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Showing 1 to 15 of 16 results Save | Export
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Julia Rabin; Lisa Vaughn; Carlie Trott; Farrah Jacquez – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
Children that participate in early childhood education (ECE) experience improvements in academic, social, and life outcomes. However, since Latinx children continue to be enrolled in ECE at lower rates and face many barriers to entry, the true benefit to Latinx individuals is unknown. The current qualitative study utilizes focus groups (and an…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Early Childhood Education, Hispanic Americans, Parents
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Campbell-Montalvo, Rebecca; Sidorova, Oxana; Valdovinos, Miriam; Cong, Xiaomei; Lucas, Ruth – AERA Open, 2022
It is known that Florida school employees known as Migrant Advocates facilitate or broker MSF health care access for migrant and seasonal farmworker (MSF) families, but it is not known how states without a Migrant Education Program might also broker MSF health care access. To address this, present study examines the role of school employees in…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Elementary Schools, Access to Health Care, Ethnic Groups
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Barillas Chón, David W. – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2021
This essay explores how stories of Tecum, Maya K'iche' warrior, and the quetzal can serve as creative entry points to contextualize the racialization and ideological positioning in Guatemala of Maya migrant youth who are now in U.S. schools. As we work on radicalizing possibilities and re-imagining liberatory futures, our efforts lie in crafting…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Immigrants, Hispanic American Students, Experience
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López, Josué; Fernández, Erica – Journal of Cases in Educational Leadership, 2020
This case explores the complex ways unaccompanied Latinx Indigenous minors experience the intersection of immigration policies and U.S. school policies and practices and the implications this has for school leaders. As such, we present three critical incidents that center three students' experience with and through U.S. schooling--from enrollment,…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Indigenous Populations, Public Policy, School Policy
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López, Josué; Irizarry, Jason G. – Urban Education, 2022
Applying several critical race theories as analytical frameworks, the authors present and analyze counterstories of Indigenous Latinx students attending an urban high school in a "new Latinx diaspora" community, underscoring points of convergence as well as the ways their experiences were distinct from those of their Latinx peers. The…
Descriptors: Urban Schools, Hispanic American Students, High School Students, Indigenous Populations
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Canizales, Stephanie L.; O'Connor, Brendan H. – International Multilingual Research Journal, 2022
Language learning and the development of language proficiency are central concerns in the study of immigrant adaptation. This paper analyzes the social construction of language proficiency among Indigenous Guatemalan Maya youth in the United States--specifically, undocumented young adults who migrated to Los Angeles, California as unaccompanied…
Descriptors: Language Proficiency, Spanish, American Indian Languages, Native Language
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Barillas Chón, David W. – Association of Mexican American Educators Journal, 2019
One highly significant yet under-investigated source of variation within the Latinx Education scholarship are Indigenous immigrants from Latin America. This study investigates how Maya and other Indigenous recent immigrant youth from Guatemala and Mexico, respectively, understand indigeneity. Using a Critical Latinx Indigeneities analytic, along…
Descriptors: Maya (People), Immigrants, Indigenous Populations, Hispanic Americans
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Pentón Herrera, Luis Javier – Diaspora, Indigenous, and Minority Education, 2021
The growing presence of the Indigenous diaspora from Latin America is beginning to transform notions of Latinidad and Indigeneity in the United States. Yet, scant studies have focused on the experiences of Indigenous Latinx students in U.S. learning environments and on what is needed to ensure their academic success. In this article, I share the…
Descriptors: American Indians, Resilience (Psychology), Hispanic American Students, Academic Achievement
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Di Castri, Theo – Journal on Education in Emergencies, 2020
Catalyst is a year-long, bilingual (English/Spanish) fellowship program for high school students and their teachers who live in communities affected by the war on drugs (WoD) that is being waged across the Americas. This educational effort is a response to the social suffering caused by the WoD. Catalyst is working to forge transnational networks…
Descriptors: High School Students, High School Teachers, Drug Abuse, Social Change
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Chang, Aurora – Journal of Hispanic Higher Education, 2017
This article examined a group of Latina students studying abroad. It highlighted ways in which identity manifests itself for Latinas in different contexts. It used counterstories, stories of historically marginalized groups in education. Primary findings were cultural dissonance; a reflection of past, present, and privilege; and the critical…
Descriptors: Hispanic American Students, Study Abroad, Student Attitudes, Personal Narratives
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Gray, Shirley B.; Rice, Zebanya – Mathematics Teacher, 2012
Certain dates stand out in history--October 12, 1492; July 4, 1776; and May 8, 1945, to name a few. Will December 21, 2012, become such a date? The popular media have seized on 12/21/12 to make apocalyptical prognostications, some venturing so far as to predict the end of the world. Scholars reject such predictions. But major archeological finds…
Descriptors: Number Systems, Foreign Countries, Hispanic American Students, Mathematics Teachers
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Machado-Casas, Margarita – High School Journal, 2009
This three-year qualitative research study took place in a new immigrant-receiving community in North Carolina. Utilizing narrative analysis, it explores how Mexican, Salvadoran, and Guatemalan immigrants of indigenous backgrounds use language as a survival tool to move in and out of transnational social spaces. In addition, it explores the ways…
Descriptors: Qualitative Research, Multilingualism, Immigrants, Hispanic Americans
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Dunn, Marianne G.; O'Brien, Karen M. – Hispanic Journal of Behavioral Sciences, 2009
This study examined the relative contributions of (a) gender, (b) perceived stress, (c) social support from family and significant other, and (d) positive and negative dimensions of religious coping to the prediction of the psychological health and meaning in life among 179 Central American immigrants from El Salvador and Guatemala. Findings…
Descriptors: Coping, Interpersonal Relationship, Social Support Groups, Foreign Countries
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Ek, Lucila D. – High School Journal, 2009
This article examines the transnationalism of a Pentecostal Guatemalan-American young woman who is a second-generation immigrant. Amalia traveled to Guatemala from when she was six months old until her sophomore year in college. These visits to Guatemala have helped her maintain her Guatemalan language, culture, and identity in the larger Southern…
Descriptors: Religious Cultural Groups, Ethnography, Foreign Countries, Immigrants
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Staikidis, Kryssi – Art Education, 2009
In this article the author describes a project in which professors and preservice art educators from Northern Illinois University (NIU) collaborated with teens and members of the DeKalb Latino local community center to create a mural celebrating a traditional Aztec narrative. The mural project involved professors, university students, teenagers…
Descriptors: Maya (People), Art Education, Foreign Countries, Community Centers
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