engaging immigrant youth: education for the 21 st century

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Engaging Immigrant Youth: Education for the 21 st Century Carola Suárez-Orozco, Ph.D. Co-Director Immigration Studies @ NYU Professor of Applied Psychology NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, & Human Development www.nyu.education/immigration/

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Engaging Immigrant Youth: Education for the 21 st Century. Carola Suárez -Orozco, Ph.D. Co -Director Immigration Studies @ NYU Professor of Applied Psychology NYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, & Human Development www .nyu.education /immigration/. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Engaging Immigrant Youth: Education for the 21st

Century

Carola Suárez-Orozco, Ph.D.Co-Director Immigration Studies @ NYU

Professor of Applied PsychologyNYU Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, & Human

Developmentwww.nyu.education/immigration/

Page 2: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Growing & Diverse Immigrant Student Population

Page 3: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Overlooked and Underserved

Page 4: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Harvard Immigration Study

Longitudinal, interdisciplinary, & comparative Documenting continuities and discontinuities in immigration

youth’s educational attitudes and adaptations over time 400 Youth from Central America, China, the Dominican

Republic, Haiti, & Mexico Ages 9 & 14 at beginning of study Recruited from 51 schools in 7 school districts in the Boston

& San Francisco areas Thirty graduate level bicultural & multilingual research

assistants Funded to date by the National Science Foundation, the W.T.

Grant Foundation and The Spencer Foundation

Page 5: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Study ObjectivesIdentify factors that contribute to 2

ACADEMIC outcomes in Year 5 Grades Achievement tests

Identify Trajectories of Grade performance over the course of 5 years

Describe Factors that contribute to Trajectories Ecological framework Using mixed methods Cumulative & interactional developmental challenges

Page 6: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Triangulated Data Collection Strategies

Ethnographic Observations Structured Interviews:

Students Parents School Personnel

Bilingual Verbal Abilities Testing Woodcock-Johnson Test of Achievement Report Cards Teacher Completed Behavioral Checklists

Page 7: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Engagement

CognitiveEngagement

RelationalEngagement

BEHAVIORAL ENGAGEMENT

GRADES

Page 8: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S. GRADES

Year 5

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 9: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

GRADESYear 5

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 10: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

GRADESYear 5Home Factors

~2 Adults in home~Mother’s Education~Working Father

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 11: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

Student Factors~Attitudes towards School ~Psychological Symptoms~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement~Behavioral engagement~Academic English proficiency

GRADESYear 5

Home Factors~2 Adults in home~Mother’s Education~Working Father

32% of variance

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 12: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

Student Factors~Attitudes towards School ~Psychological Symptoms~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement~Behavioral engagement~Academic English proficiency

Achievement Test Year 5Home Factors

~2 Adults in home~Mother’s Education~Working Father

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 13: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

Student Factors~Attitudes towards School ~Psychological Symptoms~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement~Behavioral engagement~Academic English proficiency

Achievement Test Year 5

Home Factors~2 Adults in home~Mother’s Education~Working Father

75% of variance

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 14: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Control Variables~Gender~Country of Origin ~Years in U.S.

School Factors~School Segregation ~Percent of students in school passing high stakes English test

Student Factors~Attitudes towards School ~Psychological Symptoms~Cognitive engagement ~Relational engagement~Behavioral engagement~Academic English proficiency

Achievement Test Year 5

Home Factors~2 Adults in home~Mother’s Education~Working Father

11% of variance

Predicting Academic Achievement Outcomes

Page 15: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

0%

10%

20%

30%

40%

50%

70 or below 71-85 86-100 101-115 116 -130 131 or aboveStandard Scores

Percent of Students

samplenorm

English Language Proficiency

Page 16: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Challenge of Learning English

Page 17: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Academic Performance Pathways

A

B

C

D

Page 18: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Characteristics of Declining Pathways

Less educated parents Attending poor quality schools Gaps in English language proficiency Most family conflict More likely to have protracted separations Many with unauthorized status Endorsed psychological symptoms Few supportive school relations Low behavioral engagement Difficulty sustaining incoming hope & drive

Page 19: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Myriam—Declining Case Study

Page 20: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Characteristics of Low Achievers

Least resources Come in with gaps in literacy & schooling Attended worst schools Significant family problems Few supportive school relations Did not have the psychological issues of the Decliners Lure of work Never find their academic bearings

Page 21: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Leon—Case Study of a Low Achiever

Page 22: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Characteristics of Improvers

Initial transplant shock Often had undergone pre-migration trauma Attended better schools than decliners or low achievers More likely to have intact families & working parents More likely to connect with a mentor

Page 23: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Ramón—Improving Case Study

Page 24: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Characteristics of High Achievers

Most educated parents Least family separations Better family relations Best emotional wellbeing Attended best schools Most supportive school based relationships Best English language skills Highest behavioral engagement

Page 25: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Li—Case Study of a High Achiever

Page 26: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Educational ImplicationsPractices that serve ALL students well

Rigorous Relevant for the 21st century Fostering Relationships Students at the center of Teaching & Learning Innovative Pedagogy (beyond “chalk & talk”) Flexible & Relevant Assessment (e.g. portfolios) Providing Explicit College Pathway Knowledge Providing Tutoring/After-school/Summer academic supports Finding ways NOT to make mentoring accidental

Page 27: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

Accommodating Specific Newcomer Students

Engaging family & community supports Community outreach & cultural brokers

Faith based supports too often overlooked New culturally relevant definitions of parental involvement

Thorough initial intake evaluation assessing strengths and gaps Literacy Interrupted schooling Academic strengths & deficits

Providing Language learning supports Providing supports for psychological needs

Trauma & Separations Adjustments to a new land Fostering Relationships

Page 28: Engaging Immigrant Youth:  Education for the 21 st  Century

Immigration Studies @ NYU

References Cynthia García-Coll and Katherine Magnuson. (1997). "The Psychological Experience

of Immigration: A Developmental Perspective," in A. Booth, A. C. Crouter & Nancy Landale, eds., Immigration and the Family, pp. 91-132.

Hernández, D., and E. Charney. 1998. From Generation to Generation: The Health and Well-Being of Children of Immigrant Families. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press. 1998.

Suárez-Orozco, C., Gaytán, F. Bang, H. J., Pakes, J., & Rhodes, J. (2010). Academic Trajectories of Newcomer Immigrant Youth. Developmental Psychology, 46(3) 602-618.

Suárez-Orozco, C. and Suárez-Orozco, M. Children of Immigration, 2001. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Carola Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo Suárez-Orozco, and Irina Todorova. Learning a New Land: Immigrant Students in American Society, 2008. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.

Carola Suárez-Orozco, Irina Todorova, and Josephine Louie, "Making Up for Lost Time:" The Experience of Separation and Reunification Among Immigrant Families. Family Process 41(4), (2001), pp. 625-643.