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Immigration, Diversity and Student Journeys to Higher Education presents an in-depth understanding of how immigrant students at a major public research university balanced keeping their family cultures alive and learning U.S. culture to get to college. A revitalized anthropological understanding of acculturation provides the theoretical framework for the book. The text builds its analysis using extensive quotes from the 160 immigrant students who participated in the 21 focus groups that form the core of this study. The students' families come from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Europe and Latin…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Immigration, Diversity and Student Journeys to Higher Education presents an in-depth understanding of how immigrant students at a major public research university balanced keeping their family cultures alive and learning U.S. culture to get to college. A revitalized anthropological understanding of acculturation provides the theoretical framework for the book. The text builds its analysis using extensive quotes from the 160 immigrant students who participated in the 21 focus groups that form the core of this study. The students' families come from Africa, Asia, the Caribbean, Europe and Latin America, and reflect a wide diversity of experiences and insights into how these students successfully pursued higher education. A key theme of the book is the "immigrant bargain," where students repay their parents' hard work and migration sacrifices by excelling in school. A large majority of the parents made clear that a major motivation for immigrating was so their children could have better educational opportunities; these parents had the original dreams for their children. Immigration, Diversity and Student Journeys to Higher Education examines the similarities and differences across this diverse group of students, ending with a series of recommendations about how to improve acculturation research and how to facilitate immigrant students' journeys to educational success.
Autorenporträt
Peter J. Guarnaccia is Professor in the Department of Human Ecology and Investigator at the Institute for Health at Rutgers University. He is co-editor of A Death Retold: Jesica Santillan, the Bungled Transplant, and Paradoxes of Medical Citizenship (2006).
Rezensionen
"This book, rich with intimate and insightful quotations and narratives from immigrant college students, unpacks the challenges that students from many different countries face, often with limited resources, in navigating multiple languages, cultural expectations and performances, and family and institutional demands. Written in accessible language, the concepts it unfolds-identity, language, culture, acculturation-are central to understanding and appreciating the complexities of the immigrant experience in higher education. A classic of its kind, the book offers a valuable theoretical, social, cultural and political contribution to the contemporary dialogues and diatribes around immigration, migration and the resilience of recent arrivals to the United States as they strive for success in American higher education."-Jean J. Schensul, Senior Scientist and Founding Director of the Institute for Community Research in Hartford, CT, Adjunct Professor in the Department of Community Medicine at the University of Connecticut, and Editor and Author of The Ethnographer's Toolkit