Complexities Facing Asian American Immigrant Students
Date: Tuesday, November 20 @ 00:47:06 EST
Topic: Academia


By Stacey J. Lee
Excerpted from "Additional complexities: social class, ethnicity, generation, and gender in Asian American student experiences"
Race, Ethnicity and Education
©2006 Taylor and Francis

Despite the growing number of immigrant students in schools throughout the country, many schools lack the expertise to adequately serve second language students. In fact, many school districts face a shortage of certified bilingual and English language learner (ELL) teachers. Although there is a significant body of research that suggests that bilingual education programs are most effective, most Asian American students who are English language learners are placed in English as a second language (ESL) classes or other English-only environments (Hakuta & Pease-Alvarez, 1992; Ramirez, 1991). ESL classes have been criticized for focusing on oral communication at the expense of academic skills, offering low academic standards, and segregating students (Olsen, 1997; Valdes, 2001). ESL classes have also been criticized for its assimilative nature. Valenzuela writes:

The very rationale of English as a Second Language (ESL)—the predominant language program at the high school level—is subtractive. As ESL programs are designed to transition youth into an English only curriculum, they neither reinforce their native language skills nor their cultural identities. (Valenzuela, 1999, p. 26)
Significantly, language and cultural loss among students from immigrant families disrupts inter-generational relations.

The increasing emphasis on parental involvement in schools disadvantages immigrant parents who are unfamiliar with the US educational system, have limited English language skills and/or have culturally different ideas about the appropriate role of parents in their children’s education (Lee, 2005; Valdes, 1996). In her research on Cambodian refugees, Smith-Hefner (1990, 1999) discovered that teachers incorrectly assumed that Cambodian parents do not value education because they did not actively participate in their children’s education. In my research on Hmong high school students, I found that Hmong parents were often confused by what the schools expected of them (Lee, 2005). While the school assumes that it is the parent’s responsibility to address truancy issues, Hmong immigrant parents assume that schools will exercise disciplinary authority over their children and they are frustrated when schools cannot control their children. Like other immigrant parents, Hmong parents assume that schools take responsibility for the academic and moral education of their children (Valdes, 1996).

Although Asian immigrant youth face significant barriers in school, it is important to note that research has shown that academic achievement peaks in the second generation (Kao & Tienda, 1995). While first generation students may struggle due to language difficulties, second generation students outperform third-generation. A growing body of evidence points to the negative consequences of assimilation in explaining this downward achievement (Thao, 1999). For example, Zhou and Bankston (1998) found that Vietnamese students who are alienated from the Vietnamese culture are at risk for underachievement in school. In my study of Hmong American high school students, I found that 1.5 generation students had more positive school orientations that their second-generation peers (Lee, 2005). Research on non-Asian groups has also highlighted the phenomenon of generational decline (Valenzuela, 1999). Significantly, some researchers have identified schools as forces of negative assimilation that work against academic achievement (Lee, 2005; Valenzuela, 1999). Eurocentric curriculum and English only instruction have helped to alienate students from their native cultures.

According to many researchers, the most successful students practice selective acculturation whereby they adopt aspects of mainstream US norms while preserving aspects of their native language and norms (Gibson, 1988; Lee, 2005; Zhou & Bankston, 1998). In discussing the benefits of selective acculturation, Portes and Rumbaut write:

Children who learn the language and culture of their new country without losing those of the old have a much better understanding of their place in the world. They need not clash with their parents as often or feel embarrassed by them because they are able to bridge the gap across generations and value their elders’ traditions and goals. Selective acculturation forges an intergenerational alliance for successful adaptation that is absent among youths who have severed bonds with their past in the pursuit of acceptance by their native peers. (Portes & Rumbaut, 2001, p. 274)
The success of students who selectively acculturate challenges assumptions regarding the importance of assimilation. Educators need to pay attention to this. Schools need to work towards an additive model of education that builds on what Asian American students bring with them to school.

References

Gibson, M. (1988) Accommodation without assimilation: Sikh immigrants in an American high school (Ithaca, NY, Cornell University Press).

Hakuta, K. & Pease-Alvarez, L. (Eds) (1992) Special issue on bilingual education, Educational Researcher, 21(2).

Kao, G. & Tienda, M. (1995) Optimism and achievement: the educational performance of immigrant youth, Social Science Quarterly, 76(1), 1–19.

Lee, S. J. (2005) Up against Whiteness: race, school and immigrant youth (New York, Teachers College Press).

Olsen, L. (1997) Made in America: immigrant students in our public schools (New York, New Press).

Portes, A. & Rumbaut, R. (2001) Legacies: the story of the new second-generation (Berkeley, CA, University of California Press).

Ramirez, J. (1991) Final report: longitudinal study of structured English immersion strategy, early exit and late exit transitional bilingual programs for language minority children (Washington, DC, Office of Bilingual Education).

Smith-Hefner, N. (1990) Language and identity in the education of Boston-area Khmer, Anthropology and Education Quarterly, 21(3), 250–268.

Smith-Hefner, N. (1999) Khmer American: identity and moral education in a diasporic community (Berkeley, CA, University of California Press).

Thao, P. (1999) Hmong education at the crossroads (New York, University Press of America).

Valenzuela, A. (1999) Subtractive schooling: U.S.–Mexican youth and the politics of caring (Albany, NY, State University of New York Press).

Valdes, G. (1996) Con respeto: bridging the distances between culturally diverse families and schools—an ethnographic portrait (New York, Teachers College Press).

Valdes, G. (2001) Learning and not learning English: Latino students in American schools (New York, Teachers College Press).

Zhou, M. & C. Bankston (1998) Growing up American: how Vietnamese children adapt to life in the United States (New York, Russell Sage).





This article comes from Asian American Empowerment
modelminority.com

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