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Gallo, Sarah – Ethnography and Education, 2021
Drawing from an ethnographic study with families who relocated from the United States to Mexico, I explore what I call parents' transborder pedagogies of the home, or the home-based educational practices that adults with experiences across transnational institutions draw upon to prepare their children for life and learning on both sides of the…
Descriptors: Decision Making, Relocation, Mexicans, Family School Relationship
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Gallo, Sarah; Adams Corral, Melissa – Journal of Literacy Research, 2023
Drawing from an ethnography with mixed-status families residing in Mexico, we examine what we term transborder literacies of (in)visibility, or diasporic people's innovative interactions around texts that prepare them to move across incompatible mononational institutions divided by borders. Through close attention to the literacy practices…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Mexicans, Immigrants, Literacy
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Miller, Erin T.; Murray, Beth; Salas, Spencer – Studying Teacher Education, 2019
In this article, we narrate a self-study that emerged through a collaborative, arts-based inquiry around Latinx diversity, especially those arising from citizenship status at the individual and family level. Coming from distinct professional educational landscapes (theatre/drama education, middle/secondary education, and elementary education), we…
Descriptors: Drama, Theater Arts, Role Playing, Preservice Teachers
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Valdivia, Carolina – Harvard Educational Review, 2021
This article examines how the detention or deportation of a parent shapes the roles and responsibilities of young adults within the household and the consequences that these changes have on their educational experiences. Drawing from thirty-two in-depth interviews with young adults living in the United States whose parent was detained, author…
Descriptors: Young Adults, Parents, Undocumented Immigrants, Family Involvement
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Cioè-Peña, María – Multiple Voices: Disability, Race, and Language Intersections in Special Education, 2020
In response to anti-immigrant policies, countless families are returning to their countries of origin. One immigrant community persists: the undocumented mothers of children with disabilities (CWD). Using the testimonios of Spanish-speaking Latinx mothers of emergent bilingual CWD, this study answers the question of why they stay. This study…
Descriptors: Undocumented Immigrants, Mothers, Disabilities, Spanish Speaking
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Gallo, Sarah; Link, Holly – Journal of Latinos and Education, 2016
Drawing primarily on interview data from a 5-year ethnography on the school experiences of Mexican immigrant children in a New Latino Diaspora community, we explore how their teachers understood and responded to increasing deportation-based immigration practices affecting children's lives. We illustrate how teachers fell along a continuum…
Descriptors: Elementary School Teachers, Immigration, Hispanic American Students, Undocumented Immigrants
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Mangual Figueroa, Ariana – International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education (QSE), 2016
This article draws from a 23-month ethnographic study conducted in mixed-status Mexican homes to detail the particular methodological concerns that arise when conducting research within these legally complex and vulnerable families. Specifically, the analysis illustrates when and why undocumented parents in one focal family asked the ethnographer…
Descriptors: Mexican Americans, Undocumented Immigrants, Ethnography, Research Methodology
Suro, Roberto; Suárez-Orozco, Marcelo M.; Canizales, Stephanie L. – Tomas Rivera Policy Institute, 2015
A parent's immigration status influences how a child grows up. That basic finding is grounded in the broad mainstream of current research on childhood development, which has concluded that parental factors can be powerful determinants of their offspring's well being all the way into adulthood. As this report shows, a parent's immigration status…
Descriptors: Immigrants, Parents, Parent Influence, Undocumented Immigrants
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Villar, Maria de Lourdes – Urban Anthropology and Studies of Cultural Systems and World Economic Development, 1990
Drawing from the experience of undocumented Mexican immigrants in Chicago, argues that long-term residence in the United States does not necessarily imply progressive accommodation. Stresses the role that adverse economic factors play in the circumstances of settlement. Suggests that the circumstances influencing migrants' settlement should be…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), Economic Factors, Mexicans
Browning, Harley L.; Rodriguez, Nestor – 1982
Based on an ethnographic study of Austin and San Antonio, Texas, this paper deals with the settlement process by which "indocumentados" (undocumented Mexican workers) and their families integrate themselves into U.S. society and its labor market and the multiple strategies they use to sustain themselves socially and economically. The…
Descriptors: Employment Level, Family (Sociological Unit), Foreign Workers, Labor Market
Hagan, Jacqueline Maria – 1994
This book examines the settlement process of undocumented migrant workers through an ethnographic study of a Houston (Texas) community of Mayas from a township in Totonicapan, Guatemala. The community is traced from its genesis in 1978, when a few men left the township in search of economic opportunity, to the complex effects of the 1986…
Descriptors: Acculturation, Adjustment (to Environment), American Indian Culture, Community Study