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Immigrant children in America Integration by Language Assimilation and Education

Scholary Paper (Seminar), 2003, 25 Pages
Author: Birgit George
Subject: Sociology - Miscellaneous

Details

Event: PS Einwanderungsland USA: Historische Entwicklung und aktuelle Integrationsfragen
Institution/College: Humboldt-University of Berlin (Institute for Sociology)
Tags: Immigrant, America, Integration, Language, Assimilation, Education, Einwanderungsland, Historische, Entwicklung, Integrationsfragen
Category: Scholary Paper (Seminar)
Year: 2003
Pages: 25
Grade: 1,7 (A-)
Bibliography: ~ 21  Entries
Language: English
Archive No.: V14092
ISBN (E-book): 978-3-638-19586-7

File size: 212 KB
Notes :
This work follows the questions how well immigrant children adapt to their American host society through schooling and the educational system, what role language assimilation plays here and the controvercies about bilingual education.



Excerpt (computer-generated)

Humboldt University, Berlin

Immigrant children in America
Integration by Language Assimilation and Education

by

Birgit George

 

 

 


CONTENTS

1. Introduction 3

1.1 The Integration of Immigrants into the American Society 3
1.2 Assimilation as Conception for Integration 4

2. Language and Multiculturalism  5

2.1 Language Assimilation and Biculturalism 6
2.2 Language – A Criterion for Exclusion 9

2.2.1 A Historical Overview: Testing Linguistic Proficiency  9
2.2.2 English Proficiency on General Plane 10

3. Immigrant Children in the United States 11

3.1 Problems with Data Research 12

4. Schooling and Educational Success of Immigrant Children 12

4.1 Formal Education Institutions and the Media: Acquisition of Linguistic Proficiency 15
4.2 Controvercies on Bilingual Classes and the English-Only Movement 17

5. California – A Case Study 19

5.2 Proposition 227 22

6. Conclusion 22

References  23

 

 

 


1. INTRODUCTION

During the work on my seminar paper in this seminar “Immigration Country: USA” – that introduced modern conceptions of citizenship in the United States – I questioned the process of naturalization as an instrument to integrate immigrants as well as the including language test where immigrants must prove their ability to write, speak and read English. This theme led me to the question if language works as an instrument for integration or exclusion in contemporary multiethnic America - language and education, both very important for ones forthcoming in a society.

In this homework I can only work on a small aspect on immigrant’s integration, so I intend to follow the questions how well immigrant children adapt to their American host society through schooling and the educational system and what role language assimilation plays in the American society that undergoes a continuing flow of immigrants of diverse ethnicities. Does the assimilation of the English language help for better integration, what does integration mean in this special context and what impacts does it have on immigrant children? What are their future prospects and is the common assumption true “no English language proficiency – no integration – no success”? How does the nation, state or schools react on the growing numbers of LEP students? I followed the pros and cons for bilingual classes and regarding this context the English-only Movement and its demands of American schools and its students.

1.1 THE INTEGRATION OF IMMIGRANTS INTO THE AMERICAN SOCIETY

Immigration is once again transforming the racial as well as ethnic contours of American Society. Current estimates place annual immigration to the United States (legal and undocumented) at about 1 million persons per year (National Research Council 1997) and it won’t take long until the European Americans will no longer be a majority but African Americans, Latinos, Asians and Native Americans. This shift might be a beginning of a revolutionary change in the relationship between the majority and minority Americans. Maybe that will be an end to a social and cultural dominance of European-Americans and a flowering of multiculturalism. So the question of integration of immigrants is coming more and more into focus. The socio-cultural immigrant adaptation process is largely influenced by the question if it is voluntary or involuntary migration. Political refugees e.g. maintain a strong attachment to the home country and an aspiration to return, should political conditions change. But in turn it could drive these refugees to more political activities e.g. participation in ethnic organisations etc. Immigrant adaptation is influenced, too, by pre-migration conditions, e.g. motives and intentions of migrants, that influence as well the migrant’s willingness to learn the new language, depending on how long they plan to stay in the United States, the transitional experience in moving from one country to another, the migrant’s characteristics and conditions in the receiving countries, including government policies as well as economic factors. A lot of other important factors determine the grade of adaptation such as age on arrival in the new country, the immigrant’s education and qualifications and the types of social network. This is such a mulidimensional process in which cultural integration interacts with economic adaptation, social integration, satisfaction and degree of identification with the new country.

1.2 ASSIMILATION AS CONCEPTION FOR INTEGRATION

But does integration mean assimilation? There are several models of assimilation providing the dominant motif in the way the immigrant-ethnic experience has been interpreted. When assimilation is understood as a conception where ethnic minorities become sort of copies of the ethnic majority, they are loosing all what makes them distinctive and so this term imposes a bland homogeneity where a more interesting heterogeneity had existed before. Does it mean to successfully learn a new life for getting full acceptance, to unlearn its cultural traits? To look at the American Society one can obviously see, that this older version of the conception of assimilation is not working, because the American Society is far from being homogeneous and immigrants has always affected American Society as much as American Society has affected the immigrant ethnicity. A more recent theory “... sees assimilation as the decline, and only at some ultimate endpoint the disappearance, of an ethnic distinction and its allied differences.”1 So this conception implicates that it must not be a wholly one-side process, it can take place in more than one group and just shrink the differences and social distances between them. It might be a small series of shifts that take place over generations and those who are undergoing such assimilation still carry ethnic characteristics in a number of ways. That means assimilation does not require fully extinction of ethnic difference. When and why does assimilation start? Is it a process one can escape from or is it rather an unintended or maybe directly intended, cumulative by-product of choices made by individuals seeking to take advantage of opportunities to improve their social or financial situations?

Often immigrants work much of the time, frequently at jobs they probably would reject at home and sleep in shifts in apartments occupied by large groups of fellow immigrants. Their behaviour is entirely oriented toward the goal of earning as much money to send home as possible. But after some time passed by generally a change sets in: they work less and enjoy their leisure time more and consume more of the money they earn. A process of incorporation starts here, that often will not end in one’s lifetime but instead continue into the lives of one’s children and grandchildren who adapt to these achievements. This point is from major importance for this homework. At this juncture incorporation describes a “...process by which immigrants and their descendants change from being outsiders-inresidence, whose participation in the host society is limited to its labor market and who remain in many respects oriented toward their homelands, to natives.”2

2. LANGUAGE AND MULTICULTURALISM

[...]


1 Alba, 1999: P. 5
2 Alba, 1998: P. 1


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