The Minneapolis school board meeting room has a new feature because of the pandemic, though it has nothing to do with the virus.
A row of three sound booths offers a space for Somali, Spanish and Hmong speakers to interpret the meeting in real time. People in the room can use a receiver to listen along with the interpretation, or families can tune in from home to watch the livestreamed meeting in their language.
Interpretation and translation services were offered in person at meetings before the pandemic, but the forced temporary shift to the virtual format in 2020 pushed the district — and many others across Minnesota and the nation — to lean more heavily on technology to reach families at home, both in English and their native languages.
In Minneapolis, that meant recording the meetings with interpretation and making those videos available online. The district also now takes public comment via voice mail, which can also be interpreted, and recently launched a texting tool that can translate messages between educators and parents into more than 100 languages — moves that leaders say have improved accessibility, transparency and engagement.
"It's important that what we do in English we do in the languages that our families are speaking," said Ryan Strack, the administrator of board and government relations for the district. "A school board meeting can already be inaccessible enough, but if we have the ability to improve that, we should always do that."
According to the district, more than 7,700 students have self-identified as speaking Somali, Spanish or Hmong at home.
Minneapolis Public Schools contracts with Minneapolis-based INGCO International to provide interpreters for the district, including at board meetings and parent-teacher conferences. This year's $329,000 contract includes $80,000 for interpretation at board meetings.
The company's president and founder, Ingrid Christensen, said it had long been using technology to virtually offer interpretation services in the corporate world, but schools had been slower to take advantage of the same tools.