[TRENDING: This woman received the first COVID-19 vaccine | Judge scolds theme park trespasser | Chuck Yeager dies at 97]“At the end of the day the interview is a lot of just English and knowing English and being able to answer that,” Marisela Zamora, citizenship program coordinator for Hope Community center said. “What we do is we civically engage our students and also prepare them for the citizenship interview by offering classes that cover ESL, Civics and the N-400 application.”The nonprofit in Apopka is one of three organizations in Florida that received a grant from U.S.
Citizenship and Immigration Services so they could provide resources to help people become U.S. citizens.“There’s stuff that the new questions cover that we already.