The first author I can relate to my placement at Robert L Bailey is Garcia's "Translanguaging". Translanguaging, unlike Garcia's piece, focuses on how bilingualism can be a good, beneficial thing for children. With the time I've spent at this school, I can see how that would be the case. To start off, in my classroom, there are things called "centers". During these centers, the children can choose dramatic play, math center, drawing center, painting center, and so on and so forth. One particular day, a few weeks back, I was in the "dramatic play" area with a group of children. Two girls in particular, however, stood out to me. For the sake of this, we will call them C and L. L was playing with fake foods and was naming them in Spanish, and giving instructions on how to cook them in Spanish. I'm a non-spanish speaker, and I never even took the language in high school. So, what she was saying was completely foreign to me. She finally started...