How adult school is helping Visalia man achieve goal of citizenship
In 1994, when he was 14 years old, school custodian Jose Martin traveled alone from Mexico to California to live with his father. His mother had died, and the family needed money. So, instead of school, he took a job washing dishes in a restaurant.
By 2018, Martin — by then a married father of four — was living in Visalia, a diversely populated rural town in California’s Central Valley. But he wanted a better job, he says. So he enrolled at Visalia Adult School to get his general education diploma or GED.
He liked the classes so much that he signed up for English as a Second Language (ESL) classes.
“That’s when my teacher recommended that I take the citizenship class,” he says.
“I love this country. I want to be part of it and participate in the community.”
Jose Martin, Visalia Adult School student
Visalia Adult School is part of the Visalia Unified School District, a Sequoias Adult Education Consortium member.
“We offer the citizenship class to any student in our ESL program and to the public,” Visalia Adult School Principal Tami Olson says.
The citizenship class presents an overview of United States history and government, and prepares students for the written and verbal portions of the citizenship exam, Olson says.
“We also have navigators from the Consortium who help students to access resources and to see if students qualify for fee waivers or payment plans to pay for the exam,” she adds. “We take them right through the whole process.”
Martin credits the citizenship classes with giving him an understanding of his adopted home’s system of government.
“I know a lot about the government, the Congress and the other branches of government,” he says. “I love this country. I want to be part of it and participate in the community.”
When his 17-year-old daughter asked him why he wanted citizenship, he said, “I want to vote.”“Now she’s interested in learning how to proceed so she can vote in the next election,” he says.
Martin says he also talks to his other daughters — ages 20, 14 and 11 — about what he is learning. “We talk a lot about U.S. history, and we search on the computer together for information when we have questions.”
Looking back, Martin says adult school changed his outlook. “I’m more confident when I review my kids’ homework because I understand more,” he says.
Meanwhile, Martin plans to take the citizenship exam this summer, he says. “I know if I work hard and go one step at a time, I’ll reach my goals.”
To learn more about Visalia Adult School, visit https://www.vusd.org/AdultSchool.cfm.
Written by Gail Allyn Short.
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