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Learning A New Land: Immigrant Students in American Society M ARCELO S UÁREZ -O ROZCO, Ph.D. The Courtney Sale Ross University Professor at NYU Co-Director Immigration Studies @ NYU NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, & Human Development www.nyu.education/immigration/ www.nyu.education/immigration/ Grantmakers for Children, Youth and Families, June 23, 2008
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Immigration Studies @ NYU
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The L ongitudinal I mmigrant S tudent A daptation Study Longitudinal, interdisciplinary, & comparative Documenting continuities and discontinuities in immigrant youth’s educational attitudes and adaptations over time Youth originated in Central America, China, the Dominican Republic, Haiti, & Mexico Ages 9 & 14 at beginning of study Recruited from 51 schools in 7 school districts in the Boston & San Francisco areas [Ethnographic observations occur in 20 schools] Thirty graduate level bicultural and multilingual research assistants Funded to date by the National Science Foundation, the W.T. Grant Foundation and The Spencer Foundation
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Triangulated Data Collection Strategies Ethnographic Observations Structured Interviews with Students, Parents & School Personnel Psychosocial Measures Sentence Completions Narratives Open Ended Questions Forced Choice Items Networks of Social Relations Bilingual Verbal Abilities Testing Woodcock-Johnson Test of Achievement Report Cards Teacher Completed Behavioral Checklists
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Data Analytic Strategies Simple Chi-Squares & ANOVAs Multiple & Logistical Regressions Nagin Cluster Analyses Hierarchical Linear Modeling Multiple-Case Study Analysis Narrative Analysis
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Goals of Learning a New Land ORGANIZATION Understanding Academic Achievement over time Role of Network of Relationships Role of School Contexts in Academic Outcomes Challenge of Acquiring Academic English skills for newcomer youth under less than optimal conditions they often encounter Half of book--16 case studies developed to shed light on pathways of performance over time PROVIDE Use of mixed methods Chain of Evidence (endnotes & online appendix so not too daunting) Experience Near/Youth Centered view of the world often lost in immigrant debates AVOID Invidious comparisons between countries of origin
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Immigration Studies @ NYU From Whom Was Child Separated During Immigration?
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Control Variables ~Gender ~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S. School Factors ~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test Student Factors ~Attitudes towards School ~Academic self-efficacy ~Wellbeing ~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement ~Behavioral engagement ~English proficiency GRADES PREDICTING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OUTCOMES Home Factors ~2 Adults in home ~Mother’s Education ~Working Father 32% of variance
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Control Variables ~Gender ~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S. School Factors ~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test Student Factors ~Attitudes towards School ~Academic self-efficacy ~Wellbeing ~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement ~Behavioral engagement ~English proficiency Achievement Test PREDICTING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OUTCOMES Home Factors ~2 Adults in home ~Mother’s Education ~Working Father
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Control Variables ~Gender ~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S. School Factors ~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test Student Factors ~Attitudes towards School ~Academic self-efficacy ~Wellbeing ~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement ~Behavioral engagement ~English proficiency Achievement Test PREDICTING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OUTCOMES Home Factors ~2 Adults in home ~Mother’s Education ~Working Father 75% of variance
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Control Variables ~Gender ~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S. School Factors ~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test Student Factors ~Attitudes towards School ~Academic self-efficacy ~Wellbeing ~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement ~Behavioral engagement ~English proficiency Achievement Test PREDICTING ACADEMIC ACHIEVEMENT OUTCOMES--GRADES Home Factors ~2 Adults in home ~Mother’s Education ~Working Father 11% of variance
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Challenge of Learning English Highly motivated to learn 99% said it was very important to learn English 93% liked learning But 1/3 though it was “very hard” English is _________ ~ very important for the future ~ important to succeed ~ important to get ahead Open Ended tasks Main impediment for getting ahead in the US?--56% said English Main impediment for going to college--45% said English TAT Card 1-- Many told narratives of struggles of learning
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Immigration Studies @ NYU English Language Proficiency
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Academic English- Country Comparisons Year 5
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Academic Pathways
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Immigration Studies @ NYU Recommendations for Best Practice Interdisciplinary Collaborations “Insider” (emic) & “Outsider” (etic) Perspectives Culturally Sensitive Tools Triangulated Data Sending Context & Host Context Perspectives Comparison Samples Longitudinal Perspectives Immigrant Generations Developmental Perspectives Gendered Perspectives Racial Awareness Strategic Sampling Theory Building Focus on Resilience
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