ABSTRACT

Given the protracted, varied, and geographically expansive changes in migration over time, it is difficult to establish an overarching theory that adequately analyzes the school experiences of immigrant youth in the United States. This volume extends the scholarly work on these experiences by exploring how immigrants carve out new identities, construct meanings, and negotiate spaces for themselves within social structures created or mediated by education policy and practice. It highlights immigrants that position themselves within global movements while experiencing the everyday effects of federal, state, and local education policy, a phenomenon referred to as glocal (global-local) or localized global phenomena.

Chapter authors acknowledge and honor the agency that immigrants wield, and combine social theories and qualitative methods to empirically document the ways in which immigrants take active roles in enacting education policy. Surveying immigrants from China, Bangladesh, India, Haiti, Japan, Colombia, and Liberia, this volume offers a broad spectrum of immigrant experiences that problematize policy narratives that narrowly define notions of "immigrant," "citizenship," and "student."

part |86 pages

Identity-Staking

chapter |19 pages

The Proverbial Monkey on Our Backs

Exploring the Politics of Belonging among Transnational African High School Students in the US

chapter |17 pages

“Spanish Speakers” and “Normal People”

The Linguistic Implications of Segregation in US High Schools

chapter |18 pages

Problematizing My Position as a Researcher

Studying the Construction of Class by Chilean and Colombian International Students

chapter |14 pages

Negotiating the Meaning of Citizenship

Chinese Academics in the Transnational Space

part |79 pages

Place-Taking

chapter |22 pages

“Luchando por una Vida Nueva”

A Socio-Spatial Analysis of Academic Aspirations among Rural Latino Students in the US South

chapter |18 pages

The Neoliberal Turn in US Higher Education

Implications for Indian F-l Students' Negotiations of Belonging

chapter |19 pages

Misalignment of Teacher Outcomes and Student Goals

Transnational Migrants in an Adult ESL Program

chapter |18 pages

Internationally Recruited Teachers and Migration

Structures of Instability and Tenuous Settlement

part |77 pages

Space-Making

chapter |19 pages

Why Bother to Continue Learning a Heritage Language?

Mainstream Policies and the Politics of Heritage Language Maintenance

chapter |17 pages

In Search of Success

Where School and Marriage Meet in the Educational Lives of Immigrant African Girls with Limited Formal Schooling

chapter |17 pages

(Counter)Storytelling for Social Change

Pathways for Youth Participation in Policymaking

chapter |22 pages

Navigating Institutional Structures

The Politics of Supporting Undocumented Students in Higher Education