The board asked the newly appointed curriculum associate for world languages to produce a clear statement of purpose for the district’s world-language program before recommending changes to which languages are offered. Trustees said the district should define whether world-language instruction is meant primarily for enrichment, cultural competence, college admissions, career utility, or to support the Seal of Biliteracy, and then align course offerings and grade-level placement to that purpose.\n\nStaff said the new director would observe course offerings, participation numbers and community expectations, and then advise the board on which languages to add, retain or retire. Board members flagged that scheduling and student demand affect whether students can meaningfully access electives, and asked staff to consider how course choices align with college and workforce requirements. Staff agreed to gather data on enrollments and best-practice examples from other districts before proposing program-level changes.