Children of Immigrants and Educational Expectations: The Roles of School Composition

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Jun. 01, 2010

Source: Teachers College Record, Volume 112 Number 6, 2010, p. 6-7.

Background
Many children of immigrants are not enrolled in high schools that sufficiently meet their needs, and subsequently, many are not making a successful transition to, and/or successfully completing, higher education. As immigration grows in the United States, educators and policy makers must understand how the educational processes for children of immigrants differ from nonimmigrants.

Because expectations for higher education are a necessary, though insufficient, step toward college attendance and degree attainment, and because students have these attitudes influenced by the schools they attend, the author examines high school composition for its effects on educational expectations and how compositional effects differ between children of immigrants and nonimmigrants.

Purpose and Research Questions

This study intends to be another step on the path toward understanding the educational processes of children of immigrants specifically, and of all students more broadly, as the immigrant population grows in U.S. schools.

Toward those ends, this study is based on two overarching research questions:
(1) How do the immigrant compositions of U.S. secondary schools affect the educational expectations of all students?
(2) How do the compositions of U.S. secondary schools affect the educational expectations of children of immigrants differently than nonimmigrant students?

Research Design
The research questions are addressed via secondary data analysis using data from the Educational Longitudinal Study (ELS:2002/2004), which were collected by the National Center for Education Statistics. The author explores school composition effects on a binary dependent variable indicating whether
a 12th-grade student expects to complete a graduate or professional degree.

This study emphasizes a critical-quantitative approach by demonstrating that common theories and assumptions about educational expectations may be inaccurate for children of immigrants in today’s schools.

Conclusions

Results show that children of immigrants are affected differently by school composition than are nonimmigrants, and in ways that contradict commonly accepted theoretical views. Specifically, this analysis demonstrates that comparative and normative theories of school effects are not accurate for children of immigrants, at least not to the same degree as they are for nonimmigrants.

This is a reminder to researchers and practitioners alike that subgroups of students, in this case the children of immigrants, may not be affected by schools in similar ways.

Updated: Jun. 01, 2010
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