Table 4: Language Background
|
Count
|
Percentage of Total
Households
|
|
1990
|
2000
|
Increase/ (Decrease)
|
1990
|
2000
|
Percentage Point Increase/ (Decrease)
|
| Households
in Linguistic Isolation |
100 |
75 |
(25) |
1.7% |
1.3% |
( 0.4%) |
|
Count
|
Percentage of School-Age
Children
|
|
School-Age Children (ages 5 to 17) Speaking Little or No English |
41 |
19 |
(22) |
1.4% |
0.7% |
( 0.7%) |
Note: A household consists of all the people who occupy a housing unit, including
related family members and all unrelated people, if any, such as lodgers,
foster children, wards, or employees who share the housing unit.
When a household is in linguistic isolation, the primary language for all members
14-years-old and over is not English, and English is spoken less than "very well."
All of the members
of a linguistically isolated household are tabulated as linguistically
isolated, including members less than 14-years-old who may speak only English.
|