
heart.
And
maybe
that's
why
today's
episode
felt
so
aligned.
Because
language,
music,
poetry,
storytelling,
they're
all
trying
to
accomplish
the
same
thing
human
connection.
So
today
I
honor
Reese,
the
poet,
a
creator,
a
collaborator,
mentor,
and
translator
of
emotion
into
sound.
That,
my
friends,
is
an
honorable
mention.
And
that
Share And Follow For More
SPEAKER_01
37:45
will
do
it
for
us
today.
Thank
you
for
joining
me
for
another
episode
of
Shmoose
with
Suze.
If
this
conversation
made
you
think,
feel,
or
see
something
a
little
differently,
share
it
because
these
conversations,
they
matter.
Follow
along
on
Instagram,
Facebook,
and
YouTube
for
your
daily
dose
of
Hudzba.
I'm
Suze,
your
well
informed
smartass,
reminding
you
what's
an
envelope
if
not
for
pushing.
Stay
inspired
and
inspiring.