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Kasun, G. Sue; Scott, Jessica; Kaneria, A. Jyoti; Delavan, M. Garrett – Bilingual Research Journal, 2021
Colonial and decolonial tensions manifested in a unique, Mexican school for the deaf that used Mexican Sign Language for instruction. (De)colonial tensions were inherent in the school's work, from its non-Mexican, Foreign-origin school board to its child-of-deaf-adults principal's vision. We observed the presence of a colonial legacy, decolonial…
Descriptors: Bilingualism, Deafness, Sign Language, Mexicans
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Langer, Philip; Escamilla, Kathy; Aragon, Lorenso – Bilingual Research Journal, 2010
Students participated in a 2-week intensive program in the city of Puebla, Mexico. The experience included university course work, cultural field trips, and teaching and observing in Mexican elementary schools. It also included many opportunities to interact and participate in daily life in Puebla. The study examined changes in attitudes about…
Descriptors: Field Trips, Teacher Effectiveness, Graduate Study, Cultural Pluralism
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Reese, Leslie – Bilingual Research Journal, 2012
The study focuses on storytelling among Mexican families, documenting the frequency of storytelling in the homes of working- and middle-class Mexican families, the range of topics of the stories, characteristics and genres of stories, and intergenerational continuity of storytelling practices. Also examined are potential associations between…
Descriptors: Language Tests, Early Reading, Mexicans, Story Telling
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Baca, Reynaldo; And Others – Bilingual Research Journal, 1993
Among 150 Mexican immigrant students followed throughout their careers in a Los Angeles high school, those who had entered U.S. schools after 2nd grade had lower graduation rates than those entering in grades K-2, but this was not related to differences in English proficiency, at-risk status early in high school, or family or peer factors. (SV)
Descriptors: Academic Persistence, Acculturation, Dropout Characteristics, Dropouts
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Flores, Belinda Bustos; Keehn, Susan; Perez, Bertha – Bilingual Research Journal, 2002
A case study examined a Texas bilingual teacher education program that recruited local paraprofessionals and Mexican teachers (normalistas). Interviews, writing samples, and observations of seven students revealed that normalistas were open to seeing merit in U.S. educational methods, while paraprofessionals began to question the deficit model…
Descriptors: Bilingual Teacher Aides, Bilingual Teachers, Case Studies, College School Cooperation
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Hall, Anne-Marie – Bilingual Research Journal, 2006
This article, a 5-month ethnographic research in Oaxaca, Mexico, examines various aspects of the literacy curriculum in 2 Mexican primary schools. The author observed and interviewed 35 students in 6th grade and 7 teachers in 2 schools, as well as examined student writing and teaching materials. The research suggests that though the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Grade 6, Mexicans, Educational Theories
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Graham, C. Ray; Brown, Cheryl – Bilingual Research Journal, 1996
In a small Mexican town with a sizeable English-speaking population and bilingual schools, some native Spanish speakers develop native-like proficiency in English. Interviews found that the only Spanish speakers acquiring much English attended bilingual schools and frequently had close friendships with native English speakers and favorable…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Bilingual Schools, Bilingualism, Elementary Secondary Education