Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Immigrant Education and Integration Trends The Annie E. Casey Foundation June 23, 2008 Michael Fix & Margie McHugh NCIIP Co-Directors National Center on.

Similar presentations


Presentation on theme: "Immigrant Education and Integration Trends The Annie E. Casey Foundation June 23, 2008 Michael Fix & Margie McHugh NCIIP Co-Directors National Center on."— Presentation transcript:

1 Immigrant Education and Integration Trends The Annie E. Casey Foundation June 23, 2008 Michael Fix & Margie McHugh NCIIP Co-Directors National Center on Immigrant Integration Policy

2 Metro Areas with Demographic Change: Almost Half Metro Areas with 1 Million+ Immigrants Are in the US

3 Children of immigrants are... 23% All children 30% All low-income children -- 84% Are US citizens Demographic Impacts Immigrants are... 1 in 8 US residents 1 in 2 new workers in 90s Source: MPI’s tabulations of 2000 Census and 2006 American Community Survey.

4 More States Feel the Impact of Immigration: Largest and Fastest Growing Immigrant States

5 37 Million Foreign Born in 2005 Legal permanent residents (LPRs) 28% Legal temporary residents 3% Naturalized citizens 31% Refugees 7% Unauthorized migrants 30% One in Three Immigrants are Unauthorized Source: Urban Institute’s estimations

6 Basic Stats: Children in Undocumented Families 4.6 million children, who constitute: 27 percent children of immigrants 5 percent all kids Two-thirds (3 million) are US citizens One-third (1.6 million) are undocumented About 65,000 undocumented children annually graduate from US high schools But many undocumented drop out Source: Urban Institute estimations, 2003

7 Year United States LEP Enrollment Total Enrollment Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2007. Rate of Total and LEP Enrollment Growth: From 1996 to 2006

8 Year California LEP Enrollment Total Enrollment Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2006 Rate of Total and LEP Enrollment Growth: From 1995 to 2005

9 Year North Carolina LEP Enrollment Total Enrollment Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2006 Rate of Total Pk-12 and LEP Enrollment Growth: 1995 to 2005

10 Year Nevada LEP Enrollment Total Enrollment Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2006 Rate of Total Pk-12 and LEP Enrollment Growth: 1995 to 2005

11 LEP Students Attend Linguistically-Segregated Schools Source: Schools and Staffing Survey, 1999

12 More LEP Children are Native than Foreign Born, United States Source: US Census, 2000. The figures refer to LEP students, ages 5 to 18, currently enrolled in school. Recent arrivals: 42% Recent arrivals: 52%

13 Average Scores of 8 th Graders in Math by English Proficiency: NAEP, 1996-2007 Non-LEP LEP Non-LEP Former LEP LEP 8 th Graders Source: US Department of Education, Institute of Education Sciences, National Center for Education Statistics, National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), 2007 Math Assessments

14 New York City * 26% of ELLs in the 2006 class graduated on time vs. 61% of English Proficient Students. Massachusetts * 55% of ELLs graduate within four years vs. 80% of all students (2006-2007). North Carolina * 52% of ELLs graduate with a regular diploma within four years vs. 70% of all students (2006-2007). Low Graduation Rates of ELLs

15 LEP Children Ages 5 to 17 by Generation Projected Growth: 2000 to 2025 Pct. growth from 2000 58% 83% 36% All LEP 2 nd gen 3 rd gen 1 st gen Source: Jeffrey Passel, Pew Hispanic tabulations from Census 2000 5% PUMS. Proportions of children who are LEP computed from Census 2000 data for each generation group. These proportions are held constant and applied to data for (*) 2005 from the March Current Population Survey (CPS) and to (#) projections for 2010 through 2025 done by Passel (2006 forthcoming).

16 ELL Students in US Schools

17

18 2/3 of ELL Students Are in 10 States; 1/3 are in California Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2006

19 ELL Enrollment (2004-2005): Top 10 School Districts Number of ELLs Percent ELLs* United States5,113,63610.4 Los Angeles, CA328,68444.0 New York City, NY122,84012.0 Chicago, IL82,54019.0 Miami-Dade, FL62,76717.0 Houston, TX61,31929.0 Clark County, NV53,51720.0 Dallas, TX51,32832.0 San Diego, CA38,62928.0 Santa Ana, CA36,80762.1 Broward County, FL29,90911.0 Top 10 districts868,340 Percentage of all ELLs17.0% Source: National Clearinghouse for English Language Acquisition & Language Instruction Educational Programs (NCELA), 2006 *Percent ELLs in the district’s total K-12 enrollment.

20 Nature and Quality of English Instruction Services -alignment of ELL and mainstream curricula -native language instruction and testing policies -use of valid and reliable assessments -teacher recruitment/retention -pre-service and in-service training -alignment of afterschool/SES services -time on task Barriers to Parent Involvement -language -unwelcoming school environment -systems/knowledge gap Key K-12 Issues

21 Lack of targeted federal, state and local funding to meet immigrant/ELL needs -decline in federal support Key K-12 Issues (cont)

22 Source: US Department of Education, “Funds for State Formula-Allocated and Selected Student Aid Programs.” Total Language Acquisition Grants to US States and Territories, 2002-2007 Change 2002 to 2007: -13.1%

23 Lack of targeted federal, state and local funding to meet immigrant/ELL needs -decline in federal support -continuing reluctance at state and district levels to use Title I funds to meet ELL needs -few strong state or local level efforts to address ELL funding needs -difficulties in establishing accountability for funds even when they have been designated for ELLs Key K-12 Issues (cont)

24 Advocacy -policy/legislation: collection of longitudinal data; state and local funding formulas; expanded PreK and afterschool programs. -administrative: ELL assessment and placement practices; instructional program offerings; alignment of ELL and mainstream curricula AND tests; relevance and sufficiency of teacher training. -litigation: e.g. CFE lawsuit in New York Parent Engagement -language access initiatives -language and literacy programs -personal and family leadership programs -education advocacy and organizing efforts Strategies for Funders

25 Research -policy impacts: NCLB effects on high ELL schools -instructional programs: trials to compare success of different instructional approaches -curriculum and testing: state testing consortia data will yield treasure trove of data -funding: learn lessons from areas of new investment, particularly New York Strategies for Funders (cont)

26 Find data, reports and other analysis by state and for the nation at www.migrationpolicy.org … 2006 ACS data and new databases coming online soon! Michael Fix and Margie McHugh mfix@migrationpolicy.org mmchugh@migrationpolicy.org For More Information


Download ppt "Immigrant Education and Integration Trends The Annie E. Casey Foundation June 23, 2008 Michael Fix & Margie McHugh NCIIP Co-Directors National Center on."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google