One family. One turning point.
Scroll through Marisol's story. You might recognise someone you know.

The silence
that follows.
Marisol arrived in Tucson in March. She wired money home, worked double shifts at the hotel laundry, and never missed a school pickup. But at parent-teacher night, she sat in the back row and nodded at words she couldn't hold. The form in her hand asked for a signature. She didn't know what she was signing.

A workbook.
A Tuesday night.
Her daughter Valentina found the Puente flyer tucked under a windshield wiper at the laundromat. No experience needed. No textbook to buy. Classes at 7pm, after the kids are in bed. Marisol showed up with a notebook from the dollar store and sat at a table with six other parents. The instructor started with three words: "My name is."
"I said my name out loud in English for the first time. I was 38 years old."

The report card
she read herself.
Eight weeks later, Valentina's report card arrived. Marisol sat at the kitchen table — the same table, the same lamp — and read every line. Proficient. Needs improvement. Excellent effort. She called Valentina in and read it to her, in English, out loud. Valentina cried. Marisol didn't. She had already decided what she was going to say at the next parent-teacher conference.









