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Nicole B. Adams; Stacy N. McGuire; Hedda Meadan; Melanie R. Martin Loya; Adriana K. Terol; Ban Haidar; Andrea S. Fanta – Topics in Early Childhood Special Education, 2024
Challenging behavior (CB) is a common occurrence in early childhood and frequently occurs in young children with disabilities. CB is also culturally perceived and includes differences in how caregivers understand and define the topography of CB. Despite the cultural interpretation, CB is known to impact the child and their family but there has…
Descriptors: Behavior Problems, Minority Groups, Disabilities, Caregiver Attitudes
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Gerardo Mancilla; Phitsamay S. Uy – Intercultural Education, 2024
In conducting qualitative research, scholars often grapple with positionality. Researcher positionality refers to how various social identities (i.e. gender, race, class, ethnicity, ability, geographical location) influence research methods. It examines the impact of researchers' social identities on their understanding of the research design,…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Refugees, Interpersonal Relationship, Researchers
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Degollado, Enrique David; Bell, Randy; Harvey-Torres, Rosalyn – Teachers College Record, 2022
Background/Context: Historically, the literature on access to quality education for Mexican Americans has been wrought with injustices committed on them because of the racist and deficit thinking of the time. This includes, but is not limited to, access to literacy in English and Spanish. This article focuses on las escuelitas, or little schools,…
Descriptors: Spanish, Bilingualism, Literacy, Mexican Americans
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Kiang, Lisa; Martin Romero, Michelle Y.; Coard, Stephanie I.; Gonzalez, Laura G.; Stein, Gabriela L. – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2023
Racial-ethnic inequity is deeply entrenched in U.S. social systems, yet adolescents' voices and understanding around inequity are not often directly examined. The current qualitative study uses focus group data from African American (n = 21), Chinese- (n = 17), Indian- (n = 13), and Mexican- (n = 17) origin adolescents (M[subscript age] = 12.93…
Descriptors: Equal Education, Race, Ethnicity, Minority Groups
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Ríos, Cati; Portillo, Yared; Cantero, Bryan – Journal of Adolescent & Adult Literacy, 2022
The performing arts, specifically the Mexican balladry called corridos, can offer new vistas for what constitutes civic inclusion, poetics, and worldmaking for racially and linguistically minoritized youth. This paper provides a textual analysis of "El Llanto de El Paso," a corrido (ballad) written by youth balladeer, Josué Rodríguez,…
Descriptors: Singing, Mexicans, Performance, Music
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Saldaña, Lilliana Patricia – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2021
This article traces how Mexican American Studies (MAS) scholar activists led and supported a statewide movement for MAS in Texas. As a Xicana feminist scholar activist, Saldan~a draws from her retrospective memory and personal archive of organizational notes, movement documents, personal testimonies before the State Board of Education, and photos,…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Curriculum, Course Content, Minority Groups
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Delgado Bernal, Dolores – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2018
The author employs a testimonio to partake in the instructive and cathartic tradition of sharing experiences, mistakes, and (mis)understandings of parenting children of color. In doing so, she draws from her experiences growing up in a Mexican American family and her experiences of mothering three Brown sons as a Chicana activist-scholar. She…
Descriptors: Race, Critical Theory, Parenting Styles, Feminism
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Nuñez, Idalia; García-Mateus, Suzanne – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2021
In U.S. schools, educators are often regarded as knowledge producers and sole pedagogues, whereas parents (particularly of Color) are perceived as not engaged or interested in their child(ren)'s education (Colgrove, 2019; Nun~ez, 2019; Ramirez, 2020). These negative stereotypes and white-centered discourses sustain raciolinguistic perspectives…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Parent School Relationship, Parent Participation, Stereotypes
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Valdés, Guadalupe – Intercultural Education, 2020
This article maintains that in spite of their seeming progress, Mexican-origin students in the US continue to face barriers that are typical of the complex challenges endured in public schools by minoritized and racialised peoples in the American context. It begins with a brief overview of the current-day demographics of the Mexican-origin…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Mexican Americans, Barriers, Immigration
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Kasun, G. Sue – Anthropology & Education Quarterly, 2015
Drawing upon multisited ethnographic case studies in the United States and Mexico, I demonstrate "sobrevivencia", a survivalist way of knowing of Mexican-origin families. Through an underdog mentality, family members persisted and sometimes thrived. However, the grittiness of the underdog mentality did not always work out. By…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Case Studies, Mexican Americans, Foreign Countries
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Luo, Rufan; Tamis-LeMonda, Catherine S. – Early Child Development and Care, 2019
Children's book-sharing and oral storytelling experiences were examined in 264 4-year-olds from low-income African-American, Dominican, Mexican, and Chinese families in the United States. Mothers reported on children's book-sharing and oral storytelling experiences with mothers, fathers, and other people (siblings, grandparents, relatives, and…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Minority Groups, African Americans, Hispanic Americans
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Victor Malo-Juvera – English Journal, 2017
This article will share a postcolonial analysis of three widely taught texts that the author has used to introduce both secondary English language arts classes and college students in multicultural young adult literature courses to postcolonial criticism: Sherman Alexie's "The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian," Gene Luen…
Descriptors: Adolescent Literature, Multicultural Education, Postcolonialism, Novels
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Lin, Betty; Crnic, Keith A.; Luecken, Linda J.; Gonzales, Nancy A. – Developmental Psychology, 2017
Clinically meaningful behavior problems are thought to be present beginning in the early toddler years, yet few studies have investigated correlates of behavior problems assessed before age 2 years. The current study investigated the direct and interactive contributions of early infant and caregiver characteristics thought to play an important…
Descriptors: Emotional Problems, Behavior Problems, Young Children, Toddlers
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Orth, Ulrich; Robins, Richard W.; Widaman, Keith F.; Conger, Rand D. – Developmental Psychology, 2014
We examined the relation between low self-esteem and depression using longitudinal data from a sample of 674 Mexican-origin early adolescents who were assessed at age 10 and 12 years. Results supported the vulnerability model, which states that low self-esteem is a prospective risk factor for depression. Moreover, results suggested that the…
Descriptors: Self Esteem, Depression (Psychology), Mexican Americans, Victims
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Orozco, Richard – Journal of the Association of Mexican American Educators, 2013
This essay discusses white innocence as a mechanism that may contribute to perceptions of Mexican Americans as perpetrators. These perceptions are crucial to ways teachers and administrators respond to student actions as the initial steps in the school-to-prison pipeline. Specifically, this work reviews the rhetoric of white innocence in a high…
Descriptors: Whites, Mexican Americans, Misconceptions, Social Attitudes
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