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Martinez Negrette, Giselle – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2020
The accelerated growth of the Latin@ population in the United States in the last few decades represents one of the most significant demographic changes in the nation. Alongside this population shift, some other trends have started to emerge: the Latin@ population, especially Mexican-origin people, has begun to move and settle outside traditional…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Immigration, Mexican Americans, Trend Analysis
Guevara Beltran, Maria Teresa – ProQuest LLC, 2019
This qualitative study utilizes a Chicana/Latina feminist lens and the Latin American tradition of "Testimonio" to explore Spanish-speaking immigrants' experiences of migration, language learning and socialization, paying close attention to the ways in which the multilayered intersections of identity, race, class, gender, nationality,…
Descriptors: Spanish Speaking, Immigrants, Immigration, Personal Narratives
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Stephanie L. Canizales; Brendan H. O’Connor – Educational Linguistics, 2021
Scholars acknowledge that Indigenous Latinx immigrants' complex process of adapting to life in the United States, or incorporation, differs from that of their non-Indigenous counterparts. Understanding these differences is especially important as arrivals of Indigenous refugees and asylum seekers from Central America have increased steadily over…
Descriptors: Futures (of Society), Hispanic American Students, Immigrants, American Indian Students
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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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Held, Mary Lehman; McCabe, Jeff; Thomas, Liz – Journal of Social Work Education, 2018
Latino immigrants are settling in new destination states that have fewer culturally and linguistically competent health and social service providers. Social workers are in an ideal position to serve Latino immigrants. Yet, limited literature is available on the strengths and needs of this population specific to new destination states. To help fill…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Hispanic Americans, Health Services, Social Services
Woodley, Lisa Kim – ProQuest LLC, 2019
The purpose of this study was to describe the lived experiences of Hispanic / Latinx nursing students as they acculturate into the profession of nursing. In addition, this study sought to describe differences in experiences of Hispanic / Latinx nursing students related to gender, English and Spanish language fluency, family immigration…
Descriptors: Nursing Education, Acculturation, Hispanic American Students, Nursing
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Guan, Shu-Sha Angie; Nash, Afaf; Orellana, Marjorie Faulstich – Journal of Multilingual and Multicultural Development, 2016
This study examines how language and culture brokering (translating and interpreting language and culture for others) influences the acculturative experiences and self-perceptions of young adults from immigrant Arab, Asian, and Latino American backgrounds. Semi-structured interviews with 10 participants suggest that mediating information for…
Descriptors: Code Switching (Language), Second Language Learning, Ethnic Groups, Multilingualism
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Soutullo, Olivia R.; Smith-Bonahue, Tina M.; Sanders-Smith, Stephanie C.; Navia, Laura E. – School Psychology Quarterly, 2016
This study investigates barriers to facilitating family-school partnerships with immigrant families as identified by teachers in an urban school district with high rates of immigration. Participants consisted of 18 elementary teachers who identified predominantly as Hispanic (38.9%) or non-Hispanic White (33.3%), were frequently bilingual (55.6%),…
Descriptors: Barriers, Family School Relationship, Bilingualism, Communication Strategies
Wortham, Stanton; Clonan-Roy, Katherine; Link, Holly; Martinez, Carlos – Phi Delta Kappan, 2013
A new Latino diaspora has seen the arrival of Spanish-speaking students in rural and suburban America--places that had not experienced Hispanic immigration in the way the Southwest and urban centers have. This new development presents educators with challenges in meeting these students' needs. But educators also have the opportunity to draw…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Hispanic American Students, Student Diversity, Immigration
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Cervantes, Richard C.; Cordova, David – Journal of Community Psychology, 2011
Hispanic youth currently constitute the largest and fastest growing of all ethnic and racial groups in the United States. In addition to normal developmental life stressors, Hispanic youth also face minority status and acculturation-related stress. This study examined the psychosocial and acculturative stressors of Hispanic youth (n=170) residing…
Descriptors: Race, Focus Groups, Acculturation, Hispanic Americans
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Cammarota, Julio; Aguilera, Michelle – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2012
This article reports on research projects conducted primarily by first and second generation Mexican American high school students who document how school relationships are shaped by Arizona's racist political discourses. They conducted observations of their school experiences and then wrote up what they were observing in field notes. Field note…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Hispanic Americans, High School Students, Politics of Education
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Arbona, Consuelo; Olvera, Norma; Rodriguez, Nestor; Hagan, Jacqueline; Linares, Adriana; Wiesner, Margit – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2010
The purpose of the study was to examine differences between documented and undocumented Latino immigrants in the prevalence of three immigration-related challenges (separation from family, traditionality, and language difficulties), which were made more severe after the passage of restrictive immigration legislation in 1996. Specifically, the…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Immigration, Fear, Undocumented Immigrants
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Sawyer, Adam – Teacher Education Quarterly, 2014
As the school year gave way to summer vacation, a group of 11 Nebraska educators embarked on a 16-day professional development journey to the western Mexico city of Guadalajara. During a two week stay in Mexico, these educators--who were made up of in-service and pre-service teachers and school support personnel--engaged in a structured program of…
Descriptors: Faculty Development, Spanish, Cultural Education, Immigration
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Romero, Andrea J.; Carvajal, Scott C.; Valle, Fabian; Orduna, Michele – Journal of Community Psychology, 2007
The perception of bicultural stress, stress due to discrimination/prejudice, immigration, and acculturation, was investigated in relation to mental well-being in a sample of urban Latino (n = 304), European American (n = 215), and Asian American (n = 131) 8th grade students. Bicultural stress was reported by all ethnic groups and was significantly…
Descriptors: Socioeconomic Status, Adolescents, Grade 8, Cultural Context
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Menard-Warwick, Julia – TESOL Quarterly: A Journal for Teachers of English to Speakers of Other Languages and of Standard English as a Second Dialect, 2005
In this ethnographic study, I contrast the educational experiences of two Central American immigrant women in an English as a second language (ESL) family literacy program in the San Francisco Bay area in 2002. Based on life-history interviews and classroom observations, I argue that these learners' second language and literacy development can…
Descriptors: Hispanic Americans, Social History, Immigration, Family Literacy
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