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Doris Ann Villarreal – Bilingual Research Journal, 2024
This qualitative case study examines how one bilingual teacher draws on their critical consciousness to support immigrant students and their families. Drawing on the construct of conscientization, I argue praxis is the embodiment of critical consciousness through acts of responsiveness and actions educators enact to rewrite unjust spaces and…
Descriptors: Bilingual Teachers, Activism, Bilingual Education, Spanish
Lakeya Afolalu – Research in the Teaching of English, 2024
Digital literacies have been recognized as significant practices for the identity formation of immigrant youth. However, the significance of self-sponsored digital literacies in the identity formation of African immigrant youth requires further scholarly examination. Drawing on racial and postcolonial theories, this study examines the identity…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Blacks, Ethnic Groups, Race
Chaehyun Lee – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2025
Employing transnationalism and transnational literacies as theoretical perspectives, this study explores how two focal students from Asian immigrant families construct their transnational and transcultural identities by reflecting on their dynamic border-crossing experiences. The students' creation of artifacts (illustrating self-portraits and…
Descriptors: Self Concept, Individual Development, Immigrants, Global Approach
Rolf Straubhaar – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2025
Newcomer schools inherently frame students in terms of what they "lack"--namely, fluency in the English language. The purpose of this study, drawing on a six-month ethnography of 14 tenth grade students from Mexico, is to counter this deficit framing by exploring, using the additive framework of "community cultural wealth,"…
Descriptors: Capital (Sociology), Grade 10, High School Students, Mexicans
Mihaly, Deanna H. – Hispania, 2021
The most effective way to address the critical social and political issues confronting students today is to promote intercultural competence with empathy at the core of language instruction. Language has the ability to shape our thoughts and to alter our consciousness. As students view the world through the prism of cultural openness, they are…
Descriptors: Empathy, Second Language Learning, Second Language Instruction, Spanish
Alejandra Quezada Ochoa; Marilyn Massey-Stokes – Journal of Health Education Teaching, 2023
Purpose: To examine the relationship between acculturation indicators and metabolic syndrome among Hispanic adults living in the Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington, Texas metropolitan area. Methods: This study utilized secondary data collected from a larger 2014 study among 128 Hispanic adults living in Dallas-Fort Worth-Arlington. The current study…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Adults, Acculturation, Metabolism
Pablo Lamino; Carlos Duran Gabela; Renzo Ceme Vinces; Amy E. Boren-Alpízar – NACTA Journal, 2024
An estimated 4,350,000 immigrants reside in Texas, comprising 20% of the workforce and wielding a spending power of up to $112.8 billion. Negative sentiment towards migrants has created a hostile environment, despite their substantial socio-economic contributions. Efforts to mitigate this sentiment involve youth education, targeting younger…
Descriptors: Student Attitudes, Agricultural Education, Undocumented Immigrants, Undergraduate Students
Jodi Berger Cardoso; Kalina M. Brabeck; Tzuan A. Chen; Arlene Bjugstad; Caitlyn Mytelka; Randy Capps; Thomas M. Crea – Applied Developmental Science, 2024
Recent adverse childhood experiences (ACEs) scholarship emphasizes that differing ACEs affect the onset and course of psychopathology, and that sociopolitical context contributes to ACEs experienced by marginalized youth. Guided by the Immigration-Related Adverse Childhood Experiences Model, we explored the associations between different…
Descriptors: Trauma, Predictor Variables, Disadvantaged Youth, Posttraumatic Stress Disorder
Rebecca Callahan; Lauren Schudde; Kimberly Pack-Cosme – American Journal of Education, 2024
Purpose: Immigrant-origin English learners (ELs) are the fastest-growing population in US schools. Most EL research examines the college-going outcomes of this population by focusing on those who are EL-identified in high school; here, we capture both current and former EL-identified students, or "ever-ELs." A subset of bilingual,…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Psychological Patterns, English Language Learners, Elementary Secondary Education
Oluwateniola Oluwabukola Kupolati – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2024
This study is a sociolinguistic exploration into the survival of a transnational language in the United States - a multilingual and multicultural environment. Using an adapted General Ethnicity Questionnaire, it interrogates the social dimensions of heritage language use and the diverse linguistic experiences of 120 first-generation Yorùbá-English…
Descriptors: Native Language, African Culture, Immigrants, Global Approach
Jorge L. Solís; Talia Howard; Eduardo Mosqueda; Marco A. Bravo – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2025
This study presents findings from a professional development project that engaged secondary school in-service STEM teachers in transformative perspectives to make sense of theory, practice, and action in multilingual STEM classrooms. In particular, we examine how teachers engaged with translanguaging, transdisciplinarity, and transculturation in…
Descriptors: Secondary School Teachers, STEM Education, Bilingual Teachers, Multilingualism
Brandy Piña-Watson; Gisel Suarez Bonilla; Gabriela Manzo; Iliana M. Gonzalez – Journal of American College Health, 2025
Objective: The present study examines self-compassion (SC) as a potential protective factor in the relationship between value-behavior discrepancy guilt (VBDG) and the mental health outcomes of anxiety and suicide risk in a sample of Mexican-descent college students. Method: Participants consisted of 810 college students of Mexican descent.…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Mexican Americans, Values, Behavior
Ruiz Soto, Ariel G.; Selee, Andrew – Migration Policy Institute, 2019
Education levels are on the rise among Mexican immigrants, who now comprise the fourth largest group of college-educated immigrants in the United States, after those from India, China, and the Philippines. The number of Mexican immigrants with a bachelor's degree or higher grew from 269,000 in 2000 to 678,000 in 2017--an increase that is primarily…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Immigrants, College Graduates, Age
Zong, Jie; Batalova, Jeanne – Migration Policy Institute, 2019
Since 2001, Congress has debated legislation that would offer a pathway to legal status for eligible unauthorized immigrants who arrived in the United States as children. And in 2012, President Barack Obama launched the Deferred Action for Childhood Arrivals (DACA) program that offers work authorization and relief from deportation for some such…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, High School Graduates, Graduation Rate
Amy J. Nuñez – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2025
This study explores the academic experiences of Latinx/a/o college students with undocumented parents. Nineteen qualitative interviews oriented by Latino/a Critical Theory and Habermas' Theory of Communicative Action were utilized. Findings suggest that Latinx/a/o college students with undocumented parents experience multigenerational punishment…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, College Students, Undocumented Immigrants, Parents