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Chelsea Stinson – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2024
This qualitative study is focused on the political and social connections among disability, race, language, and migration that affect how emergent bilingual students are labeled as disabled and marginalized in schools despite--or, perhaps, through--educational and migration policies. Specifically, this study is concerned with the connections…
Descriptors: Students with Disabilities, Disadvantaged Youth, Power Structure, Educational Policy
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Diamond, John B.; Posey-Maddox, Linn – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
Suburban school districts in the United States (U.S.) have experienced major demographic shifts in recent decades and vary substantially in their student populations. More than half of Asian, black, and Latinx students in large metropolitan areas attend suburban schools, and the suburbs are commonly the first destination for new U.S. immigrants.…
Descriptors: Suburban Schools, Suburbs, Race, Socioeconomic Status
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Abril-Gonzalez, Paty – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
This article focuses on Latinx youth's "testimonios" or "stories of marginalization" tied to immigration. I drew from Anzaldúa's conceptualizations of "nepantla" [unfamiliar in-between spaces] and Sepúlveda's pedagogy of "acompañamiento" [accompaniment] to understand the youth's experiences. Methods involved…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Racial Bias, Social Bias, Poetry
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Ríos-Rojas, Anne; Stern, Mark – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2018
Dreams have long been thought to be a space of fantasy and utopic hope. From Paulo Freire to Gloria Anzaldúa to Robin Kelley, many scholars have related the ability to dream with the ability to act collectively, to self-actualize, and to call into being worlds yet to be realized--dreaming as a radical political act. What happens, then, when dreams…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Undocumented Immigrants, Governance, Public Policy
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Nuñez, Idalia – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2021
In the current anti-immigrant context, Latinx families, children, and communities experience language as a highly contested and surveilled practice with consequential effects. In this study, I drew on the concept of literacies of surveillance and translanguaging to examine how language was embodied and rationalized in the context of three homes of…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Immigration, Political Attitudes, Hispanic Americans
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Fernández, Erica – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2016
Anti-immigration reform has created a hostile and threatening climate for Latin@ immigrants and their families. Simple everyday acts that are often taken for granted (i.e. parents dropping off children at school, driving to the grocery store, etc.) became acts that threaten to separate families. As a result, many Latin@ families are currently…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Parent Attitudes, Immigration, Public Policy
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Ghiso, Maria Paula; Campano, Gerald – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
In this article, we examine the discursive construction of knowledge about immigration in two geographic spaces whose "border" many students navigate: a school context meant to support English Language Learners and an out-of-school faith based organization serving immigrant communities. We draw on the concept of "border…
Descriptors: Immigration, Educational Practices, Discourse Analysis, English Language Learners
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Barraclough, Laura; McMahon, Marci R. – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2013
In response to the national conversation about the U.S.-Mexico border and immigration in recent years, we created an online partnership between students in concurrent border studies courses at our two campuses: a public Hispanic-serving institution in South Texas and a private, small liberal arts college in Michigan. We explored whether and how…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Race, Social Class, Immigration
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Laman, Tasha Tropp; Jewett, Pamela; Jennings, Louise B.; Wilson, Jennifer L.; Souto-Manning, Mariana – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2012
This article draws upon five different empirical studies to examine how critical dialogue can be fostered across educational settings and with diverse populations: middle-school students discussing immigration picture books, a teacher study group exploring texts on homelessness, a teacher education class studying critical literacy, working class…
Descriptors: Working Class, Homeless People, Stereotypes, Picture Books
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Wells, Ryan – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2009
Immigration in the U.S. continues to increase and to become increasingly diverse. About 20% of U.S. students are children of immigrants. This phenomenon is occurring as schools are racially and ethnically resegregating even as race-based decision making for K-12 schooling has been severely limited. This study examines school segregation for…
Descriptors: Elementary Secondary Education, School Segregation, Academic Achievement, Immigration
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Goode, Constance – Equity & Excellence in Education, 1997
Discusses the success myth and the American multicultural heritage and education's unintentional perpetuation of this myth. Argues that the roots of this misconception are found in most white educators' failure to understand the differences between the immigration of white Europeans and the forced immigration of Africans. Society's assimilation…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Blacks, Concept Formation, Educational Practices