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Guadalupe Espinoza; JudelMay E. Mariano; Allyson N. Blanco – Journal of Adolescent Research, 2024
The aim of this study was to better understand Latinx adolescents' experiences during the pandemic and the transition to distance learning. Guided by the community cultural wealth framework, this study focuses on the key challenges and the sources of support that Latinx adolescents relied on during this unique period. Participants included 40…
Descriptors: COVID-19, Pandemics, Barriers, Social Support Groups
Mariko Yoshisato Cavey – ProQuest LLC, 2021
Aspirations predict students' trajectories, and knowledge of how youth develop and achieve goals is crucial to supporting success. However, rural students may encounter constraining conditions that can curtail their aspirations, and students of color often face institutional barriers that impact their postsecondary pathways. Guided by theories…
Descriptors: High School Students, Mexicans, First Generation College Students, Hispanic American Students
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Tessman, Darcy; Koyama, Jill – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2019
Drawing on data collected during a 31-month critical qualitative study in the MX-US borderlands, the authors elucidate a positive and complex form of parentocracy unique to "transfronterizo" families. They demonstrate how parents bear their children in the US, move close to the border so that their children can more easily attend US…
Descriptors: Parent Child Relationship, Mexicans, Aspiration, Hispanic Americans
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Goldsmith, Jill S.; Robinson Kurpius, Sharon E. – Journal of Educational Research, 2018
Latinos, particularly Mexican immigrants, are the fastest-growing population in the United States but lag behind others in educational attainment. Parent involvement in their child's education has been linked to positive student academic outcomes, but few studies have focused specifically on Latino/a parents. To identify and promote culturally…
Descriptors: Academic Achievement, Student Empowerment, Mexicans, Immigrants
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De Los Ríos, Cati V.; Seltzer, Kate; Molina, Arturo – Applied Linguistics, 2021
Changing demography in the Southwest USA has shifted the racial compositions of many neighborhoods that were once predominantly African American to majority Latinx immigrant communities (Orfield and Frankenberg 2014). Today, it's common for these two youth communities to learn side-by-side in urban and suburban classrooms where they are often…
Descriptors: Racial Composition, Geographic Regions, African American Students, Hispanic American Students
Brian Holzman – ProQuest LLC, 2016
Ensuring smooth transitions to college may be difficult for the children of immigrants since their families are likely unfamiliar with the U.S. system of higher education, which is horizontally stratified and requires a number of steps before admission. Bridging social science literature on immigrant assimilation, cultural, social, and human…
Descriptors: High School Students, Grade 11, Parent Background, Immigrants
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Halvorsen, Anne-Lise; Harris, Lauren McArthur; Aponte Martinez, Gerardo; Frasier, Amanda Slaten – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2016
This mixed methods study explores how high school students (N = 35) enrolled in a US charter school with a high Latino/a population perform on and perceive (in terms of interest and relevance) document-based type historical reasoning tasks: one about the Dust Bowl in the 1930s and the other about the experiences of Mexicans and Mexican Americans…
Descriptors: Mixed Methods Research, High School Students, Charter Schools, United States History
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Gutiérrez, Leticia Alvarez – Urban Review: Issues and Ideas in Public Education, 2014
Drawing from a larger ethnographic study, in this research I examine how a group of newcomer Mexican immigrant high school students counteracted a hostile school climate, educational practices and adverse relationships with mainstream peers and adults. The purpose of this study is to help educators and policy makers understand how engaging in…
Descriptors: Mexicans, Ethnography, Social Justice, Immigrants
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Luna, Nora; Evans, William P.; Davis, Bret – Race, Ethnicity and Education, 2015
The Latina/Latino population is the largest minority group in the United States and has the highest high school dropout rate of any ethnic group. Nationally, just over one-half of Latina/Latino students graduate on time with a regular diploma, compared to nearly 80% of Whites. Because of the growing population and the wide achievement gap, there…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, High School Students, Dropout Rate, Achievement Gap
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Knudson-Martin, John C. – International Journal of Multicultural Education, 2013
This study investigates how a group of Mexican immigrant children in the United States made sense of engaging in school and school mathematics. The research focused on a population of Latino/a middle school students who were a distinct minority, building a model that shows how a complex set of cognitive, sociocultural, and institutional factors…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Migrant Children, Hispanic American Students, Mexicans